Beneficiary Designations - Hull on Estate and Succession Planning Podcast #82
Listen to Beneficiary Designations
This week on Hull on Estate and Succession Planning, Ian and Suzana discuss core issues in estate planning; specifically the importance of beneficiary designations.
Beneficiary Designations - Hull on Estate and Succession Planning Podcast #82
Suzana Popovic-Montag: Hi, and welcome to
Welcome to
Ian Hull and Suzana Popovic-Montag, that will provide information and insights into estate planning in Canada, from the offices of Hull Estate Mediation in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Here are Ian and Suzana.
Suzana Popovic-Montag: Hi there Ian, how are you today?
Ian Hull: I’m great Suzana. How are you doing?
Suzana Popovic-Montag: I’m fine thank you.
Ian Hull: We have had a busy short last while. We’ve been obviously busy with our practices but been out speaking and having some fun dealing with some of these interesting estate issues. I know you hosted our
Suzana Popovic-Montag: It’s certainly been a good fall beginning to the fall season with all of the excellent CLE that’s out there, Ian, so it’s been a wonderful opportunity.
Ian Hull: And we’re looking forward to…I know I’m looking forward to next week to a busy continued programs that we’re both going to be involved with. So why don’t we turn today on
Suzana Popovic-Montag: And traditionally also, the core of much of the planning that’s been done. So notwithstanding our hope that, you know, we can bring about conversation and openness and things like that in the estate planning process, the truth is that there are certain things that will always be the core to when people decide to plan and administer their estates.
Ian Hull: And as we’ve talked about, there’s sort of….we’ve broken down this series, we’ll call this our mini-series on tax planning and issues relating to estate planning. And we’re talking about obviously the core issue of avoiding in Ontario certainly what we call the estate tax itself, talking about deferral and capital gains and those sort of core issues in terms of tax avoidance. And then finally dealing with later in the series, we’re going to deal with some of the
But let’s re-circle back here and talk a little bit about what we…why don’t we spend a minute just talking about what we had covered last week and then move into our new area of beneficiary designations.
Suzana Popovic-Montag: Well Ian, last week we were talking about the fact that people can have more than one Will and we called them the primary and the secondary Wills. The idea being that one Will, the primary Will, would be the one that you would actually probate, whereas the secondary Will would be one that you wouldn’t have to. And we talked about, you know, the reasons we would want to do that and the kinds of assets that we would put into those particular Wills.
Ian Hull: So moving on from that core estate planning technique, another fundamental estate planning technique is really important, is of course the organizing and dealing with essentially beneficiary designations. Many of us have different types of investments that can be beneficiary designated. Some flow outside of the estate, some flow through the estate, but nonetheless, there are instruments such as life insurance policies and the like that can be designated specifically to an individual for a lot of good reasons.
Suzana Popovic-Montag: And the key to that designation is if you designate someone other than your estate to be the beneficiary of, for instance, your life insurance proceeds or your RRSPs, then that designated beneficiary would receive the benefit of that policy without it passing through the estate and without it therefore attracting probate fees.
Ian Hull: And the other aspect of designations of beneficiaries and where it can be a very useful tool is, is that it is a fundamental creditor protection technique that works in not all, but in most cases. For an example, an insurance policy is typically creditor-proof, when it’s in a situation where it flows outside of the estate. And some situations certainly, recently some of the case law is pointing to RRSPs as being able to be essentially creditor-proof as well. So there’s another aspect of your, you know, estate administration, and good reason for making sure we have organized our designations of beneficiaries properly.
Suzana Popovic-Montag: Ian, while we’re talking about this topic, one thing that sort of comes to mind is what happens if you’ve designated a beneficiary whose actually a minor at the time of your death?
Ian Hull: Well, that can be I guess problematic if you haven’t thought it through. There are, and in our web page we have some great articles on this specifically. Anne Werker has written an article for the Probater on insurance trusts. There are ways to designate. For example, an insurance policy, essentially the proceeds being designated into a trust. And as I say, Anne Werker has flushed out the mechanics behind that. But there are ways to protect and help protect minor beneficiaries, allowing it to come outside of the estate. And then there are, of course, ways to designate beneficiaries within the estate by simply putting, for example, the insurance proceeds into a testamentary trust that has been established under the terms of the Will.
Suzana Popovic-Montag: And I guess the benefit with that kind of arrangement is then that you can appoint a trustee for those funds, who could hold the funds for the benefit of the minor until he or she attains the age of majority. Because otherwise, as far as I understand it, if you were to designate a minor as a beneficiary, then that money would, without, you know, some trust arrangement otherwise being established, that money would be payable into the Court and held by the Court until the child turns the age of 18, is that right?
Ian Hull: Well, that’s right. And the other way, of course, we could control that money is if we go under the Children’s Law Reform Act and get appointed guardian of the minor child’s property before they turn 18, so proceeds from an insurance policy that aren’t properly designated, are either going to end up in Court or they could end up in the hands of the parent after what can be a relatively expensive process of applying to the Court to essentially gain control of those monies for your minor child.
Suzana Popovic-Montag: So the point then really being that even though you think you’re doing all this fancy planning by designating a beneficiary other than your estate to receive these proceeds from life insurance, RRSPs or the like, you also want to keep in mind that there’s a practical consideration there in terms of the age of that beneficiary as well.
Ian Hull: For sure. Let’s turn now to designations generally. Now, we’ll use the
Suzana Popovic-Montag: And as I said before, you can use your Will to actually create a trust so that you can appoint, you know, trustees, designate who the beneficiaries of the trust funds will be, and empower the trustee with rights and obligations and duties that wouldn’t otherwise be the situation if the money were simply paid into Court.
Ian Hull: And under the Act, for those who are interested in seeking this, you know, so the background is is that we need to look to Section 51…I’m just trying to read my Act here…51 of the Succession Law Reform Act, and that points us to some of the rules surrounding and the statutory authority for making these kinds of trust designations and creating these kinds of designations for beneficiaries under a Will.
Suzana Popovic-Montag: And just as a practice point I think in terms of where you actually put this provision in a trust when someone’s actually drafting it, you typically will see it set up at the very beginning of a trust before the other provisions in the Will so that it’s separate from the other estate assets and therefore free from possible claim for probate fees on that trust as well.
Ian Hull: So, and then to just step back on our sort of last rounding up of this issue, designation of beneficiaries, we also, you know, we’ve got the more complex situation where you have minor children. Or if you have a disabled child, where you want to create these trust arrangements. But the basic scenario and one that is used effectively in estate planning is to simply pass an insurance, for example, an insurance policy, directly to the surviving spouse. And that’s the one we see most often where a husband and wife situation where the husband or the wife owns an insurance policy and then they simply say, fill out the form when they apply for the insurance policy and they put down beneficiary designation being the wife. It creates some great planning abilities, it avoids the estate tax in
Suzana Popovic-Montag: That’s a great point Ian, and in addition, I think you want to re-visit it too as your circumstances change, because it may turn out that you’ve designated a former spouse, for instance, as a beneficiary of some proceeds. And then when you pass away, that might not have been necessarily what you would have otherwise intended. So as your circumstances change, you want to make sure that those designations are still what you intend them to be.
Ian Hull: No, that’s a great point. We’ve seen cases like that and it’s frustrating for the family sometimes when they get in a situation where they’ve gone and the marriage breakdown, they’ve changed their Wills as they are told to do but they forget to deal with the insurance designations and the policy ends up somewhere where maybe it shouldn’t.
Suzana Popovic-Montag: And quickly so too, because our experience seems to be that those policies are paid out quite quickly to the named beneficiaries. So in that case then, if it’s paid out to someone you wouldn’t have wanted it to be paid out to, then you’re faced with a situation where you’re trying to chase the money back, and good luck to you in those situations.
Ian Hull: Absolutely.
Suzana Popovic-Montag: Okay. Well thanks very much, Ian. I think that brings us to an end of this podcast.
Ian Hull: Thanks Suzana.
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