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Report
From Counsel: Fall, 2002
- When
Military Duty Calls Employees
- New
Estate Planning Technique
-
Cybersquatting
- Tax
Credits for Historic Preservation
- CASE
BY CASE: Joint Bank Accounts
- Lost
Healthcare Coverage
- Summer,
2002 Topics: Estate
Planning with the Family limited Partnership; Clickwrap Agreements;
Fair Labor Standards Act; Starting a Business? Get an EIN; Landlords
and Credit Checks; Case by Case.
-
Winter 2002 Topics: Small Businesses
and Job Discrimination, Case by Case: Baseball bat injury,saving
for college can be an estate planning tool, Less paperwork for
employees, Landlords, Tenants, and satellite dishes; Freelancers'
articles are not free.
- Fall
2001 Topics: Federal
Tax Relief; Case by Case: On-call duty; Guidance Counselor Liability;
To
Compete or Not to Compete;Beware of Identity Theft;Towns vs. Towers;(Over)regulation
of Wetlands
- Summer
2001 Topics:
What is Intellectual Property?, Case by Case: Homeowners are covered,
Golf win!, Employee
or Independent Contractor?; Websites
and Jurisdiction; Estate
Planning: New Rules for IRA Withdrawals; Tax
Treatment of Vacation Homes.
- Spring
2001 Topics: Home is Where the Business Is; Cases by Case:
Employee Benefits,
UPS, EPA; New Lead Paint Rules; Disability Guidance for Employers;
Estate Planning: Stretch Your IRA
- Winter
2001 Topics: Contingent
Workers, Real
Estate: Appraiser Liability,Charitable
Remainder Trusts, Credit
Reporting, Electronic
Signatures,To
Err is Human, To Forgive is Taxable, Legal
Lingo
- Fall
2000 Topics: Business
Entity Basics, Digital Audio Recording, Sexual
Harrassment in Employment, OSHA Telecommuting Rules, Estate
Planning, Assumption
of Risk, FDIC Insurance Pitfalls
- 1998-2000
Archives: Report from Counsel
- Spring
1999 Topics:
- Wills
& Trusts Seminars
- Legal
News
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WHEN
MILITARY DUTY CALLS EMPLOYEES
In
light of the recent call to active duty received by thousands
of United States military reservists, employers and employees
alike need to know their obligations to each other when employees
serve in the uniformed services. The reemployment rights of military
members were revised by Congress in 1994. The main thrust of the
legislation is to guarantee the rights of military service members
to take a leave of absence from their civilian jobs for active
military service and to return to their jobs with accrued seniority
and other protections.
The
federal law applies to all Armed Forces members, including the
Reserves, National Guards, the commissioned corps of the Public
Health Service, and any others designated by the President during
a war or an emergency. Employees of both private and public employers
are protected when they have embarked on and have been honorably
discharged from military service consisting of active duty, inactive
duty training, full-time National Guard duty, or absences for
fitness examinations. Unlike some other federal employment statutes,
the law on reemployment rights of individuals in the Armed Services
has no minimum number of employees for there to be coverage.
An
employer is prohibited from using a person's military service
or application for such service as a motivating factor in any
adverse employment action against that person. Nor can an employer
retaliate against an employee who participates in the reporting,
investigation, or filing of claims asserting that the employer
violated the federal statute.
To
receive the benefit of the statutory rights and protections, an
employee generally must give the employer advance oral or written
notice of military service. Exceptions to this requirement are
recognized when giving such notice would be impossible, unreasonable,
or contrary to military necessity.
Employees
leaving their jobs for military service lasting less than 31 days
are entitled to continued health insurance coverage at the same
cost, if any, that active employees would pay. For service lasting
more than 31 days, employees may elect to pay for continuation
of their health coverage for up to 18 months, or until their reemployment
rights expire, whichever comes first. Upon returning to work after
military service, an employee is entitled to immediate health
insurance coverage, even if returning employees usually face a
waiting period.
For
purposes of calculating retirement benefits, a period of military
service is the equivalent of time on the job. The returning armed
services member has a right to any pension benefits that accrued
before the military service began, as well as any additional benefits
that were reasonably certain to accrue during the employee's absence.
Employees serving their country in uniform must be treated as
active participants in benefit plans, rather than as having had
a break in service while they were away from work.
When
a period of military service has ended, the returning employee
has a right to reemployment, subject to some conditions and restrictions.
Generally, the cumulative length of military service must not
have exceeded five years. In addition, an employee must apply
for reemployment within time periods that increase in duration
with the length of uniformed service. Similarly, depending on
the length of military service, the employee must be given the
position he or she is qualified for and would have held but for
the military service, or a position of like seniority, status,
and pay.
The
reemployment obligation will not apply if there has been such
a change in circumstances during an employee's absence that rehiring
would be impossible or unreasonable. Employers bear the burden
of showing such exceptional circumstances, however. Courts can
be expected to construe this and other parts of the reemployment
law in favor of returning service members, so as to better achieve
the statute's purpose of encouraging noncareer military service.
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NEW
ESTATE PLANNING TECHNIQUE
When
an individual dies, there is the possibility that his or her estate
will be subject to the federal estate tax. However, only estates
exceeding a certain level in value are subject to this tax. That
level is now set at $1 million for persons dying in the years
2002 and 2003. The current $1 million exclusion amount is based
on what is called the "unified credit against estate tax." In
the case of an unmarried person's death, the application of the
unified credit is straightforward. In 2002 and 2003, an unmarried
person can leave the $1 million exclusion amount tax-free to whomever
he or she wishes. Similarly, each spouse of a married couple is
entitled to leave the exclusion amount tax-free at his or her
death.
In
the case of a married couple, estate planning steps can be taken
to insure the maximum use of the unified credit. The typical situation
is where each spouse (assuming, for purposes of the example, the
death of the first spouse in 2002 or 2003) has an estate worth
something less than the $1 million exclusion amount. If the husband's
estate is worth $750,000, for instance, and he dies first, his
estate will escape the estate tax because its value is below the
exclusion level, but the $1 million exclusion amount will not
be fully used by his estate. The ideal would be to move assets
from the wife's estate to the husband's estate so as to bring
his estate to the $1 million level. This would allow the full
use of the exclusion in the husband's estate and would reduce
the value of the wife's estate so that, given the likely increase
in the value of the wife's assets following the husband's death,
the wife's estate may be kept below the $1 million exclusion amount
at her death.
There
is a new estate planning technique that accomplishes that goal
without the need for an actual gift from the wife to the husband
in order to bring the value of his estate to $1 million. The technique,
which utilizes a "credit shelter trust," requires the couple to
establish a joint revocable trust that becomes irrevocable upon
the first spouse's death and gives that spouse the power to dispose
of the trust's assets as he or she chooses by will.
It
is crucial that the spouses grant each other "general powers of
appointment" so that property in the trust from the surviving
spouse is treated as coming from the deceased spouse. The deceased
spouse's will would direct that an amount from the trust needed
to bring the value of his or her estate to the $1 million exclusion
level is to be placed in a credit shelter trust contained in his
or her will for the express purpose of using the entire $1 million
exclusion amount. Thus, where the husband dies first and had a
gross estate of $750,000, the terms of the joint revocable trust
established by both spouses and the husband's will would place
$1 million in the husband's credit shelter trust ($750,000 from
the husband and $250,000 from the surviving spouse).
It
is important to note that this technique was approved by the IRS
in a "private letter ruling" and, therefore, general acceptance
by the IRS is not guaranteed. Because of the complexity of the
technique, the steps outlined above should not be taken without
consulting a qualified professional.
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CYBERSQUATTING
A
small partnership whose sole line of business appears to have
been registration of hundreds of Internet domain names registered
an Internet address name that was virtually identical to the name
of a famous winery. When the winery got nowhere with demands that
the domain name be released or transferred to it, it sued under
the federal Anticybersquatting Consumer Protection Act (ACPA).
Cybersquatting is the registration of a domain name of a well-known
trademark by someone who does not hold the trademark but hopes
to profit from selling the name back to the trademark owner.
Unfazed
by the lawsuit, the partnership went on the offensive. On a website
that used the name in dispute, the defendant published under the
heading "Whiney Winery" a discussion of the lawsuit and an attack
on the winery and corporations generally. This online response
to being sued was the first and only time that the registrant
of the disputed domain name actually used it.
A
federal court awarded a judgment to the winery under the ACPA.
There was no question that the winery had a valid trademark that
was famous and distinctive, and that the domain name registered
by the defendant was identical or confusingly similar to the mark.
The defense rested instead on the contention that the partnership
did not have the bad-faith intent to profit from another's mark,
as is required for liability under the ACPA.
The
court weighed various factors that go into deciding if "bad-faith
intent to profit" is shown, and the partnership did not fare well.
When it registered the domain name, it had no intellectual property
rights in the name, and it never had used the name in a legitimate
offering of goods or services. Although it had not yet offered
to sell the domain name to the winery, it had made such offers
to sell names to other trademark owners, generally accepting no
less than $10,000 per name. The partners admitted that they hoped
the winery eventually would contact them so that they could "assist"
the winery in some way. The icing on the cake in establishing
bad faith was the hosting of a website and using the winery's
trademarked name as a forum for attacking the winery's goodwill
and tarnishing its trademark.
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TAX
CREDITS FOR HISTORIC PRESERVATION
For
over 25 years the federal Government has been using tax incentives
to help preserve historic buildings. Originally, federal law allowed
accelerated depreciation on rehabilitated buildings, but subsequent
changes have made preservation and revitalization efforts even
more attractive to taxpayers. Today, there is a general business
credit equal to 20% of qualified rehabilitation expenses for a
certified historic structure, or a 10% tax credit for the qualified
rehabilitation of nonhistoric, nonresidential buildings first
placed into service before 1936. Eligibility for the tax incentives
is determined by the National Park Service. Tax credits are often
more beneficial to taxpayers than deductions, since every dollar
of a tax credit reduces the amount of income tax owed by one dollar.
The
20% credit for the rehabilitation of a certified historic structure
applies to commercial, industrial, agricultural, rental, or residential
properties, but not properties used exclusively as the owner's
private residence. A certified historic structure must be a building,
as opposed to another type of structure. To have the required
historic status, the building must be either listed individually
in the National Register of Historic Places or located in a registered
historic district and certified as being of historic significance
to the district.
Eligibility
for the 20% credit also depends on meeting some additional requirements.
For example, the building must be depreciable, that is, used in
a trade or business or held to produce income. The rehabilitation
must be substantial, generally defined as entailing expenditures
over a two-year period exceeding the greater of $5,000 or the
adjusted basis of the building and its structural components.
Qualified rehabilitation expenses include such items as architectural
and engineering fees, site survey and development fees, legal
expenses, and other construction-related costs, so long as they
are added to the basis of the property, are reasonable, and are
related to services performed.
The
owner of the rehabilitated building must hold it for five years
after completion of the rehabilitation, or pay back all or part
of the 20% credit. A sale in the first year means that the entire
credit is recaptured. The recapture amount is reduced by 20% per
year for properties held between one and five years.
The
10% credit for nonhistoric buildings constructed before 1936 shares
some of the requirements for the 20% credit, such as that the
rehabilitation be substantial and the property be depreciable.
However, only buildings rehabilitated for nonresidential uses
qualify for the 10% credit. In addition, so that the identity
of the original building is not lost in the process, projects
undertaken for the 10% credit must meet specific tests based on
retention of minimum percentages of the building's walls and internal
structural framework.
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CASE
BY CASE
Joint
Bank Accounts
An
elderly doctor and his daughter opened a joint bank account, the
money in which would go to the surviving account holder if the
other one died. Nine years later, when the doctor was in declining
health, his wife asked to be added to the account so that she
could pay bills. Based on the signatures of the doctor and his
wife, but not the daughter, the bank added the wife to the account.
Over a one-month period, the wife then wrote many checks on the
account, totaling over $100,000. The biggest check, for $75,000,
was written, cashed, and deposited to the wife's own account on
the very day her husband died.
The
daughter sued the bank, claiming it was liable to her for recognizing
a new party to the joint account without the consent of all parties
to the account. A state supreme court sided with the bank. First,
the documents that comprised the contract between the bank and
the account holders included a statement that each owner was the
agent of any other owners for purposes of endorsements, deposits,
withdrawals, and conducting business for the account. This language
was broad enough to give the doctor power to add his wife as a
new party to the account without his daughter's knowledge or consent.
Second, a statute on joint accounts similarly made each party
to an account the agent for other account holders, although the
statute was silent on the method for adding a new party to an
account. The bank had not breached its contract when it recognized
the doctor's wife as a new party to the account based solely on
the doctor's signature.
This
decision highlights the pitfalls that can accompany joint bank
accounts. Allowing each party to a joint account to exercise full
authority over the account is flexible and convenient, but the
cost of these advantages is loss of control. The exposure to this
risk is widespread, as joint account contracts typically have
language like that used in this case.
Alternative
methods for managing money make it more difficult for any individual
to raid accounts to the detriment of co-owners. These include
powers of attorney, revocable living trusts, and "agency" or "convenience"
accounts that resemble general powers of attorney but are confined
to specific bank accounts. Seek the advice of legal counsel before
deciding which of these options is most appropriate in a specific
situation.
Closed
Streets Mean Lost Profits
The
law of torts is about apportioning risks and allocating the burden
of loss. One state's highest court wrestled with these issues
in a case that arose when a high-rise building collapsed during
a large construction project.
The
plaintiffs were businesses, from hot dog vendors to large law
firms, who suffered no physical injuries to persons or property
as a result of the collapse, but who lost income when city officials
closed heavily traveled streets in the vicinity of the accident.
The defendants were the owner, tenant, and managing agent of the
building that collapsed.
It
is beyond dispute that a landowner who engages in activities that
may cause injury to persons on adjoining property owes those persons
a duty to take reasonable precautions to avoid injuring them.
On the other hand, the court had never ruled that a landowner
owes a duty to protect an entire urban neighborhood against purely
economic losses, and it refused to do so in the case before it.
Businesses in the area may well have suffered purely economic
losses due to the collapse, but the court saw no satisfactory
way "geographically" to distinguish among them.
The
businesses also were unsuccessful in claims based on a public
nuisance theory. A public nuisance is conduct that substantially
interferes with the exercise of a common right of the public.
That claim's downfall was attributable to the principle that a
private person or business can recover damages for a public nuisance
only by showing a special injury beyond that suffered by the community
at large. While the degree of harm suffered by the plaintiffs
may have been unusual, the harm was not different in kind from
that experienced by the rest of the community.
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Lost
HealthCare Coverage
Shortly after he was fired from his job, Monty got married and left
town for a three-week honeymoon. While he was away, his former employer
sent him a notice about his right under a federal law, called COBRA
for short, to elect to continue his health-care insurance coverage.
COBRA requires that such a written notice be provided within 14
days of a termination from employment, but neither the statute nor
regulations spell out what adequate notice entails.
In
Monty's case, he never got the notice, which was sent by certified
mail, return receipt requested. When Monty went to the post office
to claim the letter, postal workers could not find it. Eventually,
the COBRA notice was found, but then it was returned to the sender
with an erroneous indication that Monty never claimed it. By that
time, Monty had begun a new job and was receiving treatment for
a new medical condition. His new employer's insurer denied coverage
for this treatment as a preexisting condition. That left Monty without
coverage for significant medical expenses.
Monty
was unsuccessful when he sued his former employer under the Employment
Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) on the ground that it had
not given him the required written notice about COBRA insurance
coverage. Although it was through no fault of his own that Monty
never received the notice, his former employer had made a good-faith
attempt to get the written notice to him, and that was all that
the law requires. The employer used certified mail, which is designed
to enhance the prospects for an individual's receipt of delivery,
and it was not responsible for the letter going undelivered.
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