Tips & Traps
Trap:
Tax on Early Distributions. Internal
Revenue Code Section 72(t)(2)(E) provides
an exception to the 10 percent
additional tax on early distributions from individual
retirement accounts (iras)
for higher education expenses. In
general, distributions from iras
are considered “early” if made before the taxpayer is age 59 1/2. Higher education expenses include such things
as tuition, fees, books, supplies, expenses for special needs services, and equipment required for the
enrollment or attendance at an eligible educational institution. The ira
higher education exception does not
apply, however, to an early distribution from a 401(k) account. So was the Tax Court ruling
in Henry Uscinski,
et ux., tcm
2005-124 (2005).
William Forsberg
Parsinen Kaplan Rosberg
& Gotlieb
Minneapolis
wforsberg@parlaw.com
Tip:
Mandatory Mediation. Arbitration
clauses are becoming increasingly common in contractual employment
agreements. As an alternative
to conventional litigation, arbitration generally saves time and money, maximizes expertise in the decision-making process,
and maintains greater confidentiality.
But some arbitrations take on a life of their own and become
mini-lawsuits. Often these
are devoid of any meaningful opportunity for appellate review, due
to multiple Minnesota
precedents establishing that the decisions of arbitrators generally
are impervious to appeal in the absence of fraud, corruption, or other
egregious circumstances.
Achieving the desirable goals of adr can be enhanced by including a mandatory mediation clause
in a typical arbitration agreement.
Including a provision in an agreement calling for mediation
of disputes prior to arbitration can focus the parties on dispute
resolution economically and efficiently.
A typical clause might read as follows:
“In the event any dispute arises under this agreement, the
parties shall first attempt to resolve the dispute through mediation
pursuant to the provisions of Minnesota Civil Mediation Act, Minn.
Stat. §572.31, et. seq.”
Since there is a high rate of settlement in mediation,
requiring the parties to mediate prior to resorting to arbitration
increases the likelihood of early dispute resolution for the benefit
of all of the parties.
Marshall H. Tanick
Mansfield, Tanick & Cohen,
PA
Minneapolis
mtanick@mansfieldtanick.com
Tip:
Profitable Hours. A few hours spent reviewing your practice
expenses and shopping for better prices may prove to be the most profitable
hours of your year. Areas to
consider include:
Long distance and cellular phone service: can you save money by changing plans with your
current carrier, or by changing carriers?
General liability, auto and professional liability
insurance: Can you reduce
expenses by changing carriers, reducing coverages
or increasing deductibles?
On-line legal research: Can you reduce your monthly cost by eliminating
features you don’t need or use?
Keep in mind that cheapest is not necessarily best.
Mary Martin
Law Offices of Mary K. Martin
South St. Paul
MMinlaw@aol.com
Tip:
Wills; Interested Witnesses. Does your client want to use
close relatives as witnesses to ensure privacy or as a matter of convenience?
What the law allows, common sense and professional duty oppose. Witnesses
attest that the testator is of “sound mind and under no constraint
or undue influence,” Minn. Stat. §§524.2-504. In a dispute, the testimony
of witnesses as to capacity or undue influence could be discounted
if they are also beneficiaries interested in the outcome. Even if
there is no challenge to the will, in any falling-out after death
complaints from disgruntled family members may make the lives of related
witnesses miserable. A witness also named as a fiduciary by the will
may face similar credibility problems. The better practice may be to put convenience
aside and ask the testator to select friends, remote relatives, your
office staff, or other disinterested parties as witnesses.
Theresa K. Readio
Law Office of Theresa K. Radio
Savage
treadio@mcleodusa.net
Trap:
Procedures vs. Customs. Does your firm have uniform practices and
procedures or informal customs to guide members of the firm in getting
things done? Law firms with
customs tend to be run like a prehistoric tribe: whoever is around
the campfire when a new process is created learns and perhaps follows
that process. Others are left to wonder how the law firm started
doing things that way. By contrast, a law firm with a carefully conceived,
written set of practices and procedures is able to closely replicate
outcomes on similar matters.
Every law firm thinks that it is organized, but few
are. Try these questions to assess your
situation:
Are your “ways of doing things” in writing or
simply in the heads of those doing them? If the latter, you are not organized.
Can you readily suffer the departure of a key employee,
knowing their replacement can quickly come up to speed by reviewing
the law firm’s practice and procedures manual?
If so, you’re well on the way to getting organized.
Are members of your firm continually asking who is responsible
for certain functions, e.g.,
benefits, cle, ordering
supplies, etc.? If so, you’ve
got some organizing to do.
Customs or procedures; catch as catch can, or organized
and thought out: the choice is yours.
Michael J. Ford
Quinlivan & Hughes
St. Cloud
mford@quinlivan.com