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U.S. Treasury Bond Structured Settlement (TBSS)What Counsel Must Know about the U.S. Treasury Bond Structured Settlement Trust — and WhyThe vital starting point is this: Structured settlements do not have to use annuities issued by insurance companies. Internal Revenue Code Section 130 (the section covering tax-exempt structured settlements) provides that a “Qualified Funding Asset” [Translation: the device that funds the periodic payments of a structured settlement for an injured victim] may be any annuity or contract issued by... an insurance company... OR, any obligation of the United States. That is, U.S. Treasury Bonds. The advantage of relying on T-Bonds rather than commercial annuities is evident: annuity carriers can default, and do, leaving injured victims who are dependent on annuity income in dire straits. U.S. Treasury Bonds are absolutely secure, unless you believe that the U.S. Treasury is going to collapse. The U.S. Treasury Bond Structured Settlement Trust is created through these steps:
The IRS’ acknowledgement that the use of a dedicated trust with a bank trustee complies with the Code tax requirements on structured settlements is significant. It means that there is universal agreement that plaintiff’s attorneys can advise their injured plaintiff clients that their critical objectives in a structured settlement can be achieved without any of the risks associated with the more common annuity-based structured settlements:
Practice Implications for Counsel Plaintiff’s counsel’s job has become more demanding. With the IRS' approval of The Halpern Group's U.S. Treasury Bond Structured Settlement Trust, plaintiff’s now have a risk-free alternative to conventional settlements. It should be noted that Rule 1.4(b) of the ABA Model Rules provides that “A lawyer shall explain a matter to the extent reasonably necessary to permit a client to make informed decisions regarding the representation.” It is hard to imagine that the existence of a safer alternative to a settlement proposal with far-reaching effects on the future of the plaintiff would not be regarded as a “necessary” component of a plaintiff’s informed consent. There is also growing consensus that attorneys not possessing a basic level of understanding about structured settlement options may not be providing “competent” representation under the rules. Rule 1.1, Competence, states: “...Competent representation requires the legal knowledge, skill, thoroughness, and preparation reasonably necessary for the representation.” It would seem unreasonable for an attorney not to have the requisite
knowledge to alert a plaintiff to a structured settlement option that
avoids significant risk. The objection raised by some attorneys that the subject matter of structured settlements crosses into non-legal territory, in effect “letting them off the hook,” is belied by the language of Rule 2.1, Advisor: “...In rendering advice, a lawyer may refer not only to law, but to other considerations such as moral, economic, social and political factors, that may be relevant to a client’s situation.” Again, there should be no question of the “relevance” of an IRS-approved structured settlement option to a client’s “situation.” Good practice in injured plaintiff representation now requires counsel to have a working knowledge of structured settlement options. Making your clients aware of a risk-free investment alternative for their structured settlements, may go a long way in achieving the result. Click here to view the article: |
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