Presentation at Gulf States FPA Regional Meeting

On February 4, 2011, Jeramie J. Fortenberry gave a presentation at the Gulf States Financial Planning Association meeting in Mobile, Alabama.  His presentation, The New Estate Tax Law: Changes and Opportunities, covered the ways in which the new Federal estate and gift tax legislation has changed the estate planning landscape for financial planners.  The Gulf States chapter is part of the nationwide network of chapters forming the backbone of FPA.  It is comprised of financial planners along the Gulf Coast of Mississippi, Alabama, and the Florida panhandle.

Fortenberry Selected for Mississippi Leadership in Law

Leadership in Law

Jeramie J. Fortenberry has has been selected by the Mississippi Business Journal as one of Mississippi’s Top 50 Attorneys for Leadership in Law “Class of 2010.”  The selection was made from a large pool of highly qualified nominees. The award is intended to honor the state’s most successful lawyers, taking into account both legal success and qualities of character that make only a few stand  out.

The awards dinner is Thursday, November 4 at 6:00 p.m. at The Hilton Jackson.  The Mississippi Business Journal will publish a special edition on November 22, 2010, to honor the recipients of this designation.

Fortenberry to Give Estate Planning Update for University of Mississippi

Jeramie J. Fortenberry will give the 2010 Estate Planning Update for the University of Mississippi’s 2010 Mississippi Law Update.  The 2010 Mississippi Law Update will be held at the Dunlieth Plantation in Natchez, Mississippi, and will offer up to 12 hours of Continuing Legal Education Credit, including 2 hours of ethics.

The 2010 Mississippi law update will cover ten substantive practice areas. Other speakers include Professor Ron Rychlak, Professor Hans Sinha, Alan Perry, Mike Malouf, Whit Rayner, Rick Patt, Tom Hood, Alison Vance, and Clarence Guthrie. More information is available here.

Fortenberry to Participate in State Asset Protection Sub-Group

Jeramie J. Fortenberry, the firm’s founder, will sit on the Asset Protection Sub-Group of the 2009 Business Reform Committee formed by the Mississippi Secretary of State.  Fortenberry was appointed in June to sit on the Trust Laws Study Group of that Committee, which will review and make proposals regarding Mississippi trust legislation.

Fortenberry’s sub-group will be responsible for making policy recommendations for Domestic Asset Protection Trusts.  DAPTs were first recognized in 1997 when Alaska enacted the first DAPT statute.  Until then, asset protection trusts were only available in foreign jurisdictions, where they attracted American dollars.  Once Alaska took the first step, other states quickly followed suit.  In just 10 short years, ten other states had enacted some form of DAPT.  States with some form of DAPT now include Alaska (1997), Delaware (1997), Nevada (1999), New Hampshire (2009), Rhode Island (1999), Utah (2003), Missouri (2004), Oklahoma (2004), South Dakota (2005), Tennessee (2007), and Wyoming (2007).

It has long been recognized that a person is free to include a spendthrift clause in a trust instrument that prohibits the beneficiary from transferring, assigning, or otherwise alienating his or her right to future payments of income or principal. This means that if the beneficiary is unable to pay a debt, the creditor will be unable to access trust assets to satisfy the debt (or even to collect upon a judgment) until those assets are paid to the beneficiary.

But this general rule assumes that the person who established the trust (the settlor) is not also the beneficiary.  In other words, the asset protection works only if the beneficiary is someone other than the trust creator.  DAPTs are a departure from this traditional rule in that they allow the trust creator to fund a trust for his or her own benefit and still shield the trust assets from creditors.

DAPTs are typically subject to exceptions to protect against situations that would violate public policy. For example, many DAPT statutes provide exceptions for transfers to DAPTs that are made in anticipation of insolvency or otherwise to defraud creditors (usually as determined under the Uniform Fraudulent Transfers Act).  Other common exceptions include domestic claims such as alimony or child support and, less commonly, tort claims.

Fortenberry will work with the other members of the Asset Protection Sub-Group to review legislation from other jurisdictions and make policy recommendations regarding Mississippi’s adoption of DAPT legislation.

Fortenberry Appointed to Mississippi Trust Laws Study Group

Jeramie J. Fortenberry, the firm’s founder, was recently appointed by Mississippi Secretary of State Delbert Hosemann to sit on the Trust Laws Study Group, a subsection of the 2009 Business Reform Study Group.

The Trust Laws Study Group, which will work under the guidance of the Policy & Research Division, is responsible for reviewing and updating Mississippi’s business laws and other laws related to the Secretary of State’s mission. The Trust Laws Study Group is composed of business professionals, attorneys, CPAs and members of the state legislature and judiciary, among others.

The purpose of the Trust Law Study Group is to study the area of Trust law and make recommendations on various policy proposals to the Mississippi legislature.  The Secretary of State’s Policy & Research Division will then prepare proposed legislation based on the Trust Law Study Group’s recommendations and meet with state legislators to educate them on the proposals, with a goal of adopting the proposals as Mississippi law.