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Greensboro North Carolina Estate Planning, Probate and Living Trusts Attorneys The Law Offices of Cheryl K. David



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Educational FYIs
These recent developments and case studies address any aspect of the law that touches on estate planning. They offer an interesting perspective and/or warning. The frequency of release varies from month to month and week to week. Our purpose for sharing these Educational FYI's to you is to further enlighten you on the many variables involved in the fine balancing act of proper estate planning.

The Law Offices of Cheryl K. David releases important estate planning and related articles on a regular basis. Please take a moment to register to receive full access to our Educational Alerts and FYIs.

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Article on Family Caregivers
The Sunday, September 9, 2007 issue of Parade magazine contains an article by Gail Sheehy on family caregiving. It will recount some of her own experiences as a spousal caregiver to her husband.

CMS Technical Director Opines That States May Impose Penalty on Community Spouse Post- Eligibility Transfers
Roy R. Trudel, a Technical Director at the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services ("CMS") recently opined that a state agency has the option of imposing a transfer penalty on an institutionalized spouse if the community spouse transfers protected resources after the institutionalized spouse's eligibility has been determined. Mr. Trudel's opinion, which is a reversal from statements made by previous CMS (HCFA) officials, came about as the result of an email exchange between elder law attorney Robert Mason of North Carolina and himself.

New Study Finds Changes Needed to U.S. Health System to Accommodate Needs of Boomers
The aging baby boom generation is likely to increase the nation's disabled population, and a study says the United States needs a better system to provide care for them. More than 40 million Americans currently have some sort of disability, the Institute of Medicine reported Tuesday.

Senate Resolution Freezes Estate Tax for Two Years
Senate Resolution 21, 110th Cong. 1st Session, passed the Senate by a vote of 91 - 1.

Georgetown University Study on Medicaid Financing of Long Term Care
This article summarizes the role of Medicaid in financing long term care costs.  The article also touches on how DRA will affect the ability of portions of the elderly population to get access to long term care.

Estate Tax Repeal Vote Fail in Senate
Late Thursday, August 3, 2006, the Senate voted on an estate tax reform proposal that was came to close to full repeal and the republicans did not get the 60 votes they needed to pass it. The vote was 56-42!

Article on Boomer Inheritances
This USA article highlights how inheritances by boomers are not meeting earlier projections. The reason behind this is the increased life expectancies of seniors and the higher then projected costs for health care.

An Essay on Issues Involving the Older Driver
Eighty-six year-old George Weller's killing of 10 when he accelerated instead of braked at a Santa Monica, California market in July 2003 captured the public's attention dramatically. The Weller tragedy again reminded us that we face a growing problem: The aging process will in some way affect the driving habits and skills of most of our clients. Court intervention regarding older drivers is increasing in that probate judges address driving as fiduciary concerns for guardians and conservators. George Weller's court intervention came through the criminal bench as he was indicted on 10 counts of manslaughter in January 2004. Ideally, family members, health care providers, elder-law attorneys/estate planners and fiduciaries should assist aging loved ones/patients/clients in planning before driving skills decline and address what happens after the car is gone.

Article of Interest on Intestacy
You may be interested in reviewing the article on the laws of intestacy in the various states.

Insurance on Retirement Accounts Increased
The FDIC and Credit Union insurance coverage on retirement assets such as Individual Retirement Accounts and 401(k)s has recently been increased to $250,000 from $100,000.

Photocopy of Will is Not "Duplicate Original"
After a decedent's death, his original 1987 will could not be located. However, a photocopy of that will was in his personal papers. There was no indication of any intent to revoke the will other than the fact that the original was missing.

Genetic Link to Parkinson's Disease Found
A recent study has identified a single genetic mutation that accounts for more than 20 percent of all cases of Parkinson's disease in Arabs, North Africans and Jews. This is a major surprise, as genetics was thought to play a relatively minor role in the cause of Parkinson’s disease. Although the mutation is rare in people with ethnic roots outside the Middle East, its discovery raises the prospect that undiscovered mutations may be major causes of Parkinson's in other groups.

Drugs Effective in Treating Mild to Moderate Alzheimer's Disease
Three drugs -- Aricept, Razadyne, and Exelon -- may make some modest improvement in mental function for those persons suffering from mild to moderate impairment in mental functions due to Alzheimer’s disease. The finding come from a review of 13 studies of the drugs. The review appears in The Cochrane Library, a research journal.

Commission Considers Separating LTC Component of Medicaid
The Medicaid Commission, which is looking into ways to improve the government program is mulling over the possibility of separating long-term care financing from Medicaid.

Social Security Death Benefit Eliminated in Bush Budget Proposal
The $255 Social Security death benefit will be eliminated under the Budget proposal submitted to Congress on February 7, 2006 by the President. White House officials defended the proposals and estimated costs would be trimmed by $3.4 billion over the next decade with the elimination of the stipend. Congressional aides said Jo Anne Barnhart, the Social Security Commissioner, had told them during a closed-door briefing that the $255 one-time death benefit has become an administrative burden, since it is not paid in all cases. Mark Lassiter, a spokesman at the Social Security Administration, said the benefit "bears no relation to what a person's funeral expenses are or to any of workers' earnings levels. We believe that eliminating it is not going to cause an appreciable financial hardship to a survivor."

New Findings on Cause of Alzheimer's Disease
If confirmed, several new findings on the origins of Alzheimer's disease could overturn prevailing theories on the cause of the disease.  Scientists reporting in the Journal of Neuroscience said the neurodegenerative disease may be triggered when adult nerve cells, or neurons, try to divide.

IRS Increases PLR Fees, In Some Cases Dramatically

New PLR User Fees

The IRS has released the 2006 Revenue Procedures outlining fees for Private Letter Ruling Requests. Continue on to see some of the outlined changes:



DC Circuit: Lawyers Exempt from Sending Gramm-Leach-Bliley Privacy Notices
The Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act has provisions which require "financial institutions" to send annual privacy disclosure notices. This applies to banks, brokerage houses, etc. The Federal Trade Commission had taken the position that this also applied to attorneys holding financial information. The American Bar Association filed suit for a declaratory judgment. The ABA won in the District Court. Now, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia has affirmed the District Court's judgment.

Undernourishment Screening Tool
Undernourishment is one of the major risks to the good health of elders.

Leavitt Endorses Many of Governors' Medicaid Proposals
On August 2, Department of Heath and Human Services Secretary Mike Leavitt discussed various health topics in an interview with Associated Press editors and reporters. On Medicaid, Leavitt said that the commission he appointed to recommend ways to cut $10 billion from Medicaid over five years would "likely look" at proposals from the National Governors Association and determine that they "are pretty well thought-out ideas."

Effect of the Federal Estate Tax on Family Farms and Small Businesses
Recent discussion of the federal estate tax has focused in part, on how it affects family farms and small businesses -- particularly the possibility that having to pay the tax might jeopardize those operations.

Social Security and Medicare Trustees Release Annual Reports
Annual reports released from both the Social Security Administration and the U.S. Centers for Medicare Medicaid Services.

Wealthy People Less Likely to Die in Pain
A University of Michigan study finds that wealthier elders are significantly less likely than poorer ones to suffer pain at the end of their lives.

IRA Gifts to Charity Temporarily Unlimited
As part of the tax relief provided by Congress, unlimited donations of IRAs or pension plans to charities will be allowed for a short period of time.

Groups Campaigning Against Repeal of Estate Tax
Anti-estate tax repeal groups have begun a campaign targeting moderate Democrats and Republicans in a campaign to retain the estate tax. The campaign is helped by the efforts of many major life insurance companies as well as charitable organizations.

Spendthrift Trust Not Reachable for Debts Incurred by Beneficiary Acting as Trustee
Two testamentary trusts were created in the decedent’s will, one for the benefit of each of her sons. One son became trustee of both trusts, and proceeded to empty his brother's trust by investing in his own business, and thereafter failed to account to the other brother. The court entered a surcharge against the trustee-brother and forfeited the surety bond he had posted. The court then gave a judgment in favor of the surety against the defalcating trustee-brother.

Final Regulations on Ordering Rules for Charitable Remainder Trusts Issued
The Internal Revenue Services has issued final regulations on the ordering rules of section 664(b) of the Internal Revenue Code for characterizing distributions from charitable remainder trusts (CRTs).

End-of-Life Care
Health Affairs Journal has published three articles about the Schiavo case and the costs of end-of-life care.

Federal Housing Programs That Offer Assistance for the Elderly
A number of federal housing programs provide assistance, including rent subsidies, mortgage insurance, and loans and grants for the purchase or repair of homes, to low-income renters and homeowners.

Vote for Estate Tax Repeal Delayed; Senator Kyle Prepares Amendment to H.R. 8
Aides to several key Senators have announced that there will be no vote of estate tax repeal in the Senate until after all the relief for the hurricane victims has been secured and the rebuilding in Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama begins. Therefore, we can expect that nothing should happen for at least several weeks.

Qualified Roth Contribution Programs Gain Attention
Beginning in 2006, 401-K retirement plans may be amended to permit employees to designate some or all of their contributions as Roth contributions pursuant to a "qualified Roth contribution program." Contributions to a qualified Roth contribution program are made on an after-tax basis, but distributions (including earnings) are tax-free.

Greenspan Rejects Estate Tax Repeal
On June 21, 2005, Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan testified before the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee, during which time he reiterated his opposition to tax-cut proposals that increase the deficit and made clear that this opposition applies to proposals that repeal or drastically reduce the estate tax without fully offsetting the costs.

Alzheimer's Disease Symptoms Reversed in Mice
Mice with memory loss have had their condition reversed, a discovery that should help refine the search for a cure for Alzheimer's disease and other dementias.

Will Effectively Exercised Power of Appointment Even Though Not Admitted to Probate
Father (who died in 1981) established a living trust that divided into survivor's and family shares, with the former giving his surviving wife a general testamentary power of appointment and the latter giving her a power of appointment exercisable by will, deed, conveyance, bill of sale, gift or any other written instrument.  If Mother did not exercise the powers of appointment, the survivor's trust would pour into the family trust, which would in turn be distributed unequally among daughter, granddaughter and grandson.  Mother executed a will in 1985 purporting to appoint the entire trust corpus of both trusts; the survivor's trust was appointed outright to daughter and the family trust in equal shares among daughter, granddaughter and grandson; Mother died in 1997.  Relying on advice of counsel, the trustee and family members decided not to seek probate of Mother's will. 

Will's Assertion of Mistreatment by Disinherited Child is Not Grounds for Invalidity
Decedent's will specifically disinherited his only child and some of his grandchildren "by reason of their ... treatment" of him. Son challenged the will, claiming that it was improperly executed, and also that the decedent had operated under "an insane delusion that four of his grandchildren did not care about him."

Disclaimer Reformed to Avoid GST Tax
Daughter signed disclaimers of her interests in her mother's property in two different states.  After the disclaimers were completed, she learned that her mother's GST exemption was only $650,000 and that the disclaimed property would be subject to the tax.  She signed an affidavit indicating that she had disclaimed by mistake, and sought reformation of one or both disclaimers.  State high court rules that reformation of the two disclaimers is permitted, and remands to the trial court for entry of an order authorizing the reformation.

April 2005 section 7520 rate released
The IRS has released the Applicable Federal Rate for the month of April, 2005.  Each month the Service surveys interest rates and publishes the rate that is applicable for gift calculations.  The rate for April is 5.0%.  The rate for March was 4.6%.

Jury's Treble-Damages Finding in Undue Influence/Theft Case Set Aside by Trial Court, Restored by Appellate Court
An elderly woman was befriended by a law student, who helped her to transfer over $90,000 (in several transactions) to the law student, allegedly because the woman wanted to help her with tuition.  The woman's nephew, who had power of attorney, discovered the transactions and moved to secure conservatorship and set aside the transactions.

Undue Influence and Constructive Fraud Claims Should Have Been Submitted to Jury
After her husband became ill, an elderly woman who had never managed finances during their married life summoned her children to meet with her and to help decide how to handle the family ranch and other properties. After the family discovered that her husband had incurred $54,000 in credit card debt the children agreed to take responsibility for that debt in return for their mother transferring shares of stock in the ranch to them; she made transfers of substantially all of the stock based on that understanding.

Malpractice Claim May Be Brought By Successor Fiduciary Against Agent of Prior Fiduciary (CA)
During the pendency of a will contest, an attorney was appointed as administrator of a decedent's estate.  He hired another law firm to assist with complicated tax issues.  At some point, the administrator wrote to the tax lawyers confessing that he had misappropriated substantial funds from the estate; the tax lawyers initially attempted to help him borrow money to repay the estate, but ultimately wrote to him (in February) indicating that they withdrew from further representation and advising him to secure other assistance.  In May the administrator died; the tax lawyers turned their file over to another attorney in July.  In September the deadline ran out for filing IRS form 843, which would have extended the time for claiming a tax refund by three years.  In November, after resolution of the will contest, a new executor was appointed and he brought a malpractice action against the two groups of tax attorneys.  Both law firms argued that the plaintiff lacked privity with them, since they had been hired by the original administrator, and the trial court granted judgment for the defendants.  The intermediate state appellate court affirmed, and the estate appealed to the state Supreme Court.  That court now reverses, finding that the state probate code gives a successor fiduciary all the powers that his or her predecessor would have, impliedly including the power to bring an action such as the one here.

Power of Attorney, Lacking Gift-Giving Authority, Does Not Authorize Gifts to Agent
Mother, suffering from mild dementia, executed a general power of attorney in favor of her son--the power of attorney did not include any language specifically authorizing gifts.  Shortly thereafter she moved in and lived with him, and after about eight months moved to a nursing home.  At the time of her move to the nursing home the son, using his power of attorney, transferred all her real property, stocks and other assets to himself.  The mother died a little over a year later, leaving a will that devised all her assets equally to her son and daughter.  After securing appointment as executor of the estate, daughter filed suit to recover the remaining assets, arguing that the purpose of the original conveyance was solely to protect the assets from being depleted by nursing home expenses and that with the mother's death they should be reconveyed to her estate.  Trial court ordered reconveyance and on appealed. Intermediate state appellate court affirms, noting that without a specific gift-giving provision in the power of attorney, a gift to the agent "carries with it a presumption of impropriety and self-dealing."  In order to overcome that presumption, the recipient of the gift must make "the clearest showing of intent" on the part of the principal; evidence that the mother in this case trusted her son more, wanted him to manage her money, and may even have been fearful of her daughter did not meet that high standard of evidence.

Negligence Action for Misleading Life Insurance Projections Fails on Multiple Counts - Dickshott v. Angelocci
The plaintiff, who had been seeking to provide cash for his daughter to pay anticipated estate taxes, established an irrevocable life insurance trust in 1991 and paid $300,000 in premiums for a $4.2 million second-to-die policy.  The insurance agent's projections, assuming a 10% return, showed no further premium payments would be required.  The ILIT Trustee, a CPA, sought independent advice which indicated that the initial premium payment would need to earn a 24% return for 28 years to cover all premiums, but the settlor instructed him to follow the insurance agent's direction.

Testamentary Effect of Trust Provision Requires Compliance With Will Formalities - Arnold v. Davis
A decedent (the widow of country music recording artist Jim Reeves) had established a trust to hold her considerable assets, though her capacity to sign or approve of a trust was later called into question.  When she died while conservatorship proceedings were pending, the court granted an interpleader request and ordered that all her trust assets and all income from sale of her late husband's music and real estate holdings be paid to an administrator while the validity of the trust was resolved.

Hearsay Exception for Statements Made by Elderly or Dependent Adults is Unconstitutional - People v. Pirwani
A victim that was vulnerable to exploitation made a videotaped statement to police officers two days before she died and a statement to a social work supervisor shortly before her death.

Drafter May be Liable to Will Beneficiaries for Professional Malpractice and Breach of Contract - Caba v. Barker
As the testatrix lay dying in a hospital bed, a lawyer relative contacted a long-time associate and asked him to visit her at the hospital to help her prepare a will.  The relative also provided the lawyer with details about the testatrix' estate plan, including her intention to leave him (the lawyer relative) a significant bequest.  The drafting lawyer, the lawyer relative and the testatrix all met together at the hospital, and the drafting lawyer prepared a will and supervised its execution.  After the testatrix' death a will contest was filed, with the result that $620,000 was made unavailable to the residual beneficiaries (the opinion does not relate the particulars of the will contest or the identity of any contestant, or indicate how much of the $620,000 was attorney's fees incurred in defense of the will and how much a payment to contestants).

Legal Malpractice in Estate Planning Case Runs From Discovery - Watkins v. Hedman, Hielman & LaCosta
An attorney prepared a complicated estate plan for a married couple.  The wife advised the attorney that they wanted to make sure their trusts were and remained revocable, that they minimized estate taxes, and that they avoided probate.  The attorney never consulted with the husband, but sent documents home with wife and had her staff witness and notarize them upon return, even though they had never spoken with husband.

"Direct Lineal Descendants" in Old Trust Does Not Include Adopted Children - McGehee v. Edwards
Several trusts were established in 1929, 1930 and 1931.  Each trust limited benefits to the "direct lineal descendants" of the settlor or the settlor's parents.  Although state law was amended in 1978 to presumptively include adopted children in the terms "issue" or "descendant," the new law by its terms did not extend to prior trusts.  The trustees of the trusts, concerned about potential liability for their determination of the approximately 142 trust beneficiaries, filed an action to determine "who are, or may be direct lineal descendants ... and specifically whether children born out of wedlock" would be beneficiaries.  Counsel for one beneficiary answered, asking the court to also determine whether adopted children would qualify, whereupon the trial court appointed guardians ad litem for "persons adopted by lineal descendants, persons born out of wedlock to lineal descendants, persons born to lineal descendants through assisted conception, and legitimate minor beneficiaries and parties unknown."

Guardian Entitled to Notice and Hearing Before Denial of Request for Fees - Shappell v. Guardianship of Naybar case
The guardian of person and estate filed a petition requesting compensation for services as guardian.  The ward died before hearing on the petition, and guardian filed a second petition seeking additional compensation.  Almost two years after the ward's death, the trial court summarily denied the compensation requests.  The Florida Court of Appeals reverses the denials, noting that no one objected to the compensation requests, the guardian was not given notice of the pending denial of compensation, and the trial court did not conduct a hearing into the reasonableness or propriety of the fees.  The summary denial "violated the guardian's right to due process of law."

9th Circuit Rules Children Conceived by In-Vitro Fertilization Months After Father's Death Entitled To Soc Sec Benefits
Before a husband began chemotherapy treatment he arranged for freezing and storage of semen in case he became sterile.  The treatment was unsuccessful and husband died within two months. In-vitro fertilization, begun ten months after his death, was successful and twins were born eighteen months after his death.  The wife thereupon filed for Social Security Survivor's benefits for the children, and was denied by the Social Security Administration, an Administrative Law Judge, and a Federal District Court Judge.

State Must Permit Payment of Taxes on Special Needs Trust Termination - Stell v. Boulder Co. DSS
A self-settled special needs trust was established for the benefit of an SSI recipient who also received Medicaid benefits.  The SNT provided that upon termination (by death of beneficiary, for instance), funeral, burial, and administrative expenses, and taxes would be paid first, and that the state Medicaid agency would then be required to submit a claim for reimbursement before the trust would repay Medicaid expenses.  The Department of Social Services disqualified the trust and the beneficiary appealed.

Probate Court's Removal of Fiduciary in Six Cases Upheld - Guardianship of Monus
A professional fiduciary, who is the director of a faith-based social service agency, had served as guardian, conservator or trustee for a number of years in six separate cases.  The amounts involved in the estates varied from about $13,000 to about $210,000. In each case inventories were filed late or not at all, accountings were sporadic and incomplete, and requests were made for approval of expenditures after the fact.  The probate court determined that the fiduciary had violated his obligation to account fully, and removed him from all six cases.

Wrongful Death Action Dismissed Against Pharmacy in Death of Nursing Home Resident - Estate of Sharp
The estate of a deceased nursing home resident sued the pharmaceutical provider which had contracted with the nursing home to provide medications.  The claims alleged that the pharmacy had failed to monitor administration of controlled substances, to observe that the drugs were either being misused or stolen, or to train the facility's staff in proper drug administration procedures.  Relying on cases limiting the liability of pharmacists in wrongful death actions, the trial court dismissed the complaint with prejudice.

Guardianship Court Lacks Authority to Compel Trustee to Pay Deceased Ward's Debts - Guardianship of Gneiser
Prior to establishment of a guardianship, a ward had signed and funded a revocable living trust.  Prior to her death, the guardianship court had authorized the trustee to sell her home, and directed that the proceeds be held in the trustee's attorney's trust account.  After the ward's death, the trustee sought and gained court approval to pay burial expenses, but when the trustee requested authority to pay the trustee's attorney (which would have exhausted the remaining proceeds), the guardianship court refused and directed instead that the trustee pay fees to the guardian and the guardian's attorney, plus previously unpaid court fees associated with the guardianship.  The trustee appealed, and the Florida Court of Appeal reversed and remanded for further proceedings.

Order Directing Payment to Wife for Benefit of Husband Created Trust Relationship - In re Hogan Trust v. Hogan
After their father became incapacitated, his children from a prior marriage filed an action to prevent his wife from taking charge of or dissipating his assets, which were largely held in a self-settled trust naming some of the children as successor trustees.  As settlement of that matter, the parties agreed that the children would take over as trustees, that the wife would continue to make care decisions for the husband, and that the husband's trust would pay $25,000 per month to the wife for his care -- and specifically directing that the wife would not be a trustee.  Some time later the children became concerned that the money was not in fact being used for their father's care, and sought an accounting from his wife.  She successfully objected, arguing that the settlement agreement specifically precluded a finding of a trust relationship, and that they could have (but did not) required an accounting as part of the settlement.

Ohio Bill Would Cut Interest Rate on Unpaid, Overpaid Estate Taxes
Under Ohio HB 260, which was approved on November 9, 2004 by the Ohio House with a vote of 81 to 14, the interest rate on unpaid and overpaid estate taxes is lowered to the federal short-term rate, and the penalty for late payments would be 10 percent of the unpaid tax regardless of how late the payment is.

Guardian Ad Litem's Testimony Admissible, but Characterization as Court Agent is Not - Guardianship of Stamm
When a proposed ward objected to a pending guardianship proceeding, state law mandated appointment of both an attorney to represent him and a guardian ad litem to evaluate him.  The guardian ad litem questioned the physician (whose opinion was that the proposed ward did not lack capacity) and then arranged for appointment of and evaluation by a second physician.  The guardian ad litem testified as an expert witness at trial, and provided opinion testimony based in part on hearsay evidence she had accumulated.  After a jury found the proposed ward to be incapacitated and the court appointed a guardian, counsel for the ward appealed, arguing that the GAL's testimony should not have been admitted as expert testimony, that she should not have been permitted to rely upon or recite hearsay evidence, and that she should not have been permitted to characterize herself as "the eyes and ears of the court."

Bequest Does Not Fail for Indefiniteness of Charitable Beneficiary - Hays v. Harmon
A decedent's will left residue of his estate to a trust "to provide for poor relief to worthy and needy individuals who reside in Crawford County, Indiana...."  The decedent's only child contested the will, alleging both that his father lacked capacity and that the trust was insufficiently precise to constitute a valid charitable trust.

IRS Statistics for 2003 Estate Tax Returns
The IRS data for the 2003 Estate Tax Returns are now available from the IRA. This data include gross estate by type of property, deductions, taxable estate, estate tax and tax credits, and by size of the gross estate.

Trust Remainder Beneficiary Has Standing to Assert Elder Abuse Claim and Resultant Disinheritance of Successor Trustee - Estate of Lowrie case
A decedent established a self-settled trust naming herself as trustee and her son as successor trustee. During the last few years of her life, the decedent was taken advantage of by her son. On her death the trust provided for specific distributions to two children and a granddaughter, with the remainder to be distributed to her son; if son failed to survive, the remainder would pass to the granddaughter. The granddaughter filed an action alleging that the son had committed elder abuse and, pursuant to the terms of a California statute, should be disinherited. The Son moved to dismiss the suit for lack of standing. The trial court found that granddaughter had standing and ultimately found that son had abused his mother and that such abuse effected his disinheritance.

Statements to Beneficiary Do Not Support Establishment of a Trust - Hubbard v. Shankle
Prior to his death, the decedent had changed the beneficiary on his life insurance policy to name his girlfriend of three months. He told her that he was making the change because he wanted her to have the proceeds and he wanted her to take care of college expenses for his two- year-old daughter. When he died the girlfriend received $110,000 from the policy, of which she immediately spent $45,000.

Best Interests of Ward May Require Appointment of Limited Guardian Despite Trial Court's Concerns - Estate of Gillis
The District Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities Administration (MRDDA) filed petition for appointment of guardian of the person for a 33-year-old developmentally disabled patient recently placed in a community setting as part of a court-ordered deinstitutionalization process. The trial judge found that the proposed ward qualified pursuant to the guardianship statute for appointment of a guardian, but expressed concern that there was no real emergency medical care problem and that appointment of a guardian in a case such as this one would simply encourage the MRDDA to file petitions in other cases, and that there was "no real crisis going on" to justify the guardianship.

Number of Americans With Long-Term Care Insurance Unchanged from 2002
More than 85% of American older than 45 years old do not have long-term insurance, according to a second annual survey released by the Long-Term Care Financing Strategy Group, Washington D.C., a think tank affiliated with the American Health Care Association.  The study, entitled "Index of Long-Term Care Uninsured," shows the number, at 82 million, has not changed since last year¹s study.  The study reveals that approximately 16% of those aged 65 and over have private long-term care insurance.

Summary of American Jobs Creation Act of 2004
Congress has recently passed the American Jobs Creation Act of 2004 and the president has indicated that he will sign it.

Treasury Eyeing Estate Tax Shelters Involving Charities
Treasury officials speaking at the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants conference on