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| Legacy Lounge How can we do a better job passing on wealth--not just money, but vision, purpose, values, perspective, family stories, and so much more Let's talk about it! The Legacy Lounge is a place for people involved in the legacy- and estate-planning process to help first-generation donors maximize the effectiveness of their gifts (again: not just money, but vision, purpose, values, perspective Let's grow NOTICE: In order to comply with COPA (Child Online Protection Act) regulations, and in order to eliminate as much spam posting as possible, we have had to institute a registration process for you to participate in forum discussions. Please take the few minutes necessary to identify yourself so that you can take part in discussions! Until you do register, I'm sorry, but you will not be permitted to post. Thank you. |
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Administrator
Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: Colorado
Posts: 10
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It was just two weeks ago that I wrote about advanced giving strategies that could potentially offer you tax deductions worth as much or more than your gift.
I was shocked only a week later when I received an email from my father asking whether my wife and I--or any of my siblings--might be able to help our youngest brother with a "problem"--specifically, providing a place to store a concert grand piano Dad had bought almost 40 years ago and had then given to our brother, on one week's notice, not quite eight years ago. "If you want it, you need to arrange to have it picked up and out of my house before next Tuesday," Dad had told Brother back at Christmas of 2001. The piano, all of us in the family knew, was supposed to be worth several tens of thousands of dollars. On the other hand, Brother has never been wealthy; he didn't have the cash necessary to move the instrument from Dad's home in Virginia down to Brother's home in Florida. And, to top it off, the house he and his wife owned at the time was quite small for such a large instrument. The piano would completely dominate--indeed, fill--their living room. But when the offer was made . . . especially considering the manner in which Dad made it . . . Brother and sister-in-law decided to accept. Scroll forward several years to late 2007. Brother had suffered several serious financial setbacks. Meanwhile, his mother-in-law became a widow and came to need direct personal care. So Brother and sister-in-law decided to move cross-country to live with her mother--a win-win-win situation all around. But the piano! What were they going to do with it? Eventually, they found a college in Southern California that was willing to take the piano as a "loaner" for several years while also covering the costs associated with insuring and maintaining it. So off they shipped the piano to said college back in early 2008. And then, last week Wednesday (October 28), Dad writes: Quote:
But confusion, too. Hadn't Dad given the piano to Brother? So why was he inserting himself in the process? And why were we hearing about this need from him and not from Brother? And the way he wrote: It wasn't at all clear whether he had, in fact, truly given the instrument to Brother or whether he had only "kind of" given it, but (mentally) held control. I wrote to our CPA: Quote:
He described how the piano had been neglected and almost abandoned. "Nobody" wanted it. "The wealthy, highly educated families in _______, with their large homes, could afford a better-looking instrument, and the poor folks in _______ [where our family lived] didn't have space for a 'monster'!" I wrote to Dad: Quote:
Quote:
What might have happened if, knowing he would eventually be moving from his home . . . --What might have happened if, at least months—and maybe years before his move, Dad had broached the topic of the piano . . . with Brother and, perhaps, with the rest of us? Might Brother and his wife have found themselves, actually, in a better position than they did as, despite their meager income, they invested thousands of dollars (which they had to pay back over time) first moving the piano to Florida, then insuring it, then paying for the move across the country to the college in southern California. . . ? And now, years later: Brother found himself, again, suddenly “up a creek without a paddle” . . . and he, too, hadn’t really thought through the advantages and disadvantages of loaning this instrument to an institution rather than donating it or selling it for cash. And so, now--a week ago--he was actually in a position where, on a couple of occasions, he said, “If the school won't take it, I may have to tell them to just put it out with the trash.” And then there was this matter of tax deductions: Dad, having waited until his earning years are long over, would gain almost no tax advantage by donating the piano to a charity. And Brother, certainly, would gain no benefit by donating it. (No income = no income tax.) As it happened, rather than offering to store the piano--only to perpetuate the multiplied "emergency" rescues for this instrument--I was able to find out from our CPA that, if Brother gives me the piano, I can donate it, even the next day, and claim a tax deduction based on the full fair market value as determined by a properly licensed appraiser. Considering the small percentage of the selling price that any piano broker is willing to give a seller, and considering my tax bracket, the deduction I am likely to receive for such a donation will be worth far more than anything Brother could get even by selling it at full retail through a piano dealer. . . . So that is what we are planning to do: I've been given a piano. We have found a recipient charity that wants to use the piano for its exempt purpose (in this case, the charity is a retirement center that has been looking desperately for a piano), and I will be making the donation to the charity. We have already committed to giving 50% of our AGI for this year, so the tax deduction will have to roll over to future years. But I expect I will be able, then, to give Brother the value of that tax deduction--cash that will do him and his wife a whole lot more good than that grand piano itself would have ever done them! ***** I tell this story partially to inspire you to think through: Am I (i.e., are you) or are my parents (i.e., your parents) hanging on to any possessions that could actually become more like albatrosses around the necks of the receiving generation? Any possessions whose transfer could cause heartache or disunity amongst members of the receiving generation? Do you have some stories you might be able to share of estate “gifts gone bad” . . . or that threatened to go bad except for some fortuitous circumstance or intervention? . . . Please share your stories! Others of us might learn from them. Or maybe you can share with the rest of us your concerns about items you can already see are likely to cause problems within your family if you and your parents--or, if you're from the donor generation, if you and your children--don't talk about them. May the rest of us help you answer some of the questions that bother you? Thanks for joining the discussion.
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John Husband to the wife of my youth (Proverbs 5:18) Father of four (plus three children-in-law); grandfather of five Author of Dating With Integrity |
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