Finding
Fiduciaries
Few Life & Estate Planning decisions are more important than the selection of your financial fiduciaries. After all, they will be responsible for
taking care of your assets when you are incapacitated and upon your death. If you find this a difficult decision, then you may tend to procrastinate and eventually become disabled or die
without a proper Life & Estate Plan. In this article, we will share some thoughts to help you select appropriate financial fiduciaries and hopefully avoid the procrastination trap.
Risky Business: Managing Assets
Your fiduciaries will be responsible for all of the financial matters for which you are now responsible. For example, they must safeguard, manage
and distribute all of your assets after they satisfy your legitimate creditors and ensure compliance with all tax laws. Fiduciaries are held to the highest legal standards of conduct. This
fiduciary duty even extends to the rights of third parties. Teaching point: Along with the honor of being named as the financial fiduciary, comes great personal exposure to civil and even
criminal liability.
Common Candidates for Financial Fiduciaries
Before they understand the responsibilities and attending risks, many people look first to family members as financial fiduciaries. This is
natural, because family members likely know and care about you as no stranger ever would. Nevertheless, serving as a fiduciary can be an overwhelming responsibility, especially when your
fiduciaries have their own busy lives to run.
For many people, third party professionals are appropriate financial fiduciaries. Corporate fiduciaries, accountants and attorneys are commonly selected. It is their
business to safeguard, manage and distribute client assets ... and ensure compliance with all tax laws. Also, if these third party professional fiduciaries are unrelated to you and your
family members, then valuable asset protection planning may be available.
A popular alternative is a team approach where you select both a family member and a third party professional to serve as co-fiduciaries. This approach combines the
respective advantages of each. The family member takes care of the non-financial people concerns and the professional takes care of the financial details. Such a combination also
helps preserve family relationships when someone must tell a youthful beneficiary that a red sports car is not within the letter or spirit of authorized trust fund expenditures. In other
words, it is much easier for a non-family member professional to tell beneficiary Bobby "no," than it is for his favorite uncle (as trustee).
Select Appropriate Fiduciaries
As you can see, the selection of appropriate financial fiduciaries is critical to the ultimate success of your Life & Estate Plan. Be sure to seek
the advice of qualified counsel to help you carefully weigh the pros and cons before making this important decision. Remember: This definitely is an aspect of your Life & Estate Plan where
an inappropriate selection could be rather expensive for you and your fiduciaries.
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