Category Archives: The Slight Edge and Structured Settlements

Texas Attorney General discusses his own structured settlement

“Attorney General Greg Abbott, paralyzed by a falling oak tree in 1984, will receive more than half a million dollars this year from a legal settlement that guarantees him a six-figure yearly income for the rest of his life.

Now the front-running candidate for Texas governor, Abbott in August discussed the terms of his multimillion-dollar-lawsuit agreement for the first time in an exclusive interview with The Texas Tribune. His campaign also provided a copy of the 1986 settlement to the Tribune.”

Written August 2, 2013 by Jay Root, The Texas Tribune.

Find the full article here:  http://www.texastribune.org/2013/08/02/greg-abbott-gets-millions-lawsuit-proceeds/.

Max Baucus, Doug Buxbaum, and Structured Settlements

“This child’s story is but one of many in which this structured settlement has created financial security.”

Thanks to the NSSTA for the below blog post.

“For the past 30 years, Montana attorney Doug Buxbaum has been involved in some of that state’s largest medical negligence and wrongful death cases. A name partner at Buxbaum Daue & Fitzpatrick in Missoula, Mr. Buxbaum has been included in The Best Lawyers in America listing for more than a decade.

Earlier this year, Best Lawyers named him “Lawyer of the Year” in the Missoula, Montana area in the field of personal injury. ”

See below for this interesting article by Doug Buxbaum.

http://missoulian.com/news/opinion/columnists/sen-baucus-greatest-achievement/article_d9239756-ceb2-11e2-ad82-001a4bcf887a.html

 

Super Lawyer discusses structured settlements

California “Super Lawyer” Erik Peterson discusses brain injury cases, special needs trusts, and structured settlements:

My thanks to NSSTA for this post.

Making ends meet on healthcare

One of the key long-term concerns of many accident survivors involves finding acceptable and affordable health insurance.  Two news stories this week show how daunting this task is and point out the vital need for accident victims to ensure regular (and significant) funding to cover their healthcare needs.

HealthcareThis article written and posted by National Structured Settlements Trade Assocation –www.nssta.com.

For a free NSSTA handout about post-accident financial strategies, please click here.

Start with indications that many employees are having their weekly hours cut so they fall below the coming federal standard to qualify for employer-sponsored health coverage, according to this new survey from the International Foundation of Employee Benefit Plans.

One in six employers (16%) have adjusted or plan to adjust their employees’ hours so that fewer reach the 30-hour per week level necessary to qualify for healthcare.  Also, one quarter of employers (25%) surveyed reported expanding High-Deductible Health Plans (HDHPs).

As this recent Los Angeles Times article points out, HDHPs do have advantages including that they are generally inexpensive.  But the article notes a key drawback.  For people “who don’t have a lot of cash on hand, these policies can be a poor choice. Often, they hesitate to seek care when they become ill or injured.”

The second news story involves a sobering healthcare survey from Fidelity Investments.  A 65-year-old couple retiring in 2013 without employer-provided retiree health insurance will need about $220,000 to pay for their medical-related expenses.

This is down from last year, according to Fidelity, primarily due to changes in demographics and smaller payment increases to doctors and hospitals.  But it is obviously still a daunting figure.

Equally important, as Fidelity notes, this does not include the potential costs of long term care.  “The estimate… does not include any costs associated with nursing home care and applies to retirees with traditional Medicare insurance coverage,” says the report.

Both news stories show the need for everyone – especially the accident survivor needing extensive rehabilitation or medical care – to guard their financial futures.  Nothing does that better than a structured settlement, whose payments are not subject to reductions due to interest rate or market changes and which is backed by exceptionally safe “investment grade” assets.

http://www.nssta.com/blog/making-ends-meet-healthcare

Legal Update: U. S. Supreme Court Strikes Down State Medicaid Recovery Law Statute (2013)

In Wos v. EMA, U.S. Sup. Ct., No. 12-98., the U.S. Supreme Court struck down North Carolina’s irrebuttable presumption of a one-third medical recovery for purposes of reimbursing state Medicaid.

This legal update is published by Providio MediSolutions (www.providiomedisolutions.com), which provides a broad spectrum of Medicare Secondary Payer Act (MSPA) compliance solutions for law firms, defendant insurers, third party administrators, self-insureds and, of course, Medicare beneficiaries themselves.

U.S. SUPREME COURT STRIKES DOWN STATE MEDICAID RECOVERY LAW STATUTE

Analyst’s Comment provided by John McCulloch, J.D.

In this analyst’s opinion, the Supreme Court effectively and efficiently cut through a wide variety of justifications the state of North Carolina used in justifying their one-third presumption. Since the decision in Ahlborn, a number of states have relied upon presumptive allocations in their Medicaid recovery statutes, feeling that Ahlborn gave them room to create such a scheme. These statutes have frustrated public policy in favor of settlement by making it difficult, and at times impossible, for parties to settle lawsuits knowing that a large portion of the settlement, including amounts for pain and suffering, would be taken away by state Medicaid. This decision will have long ranging implications in those states because this is a U.S. Supreme Court ruling. Under the Supremacy Clause, where state and federal law directly conflict, state law must give way.

Case Facts

E. M. A. was born with multiple serious birth injuries and her parents settled her medical malpractice suit with damages estimated at $42 million. The suit was settled for $2.8 million, due in part to insurance policy limits. The settlement did not allocate between medical and nonmedical compensation. In approving the settlement, the state court placed one-third of the recovery into escrow pending a judicial determination of the amount of the Medicaid lien owed by E. M. A. to the State. The state of North Carolina had a statutory presumption of one-third of a tort recovery being attributable to medical expenses.

E. M. A. and her parents then sought declaratory and injunctive relief in Federal District Court, claiming that the State’s reimbursement scheme violated the Medicaid anti-lien provision as held in the Supreme Court’s decision in Arkansas Dept. of Health and Human Servs. v. Ahlborn. The Fourth Circuit vacated and remanded, concluding that the State’s statutory scheme could not be reconciled with Ahlborn. The US Supreme Court granted certiorari and held in a 6-3 vote that the Federal anti-lien provision preempts North Carolina’s irrebuttable statutory presumption that one-third of a tort recovery is attributable to medical expenses.

Case Holding

The Supreme Court, in striking down North Carolina’s one-third statutory presumption, found that it provided no process for determining what portion of a Medicaid beneficiary’s tort recovery was attributable to medical expenses, instead finding North Carolina relied upon an arbitrary number, one-third, and by statute deemed it

to represent payment for medical care. It held that an irrebuttable, one-size-fits-all statutory presumption is incompatible with the Medicaid Act’s clear mandate that a state may not demand any portion of a beneficiary’s tort recovery except the share that is attributable to medical expenses.

North Carolina argued that if the Supreme Court struck down the one-third presumption, it would frustrate the Medicaid anti-lien provision in the context of tort recoveries. Further, it argued that the Ahlborn decision permitted them to have a one-third presumption. The Court stated this was a misinterpretation of Ahlborn. The Supreme Court, in Ahlborn, did not endorse irrebuttable presumptions that designate some arbitrary fraction of a tort judgment to medical expenses in all cases.

North Carolina also argued that its law falls within the scope of a state’s traditional authority to regulate tort actions, including the amount of damages that a party may recover. The Court disagreed, stating that a statute that singles out Medicaid beneficiaries in this manner cannot avoid compliance with the federal anti-lien provision merely by relying upon a connection to an area of traditional state regulation. The State also contended that even though its allocation of one-third of a tort recovery to medical expenses may be arbitrary, other methods for allocating a recovery would be just as arbitrary. The Court found this unpersuasive, as allocations, while to some extent not precise, need not be arbitrary

Another argument was made that it would be wasteful, time consuming and costly to hold “frequent mini-trials” in order to divide a settlement between medical and nonmedical expenses. This argument would not relieve a state of its obligation to comply with the terms of the Medicaid anti-lien provision, and the Court found that the State had ample means available to allocate Medicaid beneficiaries’ tort recoveries in an efficient manner that complied with federal law.

Lastly, North Carolina produced two documents, a July 2006 memo and a December 2009 letter responding to an inquiry from a member of North Carolina’s congressional delegation, stating that the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services approved of North Carolina’s statutory scheme for Medicaid reimbursement. The State felt these agency pronouncements were entitled to Chevron deference and treated as law. The Court disagreed, finding that the documents no longer reflected CMS’ position, and that opinion letters did not have the force of law.

In the end, the Court determined that a state may not evade the pre-emptive force of federal law by resorting to creative statutory interpretation or description at odds with the statute’s intended operation and effect.

Why are Installment Sales Gaining in Popularity?

2013 saw the highest tax increase in history, including tax increases on ordinary income, investment   income, and capital gains.This article is written by Doug Brand with Platinum Marketing.

Long term capital gains have enjoyed low levels of taxation, keeping the wasting of assets to taxes at a minimum. With the increase in capital gains, deferral mechanisms are growing in popularity.

Income earned through capital gains is not subject to the standard income tax brackets, but is instead taxed at a special capital gains tax rate depending on both the type of investment and the taxpayer’s normal tax bracket. While many taxpayers believe capital gains to be 15% to 20%, there are actually a number of   different brackets depending on the type of property. For example, collectibles and art are taxed at a much higher rate than real property. Federal capital gains rates are below:

Ordinary
Tax Bracket
Capital Gains
Long-term
Capital Gains
Short-term
Real Estate
Long-term
Collectibles
Long-term
Special Stock
Long-term

10%

0% 10% 10% 10% 10%

15%

0% 15% 15% 15% 15%

25%

15% 25% 25% 25% 25%

28%

15% 28% 25% 28% 28%

33%

15% 33% 25% 28% 28%

35%

15% 35% 25% 28% 28%
When you factor in state and local taxes, a taxpayer could lose a third or more of their business or property when they sell it.

Installment Sales and Structured Sales remain a time tested method for deferring capital gains.

“You also have to know what to do after the settlement.”

“Placing your money in the stock market can be a risky bet these days. 

[A structured settlement] can be a really important tool to consider when you’re looking at the long term.”

Posted on March 4, 2013 at the NSSTA blog:  www.nssta.com/blog

That’s Virginia trial attorney Jesse Suit, III speaking in a recent video his law firm uploaded to YouTube.  A partner at the Kalfus & Nachtman law firm in Norfolk, Virginia, Suit explains multiple reasons he recommends that his clients look at a structured settlement.

In addition to the clear-cut tax benefits (all structured settlement income is exempt from federal and state taxation), he cites the ability to tailor payments to meet each client’s specific need regardless of whether that involves monthly, quarterly or even yearly payments.

Suit is a member of the Louisiana and Virginia State Bars and the Admiralty Section of the Association for Justice. In addition to his litigation practice at Kalfus & Nachtman, he frequently lectures on maritime and evidentiary issues.

In the video, Suit also shares the story of a former client who used a structured settlement to fund his young children’s college educations.

“Not only is it important to win your case and get a settlement,” he says, “You also have to know what to do after the settlement.”

What Warren Buffett Knows About Structured Settlements…

Thanks to NSSTA for this article.  Published by Brendan Lynch, April 9, 2013 in LifeHealthPro:

“What can we do to improve profitability and grow our business?” is a question that often comes up in conversations with life industry colleagues. Very often, I tell them, the potential answer is to intensify your focus on asset/liability management. In this task, structured settlements frequently play an important role.

One person who has figured out the benefits of structured settlements is Warren Buffett. In recent years, Berkshire Hathaway has moved aggressively into structured annuities, capturing about 15% of the total market in 2012. A quick scan of life insurance members of the National Structured Settlements Trade Association shows about a dozen other companies: Amica, Liberty Mutual, American General, New York Life, MetLife, Pacific Life, Prudential, Mutual of Omaha, and USAA.

There are multiple reasons that a life insurer should look at starting a structured settlement annuity program. The most obvious would be that this product is spectacularly well-suited for both the insurer and the beneficiary. Since 2008, structured settlement annuities have proven themselves through all investment cycles with every payment going out on time and in full. There couldn’t be a better testimonial of insurers’ financial strength and the social and moral value of the product.

For the rest of the article, click here:   http://www.lifehealthpro.com/2013/04/09/what-does-warren-buffett-know-that-you-should?ref=hp

Who Recommends Structured Settlements: Professional Medical Liability Former Chairman

Structured settlements are recommended by all different kinds of organizations and from both plaintiff and defense attorneys.   (Thanks to NSSTA for their assistance with this post.)

“For years, structured settlements have offered great benefit and financial security to injury victims, surviving spouses and children involved in tort cases.”

Corboy

Philip Corboy, Esq.
Trial attorney and former chairman, American Bar Association Committee on Medical Professional Liability

Yes, trial lawyers and their associations like and endorse structured settlements.

When recently putting together a CLE for a group of attorneys, I decided to gather together some quotes to dispel the myth that plaintiff attorneys don’t like structures.  Not only do they like them, but many actively use and encourage them in their cases.  (My thanks to NSSTA for their assistance .)

“A creative structured settlement consultant can put together a package that will give the injured person some flexibility and access to money when they need it, but also preserve that money over many years.”

Fayrell Furr, Esq. President, Southern Trial Lawyers Association (2005-2006)

“Whether you’ve received a moderate injury or a severe one, your lawsuit settlement is a one-time chance to be compensated for your loss. That’s why, regardless of how serious an injury is, I urge my clients to consider a devriesstructured settlement. When you agree on a structured settlement, you can arrange regular, on-time payments. This financial security is extremely important because it lets accident victims focus on the important task of pulling their lives back together.”      

 Douglas deVries, Esq. Past president, California Trial Lawyers Association

 

“Structured settlements are a benefit that I have recommended to clients as one of the best ways to guarantee financial security and independence.”

 William Garner, Esq. Board of Governors, Association of Trial Lawyers of America