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Jointly Owned Property
If you own property with another person as joint
tenants with right of survivorship, that is, not as
tenants in common, the property will pass directly to the
remaining joint tenant upon your death and will not be a
part of your probate estate. (It will, however, be a part
of your taxable estate.) Frequently, people (particularly
in old age) will cause bank accounts or securities to be
placed in the name of the owner with one or more children
or trusted friends as joint tenants with right of survivorship.
This is sometimes done as a matter of convenience to give
the joint tenant continuing access to accounts to pay bills.
It is important to realize that the ownership
of property in this fashion often leads to unexpected or unwanted
results. Disputes, including litigation, are common between the
estate of the original owner and the surviving joint tenant as
to whether the survivor's name was added as a matter of convenience
and/or management or whether a gift was intended. The planning
built into a well-drawn will may be partially or completely thwarted
by an inadvertently created joint tenancy that passes property
to a beneficiary by operation of law, rather than under the terms
of the will.
Many of these problems are also applicable to
institutional revocable trusts and "pay on death" forms of ownership
of bank, broker, and mutual fund accounts and savings bonds. Effective
planning requires knowledge of the consequences of each property
interest and technique.
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