Vero Beach Estate Planning Attorney
E. Steven Lauer

Few activities are more important, yet more intimidating, than planning for your own long-term security and the continued well-being of your loved ones.

The complexities of estate laws can lead many people to put off this crucial task until it’s too late, but with competent legal help you can lay a solid foundation for protecting your life and preserving your future. As an experienced Vero Beach Estate Planning Attorney, I provide exceptional representation to clients throughout Florida in the following practice areas:
  • Estate Planning
  • Probate
  • Living Wills
  • Trusts
  • Powers of Attorney
  • Elder Law
  • Wills
  • Will Contest Litigation
  • Estate Litigation
  • Conservatorships
  • Guardianships
  • Estate Tax Returns
  • Private Annuities and Charitable Trusts
As a skilled Vero Beach Estate Planning Attorney, I work to ensure that your taxes are minimized and your assets are well-managed and distributed according to your wishes. The clients of my Firm include some of the wealthiest families in the country. However, we do not limit our practice to high-net-worth clients. We provide a broad range of services to all clients who need assistance with their assets.

"Estate planning" is the process of ensuring your family financial health by making certain that your assets are preserved, enhanced and protected during your lifetime and distributed according to your intentions after your death.

If you retain us to do estate planning for you, we first develop a financial statement with you which shows the nature and extent of your assets and their registration. These assets include your real estate, financial assets, business assets and retirement plans and life insurance.

We then ascertain your estate planning objectives. These objectives may be as simple as providing for your family or minimizing estate taxes or as complicated as providing trust for family members with special needs or for charitable beneficiaries.

We then make our recommendations about what documents you need and how your assets should be registered. These documents include Wills, Revocable Trusts, Insurance Trusts, Grantor Retained Annuity and Uni-trusts, Qualified Personal Residence Trusts, Charitable Remainder Annuity and Uni-trusts, Family Foundations, Family Partnerships and many other arrangements. For more information on these type of arrangements see the "Article" section of this site.

After your documents are executed and your assets properly registered, the estate planning process is not over. We periodically advise you of changes in the law that may effect your estate plan by newsletter or personal contact. If you have not reviewed your estate plan within a reasonable amount of time, we will contact you to remind you of the importance of updating your estate plan.

Elder Law:
Also included in the estate planning process is a review of who you would like to handle your affairs if you become incapacitated. Therefore, in addition to estate planning, we prepare Powers of Attorney, Advance Directives and Designations of Guardians for Minors. In addition, an important aspect of preserving your wealth is discussion of your health care arrangements in case of incapacity. We are prepared to discuss with the desirability of obtaining nursing home insurance and home health care insurance to defray the cost of these items upon incapacity.

If you have a family member with "special needs", we are experienced in preparing documents that will protect the members of your family without disqualifying them from receiving government benefits.

Trust and Estate Administration:
Hand-in-hand with estate planning goes the administration of your estate or trust upon your death. We not only have attorneys who are trained to assist you but also paralegals who devote all of their time to estate and trust administration and who are available to answer any questions during the process.

At the beginning of an estate or trust administration, we meet with your family and the administrator of your estate and trust to discuss the administration process in detail. We follow their initial discussion with a detailed letter or "blueprint" of the estate administration process which outlines all of the steps and who will be responsible for each item in the estate administration. We either prepare or assist in the preparation of necessary tax returns and assist the administrator in settling claims of creditors, paying administration expenses, dealing with tax agencies, making distributions and establishing trusts.

Tax Preparation:

Although we would be more than happy to deal with and work with your tax preparer, we provide a full range of tax preparation services, performed "in house" by our attorneys and staff. We prepare individual income tax returns (1040), federal estate tax returns (706), federal gift tax returns (709), fiduciary income tax returns (1041) and most state returns. We find that providing these services to our clients give us yearly contact which facilitates better estate and financial planning and "one-stop-shopping" for our clients.

Fiduciary Services:
Although we are pleased to work with a corporate fiduciary or a member of your family and guide them through the estate and trust administration process, we can also provide fiduciary services to our clients who need a professional but would prefer to deal with an individual rather then a corporation. In addition, naming a member of our firm as the Personal Representative or Trustee will allow members of your family to continue any investment advisory relationship that you may have since we do not provide investment advice. Some important functions that we provide as a fiduciary include meeting with the beneficiary and determining the beneficiary's financial needs, helping to chose an investment advisor and working with this investment advisor to achieve the investment objectives, making discretionary distributions decisions and balancing the needs of the current beneficiaries and the remainder beneficiaries.

Probate and Trust Litigation:
The potential of an inheritance brings out the worst in some people. As a result, we can assist you and your family in resolving conflicts before the Courts.

These conflicts can range from the academic such as obtaining instructions from a Judge regarding the interpretation of documents, to the emotional such as claims of "undue influence", "lack of testamentary capacity", and "tortious interference". We are experienced in handling both the defendant and the plaintiff side of these types of cases.

In the case of an heir or beneficiary who is attempting to set aside a Will or Trust for lack of testamentary capacity, undue influence or tortious interference, we will consider handling the case on a "contingent fee" arrangement so that you will only pay an attorney's fee only if there is a recovery.

If you or someone you know in Florida needs the assistance of an experienced Vero Beach Estate Planning Attorney, call Steven Lauer today at 866-691-7920, or complete the contact form provided on this site to schedule your initial consultation.




Practice Areas and Legal Definitions


Probate:
 
Probate is the legal process of transferring property following a person's death.  Although probate customs and laws have changed over time, the purpose has remained much the same: an individual formalizes his or her intentions as to the transfer of his or her property at the time of death (typically through a Will); his or her property is collected, certain debts are paid from the estate and the property is distributed accordingly.

Wills:

A Will is a written instrument containing directions on how the assets and property of the testator (individual creating the Will) shall be divided upon his or her death.  Wills can also contain instructions regarding the care of minor children, gifts to charity and formation of posthumous trusts.  In order for a Will to be legally valid, the testator must sign the Will in the presence of two witnesses and he or she must be mentally competent and not acting under duress or under the controlling influence of another.

Will Contest Litigation:

A Will Contest is a type of litigation that challenges the admission of a Will to probate.  Issues that are likely to spur the contesting of a Will include: 

  • the testator lacked mental capacity, i.e. was senile, delusional or of unsound mind at the time the documents were created;
  • the testator was subjected to fraud, coercion or undue influence during its creation and implementation;
  • there are ambiguities in the document or
  • the Will is a forgery or does not conform to legal requirements as to the number and nature of the witnesses.

If the Will is thrown out, the court, depending on state law and the specific facts and circumstances may disallow only the part of the Will that was challenged; throw out the entire Will, distributing the property as if the person died without a Will or use the last previous Will.

Trusts:
Trusts are estate-planning tools that can replace or supplement Wills and can also help manage property during life.  A trust manages the distribution of a person's property by transferring its benefits and obligations to different people.  Maintaining assets in a Trust often makes it easier to minimize taxes and leave a larger inheritance.  A Trust is also a way to provide a steady income to the Beneficiary over time (as opposed to distribution in a lump sum), thus reducing the Beneficiary's tax burden, allowing the Trust to grow through investment, and keeping assets free from creditors of the Trust beneficiary.  Trusts can also be established for the benefit of charitable organizations.

Probating Estates:

Estates are categorized as probate or non-probate property.  Probate property is property that is transferred by the provisions of a Will.  Non-probate property is property that is either jointly held and passes by right of survivorship, is directed by beneficiary designation such as an IRA or a life insurance policy, or passes according to the terms of a trust.

Estate Planning:

Good estate planning is more than just a simple Will.  It minimizes potential taxes and fees (including Federal and State gift and estate taxes), and sets up contingency planning to make sure wishes regarding health care treatment are followed before and after death.  A good estate plan also coordinates what happens to a home, investments, business, life insurance, employee benefits (such as a 401K plan) and other property in the event of disability or death.

Powers of Attorney:

Powers of Attorney are governed by the law of agency, a branch of common law concerned with the delegation of power from one person (the principal) to another (attorney-in-fact or agent).  When a person becomes incapacitated, the government or the court often steps in and appoints someone to represent and make legal decisions for the incapacitated person.  One of the ways to avoid government or court intervention and the appointment of a stranger to act as your guardian, is to use a Power of Attorney.  A Power of Attorney is a written document that can be limited in scope, or it can allow one person to give another the full power and authority to represent him or her.  There are two types of Power of Attorneys; one covering assets and one covering health care decisions.

Estate Litigation:

Estate litigation is a legal dispute usually initiated by someone who feels they did not receive all they were entitled to in a Will.  Wills can be challenged if it is suspected that the Will is not legally valid or if the person who was writing the Will was wrongly influenced while creating it.

Conservatorship:

A conservatorship is a court order that a person deemed fully or partially incapable be subject to the legal control of another person.  The conservator is responsible for the assets and finances of an incapacitated person.  Many jurisdictions use the term "guardian of the person" to refer to the same legal principle.  It may be necessary to petition a court to appoint a conservator for persons:

  • Who have physical or mental problems that prevent them from managing their own financial affairs;
  • Who have no person already legally authorized to assume responsibility for them; and
  • Where other kinds of assistance with financial management will not adequately protect them. 

Guardianship:
A guardianship is a legal relationship created by a court between a guardian and his ward, either a minor child or an incapacitated adult.  The guardian has a legal right and duty to care for the ward.  This may involve making personal decisions on his or her behalf, managing property or both.  Usually, a person has the status of guardian because the ward is incapable of caring for his or her own interests due to infancy, incapacity or disability.

Courts generally have the power to appoint a guardian for an individual in need of special protection.  There are different types of guardians that can be appointed.  A guardian with responsibility for both the personal well-being and the financial interests of the ward is a general guardian.  A person may also be appointed as a special guardian, having limited powers over the interests of the ward.  A guardian appointed to represent the interests of a person with respect to a single action in litigation is a guardian ad litem.

Estate Tax Returns:

The money and property you own when you die (your estate) may be subject to federal estate tax.  Most estates are not subject to the tax.  Only about 2% of all estates are subject to the estate tax.  An estate tax return generally will not be needed unless the estate is worth more than the applicable exclusion amount for the year of death.  The estate tax is technically a tax on the transfer of property to others, generally to children of a decedent.

Estate taxes are different from, and in addition to, probate expenses and final income taxes owed on income the decedent earned in the year of his or her death.  They also are separate from inheritance taxes that are collected by some states.

Most states impose their own estate taxes, usually as a "sponge tax" that piggybacks on the federal estate tax.  The federal estate tax allows each estate a tax credit for any state inheritance or estate taxes paid, up to a maximum dollar amount.

Private Annuities & Charitable Trusts:

In a private annuity trust, an owner transfers property to an irrevocable trust in exchange for a promise to make prescribed payments to the owner for his or her lifetime.  The trust then sells the property to a third party, the proceeds of which are invested to provide the payments promised to the owner.  On death, the remainder of the trust estate typically passes to the heirs of the property owner.  The trustee must be someone other than the property owner.

A charitable trust is somewhat similar to a private annuity trust, except that the owner transfers property to an irrevocable trust of which one or more charitable organizations will be beneficiaries.  The type of charitable trust most likely to be used is a charitable remainder trust, in which the owner retains an income interest for his or her lifetime.  The property can be sold by the trustee and the proceeds invested to provide the payments to the owner.  On death or after a specified term of years, the remainder of the trust estate passes to one or more designated charitable organizations.  Unlike a private annuity trust, the trustee can be the property owner.

If you or someone you know in Florida needs the assistance of an experienced Vero Beach Estate Planning Attorney, call Steven Lauer today at 866-691-7920, or complete the contact form provided on this site to schedule your initial consultation.







Professional Profile

If you or someone you know in Florida needs the assistance of an experienced Vero Beach Estate Planning Attorney, call Steven Lauer today at 866-691-7920, or complete the contact form provided on this site to schedule your initial consultation.

ADDRESS OF THE FIRM:
E. Steven Lauer, P.A.
3426 Ocean Drive
Vero Beach, FL 32964
Telephone: 866-691-7920
Fax: 772-234-4249

MEMBERS OF THE FIRM:

E. Steven Lauer

Steve Lauer was born in 1952 in St. Louis, Missouri. He was the valedictorian of the 1970 graduating class of Cocoa High School in Cocoa, Florida. He attended Duke University where he was the recipient of the Burlington Industries Scholarship for Management Science Students. He was a member of the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity and served as a member of the AB Duke Scholarship Selection Committee. Steve graduated from Duke University in 1974 with high honors and a degree in Management Science.

Upon graduation, Steve took the North Carolina Certified Public Accountants exam which he passed in 1974 on the first seating. He worked briefly as a Public Accountant for Dobson, Jones and Bjerning in Merritt Island, Florida on both audit and tax projects. In 2000, he became a North Carolina certified public accountant (CPA). His CPA certificate is currently “inactive”.

In September of 1974, Steve enrolled in the College of Law at the University of Florida. At the University of Florida he served as both a legal research and legal writing instructor and graduated with honors in 1976.

Steve practiced for eight years in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida with a “tax boutique” firm. His practice included all aspects of taxation, including estate planning, estate and trust administration, tax controversies, tax audits, retirement plan design, drafting and planning and other general tax matters. He was admitted to practice before the Tax Court in 1979 and was admitted to practice for the United States District Court, Southern District of Florida in 1980, the Eleventh and the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeal in 1981.

In 1983 Steve became Florida Bar Certified in Taxation with the first group of lawyers in Florida to be certified as specialists.

In 1985 Steve moved to Vero Beach, Florida and opened a small law office which specialized in Wills, Trusts, Estate and Taxation. During the next 17 years he practiced by himself, with a small local firm, and with a regional firm.

In 1994, Steve became certified by the Florida Bar in Wills, Trust and Estates.

Steve was a Director and Treasurer of the Riverside Theater, a Director, President and Volunteer-of-the-Year of the American Cancer Society. He has also been active in the First Presbyterian Church of Vero Beach, Florida as a Deacon and a member of the Endowment Committee.

Steve served as a Director, Secretary, Treasurer and President of both the Young Lawyers Division of the Broward County Bar and the Indian River County Bar Association. He was a past Director and Officer of the Estate Planning Council of Broward County.

He is active in the Rotary Club of Vero Beach as a member, Director, and current Vice President and in the Vero Beach Rotary’s Charity Foundation as a Director and current Secretary.  He serves as President of the Indian River Estate Planning Council.









Additional Questions or need further information?

Steven Lauer
E. Steven Lauer, P.A.
3426 Ocean Drive
Vero Beach, FL 32964
Telephone: 866-691-7920
Fax: 772-234-4249

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