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MYTH 21
THE JOINT BANK ACCOUNT CASE
JOINT ACCOUNTS DO NOT GIVE LEGAL CONTROL OVER A BUSINESS
Key Concept: Control and inheritance
Sub-Concept: Joint accounts do not transfer business authority
IRS or Law Link: Uniform Probate Code
https://www.uniformlaws.org/projects/probatecode
Case Study: Joint Bank Account Business Dispute
Summary:
- Joint accounts do not create legal authority to manage a business.
- Banks routinely freeze business accounts when an owner dies.
- Heirs cannot act until a court or trust document grants authority.
Key Takeaway and Action Steps:
Do not rely on joint accounts as part of a succession plan. Use trusts and operating agreements to name successor managers.
Hypothetical:
A daughter listed on her father’s joint bank account assumes she can run his business after he dies. The bank freezes the account because she has no legal appointment.
Tags: #BusinessSuccession #ProbateLaw
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MYTH 22
IRS v COINBASE
CRYPTO IS TRACKABLE, TAXABLE, AND NOT PRIVATE
Key Concept: Digital asset taxation
Sub-Concept: IRS treats crypto like property
IRS or Law Link: IRS Notice 2014-21
https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-drop/n-14-21.pdf
Case Study: IRS v Coinbase (2017)
Summary:
- The IRS compelled Coinbase to release user data.
- Crypto trades are taxed like stock sales.
- Unreported gains trigger audits and penalties.
Key Takeaway and Action Steps:
Report all crypto gains and losses. Maintain complete transaction records. Add crypto to trust planning and digital asset instructions.
Hypothetical:
An investor trades 200,000 dollars of crypto without reporting. The IRS audit starts after Coinbase hands over the user data.
Tags: #CryptoTax #IRSCompliance
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MYTH 23
UNITED STATES v ESTATE OF GERMAN
A REVOCABLE TRUST AVOIDS PROBATE BUT NOT ESTATE TAX
Key Concept: Trust taxation
Sub-Concept: Control equals estate inclusion
IRS or Law Link: IRC Section 2038
https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/26/2038
Case Study: United States v Estate of German (1982)
Summary:
- Revocable trust assets remain fully taxable in the estate.
- Control and revocation powers keep assets in the tax base.
- Families often confuse probate avoidance with estate tax planning.
Key Takeaway and Action Steps:
Use irrevocable trusts for tax reduction. Use revocable trusts for probate avoidance only.
Hypothetical:
A 5 million dollar home placed in a revocable trust is still taxed in the estate because the owner retained full control.
Tags: #EstateTax #TrustPlanning
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MYTH 24
ESTATE OF GALLO
NO PLAN CAN RESULT IN YEARS OF FAMILY LITIGATION
Key Concept: No-plan risk
Sub-Concept: Dying without documents triggers probate conflict
IRS or Law Link: Uniform Probate Code Section 3-112
https://www.uniformlaws.org/projects/probatecode
Case Study: Estate of Gallo
Summary:
- No will or trust led to family arguments and court battles.
- Probate court appointed a neutral administrator.
- Litigation fees consumed a large share of the estate.
Key Takeaway and Action Steps:
Create a will and a trust. Name successor trustees. Prevent court interference and family conflict.
Hypothetical:
Three siblings spend two years fighting over their father’s company, with more than 300,000 dollars lost to legal fees.
Tags: #ProbateRisk #EstatePlanning
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MYTH 25
ESTATE OF LINTON
THE IRS TAXES PAPER-ONLY GIFTS AS IF NO GIFT EVER HAPPENED
Key Concept: Gift completion
Sub-Concept: Transfers must have economic substance
IRS or Law Link: IRC Section 2511
https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/26/2511
Case Study: Estate of Linton (2012)
Summary:
- The family documented a gift but did not transfer real control.
- IRS treated the “gift” as incomplete.
- The entire asset was pulled back into the estate.
Key Takeaway and Action Steps:
Complete ALL steps of a gift. Transfer control, title, and economic rights. Substance beats paperwork.
Hypothetical:
Parents gift LLC units to their children but keep the checkbook. IRS taxes the entire LLC in their estate.
Tags: #GiftTax #SubstanceOverForm
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MYTH 26
ESTATE OF WHEELER
DEATHBED TRANSFERS ARE A RED FLAG FOR THE IRS
Key Concept: Timing rules
Sub-Concept: Transfers within 3 years can be clawed back
IRS or Law Link: IRC Section 2035(a)
https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/26/2035
Case Study: Estate of Wheeler
Summary:
- Gifts made close to death receive heavy IRS scrutiny.
- Transfers within 3 years can be included in the taxable estate.
- IRS denies last-minute attempts to avoid tax.
Key Takeaway and Action Steps:
Do planning early. Do not wait for medical decline. Avoid last-minute entity transfers.
Hypothetical:
An owner transfers a 10 million dollar LLC interest four months before death. IRS adds it back to the estate.
Tags: #EstateTax #IRC2035
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MYTH 27
ESTATE OF POWELL
SERVING AS TRUSTEE OF YOUR OWN IRREVOCABLE TRUST CREATES RISK
Key Concept: Retained control
Sub-Concept: Trustee powers can cause estate inclusion
IRS or Law Link: IRC Sections 2036 and 2038
https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/26/2036
Case Study: Estate of Powell (2017)
Summary:
- The mother was trustee of the trust holding her own assets.
- IRS included the trust assets in her taxable estate.
- Control over distributions destroyed the estate plan.
Key Takeaway and Action Steps:
Use an independent trustee. Remove personal control. Align the trust with estate freeze goals.
Hypothetical:
A man creates an ILIT but insists on being trustee. IRS pulls the entire 2.5 million dollar policy into his estate.
Tags: #TrustPlanning #RetainedControl
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MYTH 28
THE S CORPORATION CASE
A WILL CANNOT TRANSFER SHARES TO JUST ANY BENEFICIARY
Key Concept: S corporation eligibility
Sub-Concept: Only certain shareholders and trusts qualify
IRS or Law Link: IRC Section 1361
https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/26/1361
Case Study: S Corporation Eligibility Dispute
Summary:
- A will transferred S corp shares to an ineligible trust.
- S corp status terminated automatically.
- The company became subject to corporate taxation.
Key Takeaway and Action Steps:
Use QSSTs and ESBTs for S corp succession. Do not rely on a will. Pre-plan shareholder eligibility.
Hypothetical:
After death, shares fall into a non-qualifying trust and instantly terminate S corporation status.
Tags: #SCorpRules #SmallBusinessTax
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MYTH 29
HACKL v COMMISSIONER
NOT ALL GIFTS QUALIFY FOR THE ANNUAL EXCLUSION
Key Concept: Gift exclusions
Sub-Concept: Gifts must be present-interest gifts
IRS or Law Link: IRC Section 2503(b)
https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/26/2503
Case Study: Hackl v Commissioner (2003)
Summary:
- LLC units lacked immediate rights for the recipient.
- IRS denied the annual exclusion.
- Donor owed gift tax.
Key Takeaway and Action Steps:
Provide real rights to income or withdrawal. Use Crummey notices when needed for trust gifts.
Hypothetical:
A parent gifts LLC units but prohibits voting or distributions. IRS denies the exclusion because the child lacked immediate benefit.
Tags: #GiftTax #IRC2503
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MYTH 30
THOMPSON v COMMISSIONER
PERSONALLY OWNED IP IS STILL PART OF YOUR TAXABLE ESTATE
Key Concept: Intellectual property valuation
Sub-Concept: IP must be transferred properly to avoid inclusion
IRS or Law Link: IRC Section 2031
https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/26/2031
Case Study: Thompson v Commissioner
Summary:
- Personally owned trademarks and patents are estate assets.
- IRS includes all royalty and licensing rights.
- Registration alone does not provide tax protection.
Key Takeaway and Action Steps:
Assign IP to a trust or entity where ownership and control are separated. Plan licensing rights during life.
Hypothetical:
A creator owns a patent personally while the business uses it. IRS taxes the full patent and future royalty stream.
Tags: #IntellectualProperty #EstateTax





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