If you are running a business, it’s easy to
prioritize estate planning less than your other business matters. After all, if
you’re facing challenges meeting next month’s payroll or your goals for growth
over the coming quarter, concerns over your potential incapacity or death can
seem far less urgent.
But the reality is considering what would happen
to your business in the event of your incapacity or when you die is one of your
most pressing responsibilities as a business owner. Although estate planning
and business planning may seem like separate tasks, they’re inexorably linked.
And given that your business is likely your family’s most valuable asset,
estate planning is crucial for your company’s continued success and your loved
one’s future well-being.
With a proper estate plan, your team, clients,
and family could avoid dire consequences if something should happen to you. Yet
these dangers can be easily mitigated using a few basic estate planning
strategies. To demonstrate why proper estate planning is so important for
business owners, here are four issues your company and family are likely to encounter
as a result of poor estate planning, along with the corresponding estate
planning solutions you can use to prevent and mitigate those issues.
Issue #1
If your estate plan consists of only a
Will, your estate — including your business and its assets — must go through
the court probate process when you die.
When creating an estate plan, most people
typically think of a Will. While it’s possible to leave your business to
someone in your Will, it’s far from the ideal option. Upon your death, all assets
passed through a Will must first go through the court process known as probate.
During probate, the court oversees your Will’s
administration to ensure your assets (including your business) are distributed
according to your wishes. The problem is, probate can take months, or even
years, to complete, and it can also be quite expensive, which can seriously
disrupt your operation and its cash flow. It’s also important to consider that
probate is a public process, potentially leaving your business affairs open to
competitors.
Plus, while your family and team may know how
to run your company without you, they might be able to access vital assets,
such as financial accounts, once probate is concluded. Even if they could
access all of the needed assets, the legal fees charged by the lawyers your
family will likely have to hire to help them navigate probate can quickly
deplete your company’s coffers.
Given the drawbacks associated with a Will, a better
way to ensure your business’s continued success following your death is through
a Trust: a Revocable Living Trust, an Irrevocable Trust, or some combination of
the two. A Trust is not required to go through probate, and all assets placed
within the Trust are immediately transferred to the person or persons of your
choice in case of your death or incapacity.
When you die, having your business held in a
Trust would allow for the smooth transition of control of your company without
the time and expense associated with probate. Plus, Trusts are not open to the
public, so your company’s internal affairs would remain private, and the
transfer of ownership can take place in your lawyer’s office instead of a
courtroom.
Finally, especially Irrevocable Trusts, can
help shield your business and its assets from creditors and lawsuits, which
could threaten your company with you out of the picture.
Issue #2
If you
become incapacitated by illness or injury and you haven’t legally named someone
to manage your business assets, the court will choose someone for you.
A Will only goes into effect when you die, so
it offers no protection for your business if you’re incapacitated by accident
or illness. With just a Will—or no estate plan at all—the court will appoint a
financial guardian or conservator to assume control of your business until you
recover.
Like probate, the court process associated
with guardianship can be long and costly. And whether the guardian is a family
member, employee, or outside professional, it’s doubtful that individual would
run your business exactly how you would want them to, and this can seriously
disrupt your operation. Worse yet, having a court-appointed guardian managing
your business affairs can lead to serious conflicts and strife within both your
team and family, especially if you’re out for a lengthy period.
One estate planning vehicle that can prevent
this is a durable financial power of attorney. A durable financial power of
attorney allows you to name the person you would want to run your business and
handle all of your other financial affairs if you ever become unable to do so
yourself. If you’re sidelined by illness or injury, this person will be granted
legal authority to handle your business affairs, such as managing payroll,
signing documents, and making financial decisions.
This not only minimizes the expense and delay
associated with the guardianship process, but it also ensures that while you
are incapacitated, your company and other financial interests will be managed
by someone you trust, rather than relying on the court to choose someone for
you.
Again, having a Trust and a named Trustee
would allow your business to be operated in the event of incapacity, without
the necessity for any court process.
Issue #3
If your
business partner dies and you don’t have a legal agreement that allows you to
purchase your partner’s share of ownership in your company, along with a source
of liquidity to fund that purchase, you could find yourself in business with
your partner’s heirs.
Suppose you share ownership of your business
with one or more other people. In that case, it’s crucial that you have a
legally binding plan designating what would happen to each partner’s ownership
interests should one of you leave the company, get divorced, die, or become
incapacitated. Without such a plan in place, along with the funds needed to
execute that plan, many potential
problems and conflicts can arise.
To prevent such conflicts, you should create a
buy-sell agreement. A buy-sell agreement outlines exactly what would happen to
your business if an owner leaves the company for any number of reasons or when
one of the owners dies, becomes incapacitated or gets divorced.
For example, a buy-sell agreement can ensure
that should certain triggering events occur—like a partner’s retirement, death,
or permanent incapacity—the remaining owners can purchase that partner’s share
of the business. In this way, an effective buy-sell agreement can prevent you
from dealing with new partners you didn’t count on. At the same time, a
buy-sell can help prevent your loved ones from getting stuck owning a business
they don’t want and can’t sell.
In addition to having a buy-sell agreement in
place, you will also need a source of funding that allows the surviving owners
to buy out the deceased partner’s shares. Most cases, the best way to fund your
buy-sell is by purchasing life insurance.
Issue #4
If you
name a family member to run your company after your death and you don’t provide
them with a detailed plan, your business can be ruined by just a few poor
decisions.
There are countless stories of family members
assuming control of multi-million-dollar businesses and running things into the
ground in just a short span of time. If such massive fortunes can be squandered
so quickly, it’s doubtful that smaller operations like yours will fare much
better.
Even if your successor doesn’t destroy your company,
he or she can cause serious conflicts among your staff, clients, and family
simply by managing a business radically different than yours. For this reason,
simply naming a successor to take the reins in your absence is not enough.
A comprehensive business succession plan can
help ensure your company doesn’t fall apart when you pass on. Beyond simply
naming a successor, such plans provide stability and security by allowing you
to lay out detailed instructions for how the company should be run.
From specifying how ownership should be
transferred and providing rules for compensation and promotions to establishing
dispute resolution procedures, an effective succession plan can provide the new
owner with a roadmap for your company’s continued success following your death
or retirement.
Secure your business, your
legacy, and your family’s future
If you haven’t taken the time to create a
proper estate plan, your business is missing one of its most essential
components. During our Life & Legacy Planning Process, we will work with
you to create a comprehensive estate plan to ensure the company and wealth
you’ve worked so hard to build will survive—and thrive—no matter what happens
to you. By working with us, you can rest assured that your business and legacy
will benefit the people you love most.
Contact us today to get started.
This article is a service of Ganvir Law, Personal
Family Lawyer™. We offer a complete spectrum of legal services for businesses
and can help you make the wisest choices on how to deal with your business
throughout life and in the event of your death. We also offer a Business
Strategy Session for an ongoing business, which includes a review of all the
legal, financial, and tax systems you need for your business. Call us today to
schedule.
The content is
sourced from Personal Family Lawyer® for use by Personal Family Lawyer® firms,
a source believed to be providing accurate information. This material was
created for educational and informational purposes only and is not intended as
ERISA, tax, legal, or investment advice. If you are seeking legal advice
specific to your needs, such advice services must be obtained on your own
separate from this educational material.