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Legal Matters > Plan Peace of Mind
Rethinking Asset Protection
The most effective ways to minimize financial risks
over the long term may be surprising.
By DAVID B MANDELL, JD, MBA AND JASON M O’DELL, CWM
Too many physicians over the last decade have sought cookie-cutter asset
protection plans to give them some “peace of mind” that if they ever endure an outrageous malpractice case, they won’t lose everything. While we admire these doctors’ commitment to pro-actively managing their risk, we have to remind doctors we
speak with that all “asset protection plans” are not created equal. In fact, many will not even work if they ever are relied
on. Why is this? Essentially, it is because of a basic tenet of asset
protection: that any asset protection plan that will truly stand up if
challenged must have economic substance. Taken a step further, superior asset
protection planning would involve tools that are primarily used by people for
non-asset protection purposes. In this way, the best asset protection plan
involves tools typically not thought of as “asset protection tools.” In other words, “the best asset protection is not asset protection.”
JUST LIKE TAX PLANNING
While few physicians realize this crucial fact of asset protection planning, all
of the leading attorneys in the field know it quite well. In fact, we are not
alone—as tax attorneys and CPAs know, this adage is also just as true when it comes to
tax planning.
Simply put, when determining whether or not a particular transaction with
significant tax benefits was an illegitimate tax shelter or not, the IRS or tax
court typically uses a simple test—“Would a taxpayer have done this deal if not for the tax benefit?” In other words, they are asking whether or not this transaction was simply done
to save taxes or did it have another economic purpose? If there was such a
purpose, the transaction stands; if it was only tax-motivated, it fails.
This same test applies when evaluating whether a creditor protection tactic will
be upheld if ever challenged down the road. Here, the question is “did this transaction have an economic purpose… or was it simply done for asset protection purposes?” If you are using tools that millions of American use daily for non-asset
protection purposes, you can convincingly answer “yes.”
ASSET PROTECTION AS A SLIDING SCALE
In the three books either of us have written for doctors, we use a sliding scale
approach to evaluate asset protection techniques—with the lowest (-5) being an asset that is completely vulnerable and the
highest (+5) being an asset that cannot be taken by a creditor even in
bankruptcy. This is important to understand here because every (+5) asset
protection technique, whether in a personal or practice implementation, has
significant economic benefits to the client, irrespective of asset protection.
ASSET PROTECTION WHICH ISN’T
Which asset protection tools are not asset protection tools? Let’s examine a few of them briefly:
A. Qualified Retirement Plans: The term “qualified” retirement plan means that the retirement plan complies with certain Department
of Labor and Internal Revenue Service rules. You might know such plans by their
specific type, including pension plans, profit sharing plan, money purchase
plans, 401(k)s, or 403(b)s. Properly structured plans offer a variety of real
economic benefits: you can fully deduct contributions to these plans and funds
within them grow tax-deferred. In fact, this is likely why most medical
practices sponsor such plans.
What you may not know is that under federal bankruptcy law, and nearly every
state law, these plans are protected against lawsuits and creditor claims—enjoying (+5) protection status. IRAs are also (+5) protected in bankruptcy,
with some limits, although their state protection depends on the state. For
both, the overwhelming majority of millions of Americans who use qualified
plans and IRAs are not using them for asset protection purposes. This, then, is
a great example of attractive economic tools that just so happen to have
tremendous asset protection benefits as well.
B. Non-Qualified Retirement Plans: Non-qualified plans are relatively unknown to physicians, despite the fact that
most Fortune 1000 companies make non-qualified plans available to their
executives. These types of plans should be very attractive to physicians, as
employees are not required to participate and allowable contributions can be
much higher than with qualified plans, although not deductible. Once again,
non-qualified plans are generally not used for asset protection purposes, but
they may have such benefits—depending on how they are structured.
C. Captive Insurance Companies (CICs): CICs are used by many of the Fortune 1000, for a host of strategic reasons. In
this technique, the owners of a medical practice actually create their own
properly-licensed insurance company—to insure various types of risks of the practice. These can be economic risks
(that reimbursements drop), business risks (that electronic medical records are
destroyed), litigation risks (coverage for defense of harassment claims or HCFA
audits), and even medical malpractice (keeping some risk in the captive and
reinsuring the rest). If it is created and maintained properly, the CIC is like
any insurance company—established in a real economic arrangement with its insureds. Also, CICs can
enjoy tremendous creditor protection (+4/+5)—although they are almost never created for this purpose.
D. Cash Value Life Insurance (CVLI): CVLI policies are purchased by millions of Americans each year for their tax
benefits (generally, tax-free growth, pays income tax free heirs), for family
protection and for estate planning purposes. Nonetheless, in many states, the
cash value can enjoy the top (+5) protections. In this way, a physician can
purchase a product that is widely recognized as a part of a financial plan and
enjoy (+5) protections easily.
CONCLUSION
Too many physicians who have implemented generic “asset protection plans” may be disappointed if they are ever attacked—as they may be ignored by courts that see no economic substance. On the other
hand, those who implement techniques such as those described above may be
pleased—not only will their protection be upheld, but with the significant wealth they
may build along the way. END
David Mandell and Jason O’Dell are co-founders of the financial consulting firm O’Dell Jarvis Mandell and can be reached directly at 800-554-7233.
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UO magazine IS PACKED WITH ArticleS FOR PHYSICIANs + 100’s of Physician Practice Opportunities
Physicians receive a complimentary subscription (six issues)
Call 1-800-888-2047. UO Magazine is published by UO Inc. © 2008
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