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DTSTART:20130114T181500Z
DTEND:20130114T191500Z
LOCATION:MAC 405 Washington Avenue
UID:663120130114T181500ZGetting Family Business Owners Off the Dime: How to get them started on Estate/Succession Planning
DTSTAMP:20260614T035850Z
DESCRIPTION:\nRegistration is 11:30am., Lunch is 12:00pm., Presentation is 12:15pm.\n \n[Registration Link](https://www.123signup.com/register?id=sprtb) \nAbout the Talk: \nMany family business owners mistakenly think that taxes are the reason for the incredible failure rate of successful transitions to the next generation. That is not so. Businesses fail to pass successfully due to a number of non-tax reasons: cash flow for a surviving spouse; children who do not work in the business; real estate which is not owner by the business; buy-sell agreements that are not consistent with the terms of the business owner’s estate plan; and so forth. Eric will explore different strategies to get the business owner started on estate and business succession planning, so you can motivate your best client to engage in this critical work.  \n  \nSpeaker Biography: \nERIC A. MANTERFIELD is a partner in the Indianapolis, Indiana law firm of Krieg DeVault LLP, where he concentrates his practice in estate planning, family business succession planning, charitable planning and probate and tax litigation. Eric is an Indiana Board Certified Trust & Estate Lawyer by TESB. \nEric serves as co-counsel with numerous attorneys on the development of sophisticated succession plans for owners of family businesses and high net worth individuals, advises numerous trust departments on steps to minimize fiduciary liability and has served as an expert witness on estate and trust litigation matters. \nEric is a Fellow of the American College of Trust and Estate Counsel (Indiana State Chair). He was identified in 2009 by Worth magazine as among the top 100 estate planning attorneys in the US. Eric is listed in "The Best Lawyers in America," "Indiana's Best Lawyers," and "Indiana Super Lawyer." Eric served as an Adjunct Professor of Law at the Indiana University School of Law in Bloomington, where he taught Estate Planning for thirty-one years. \nEric is a magna cum laude graduate of Denison University (Phi Beta Kappa). Eric received his law degree from the University of Michigan Law School in 1972. He is a member of the Indianapolis (Estate Planning & Administration Section; Business Section) and Hamilton County, Indiana (Section of Real Property, Probate and Trust Law) and American (Section of Real Property, Probate and Trust Law and Section of Taxation) Bar Associations. Eric is a Life Fellow of the Indiana Bar Foundation. \nEric is a past president of the Estate Planning Council of Indianapolis and served on the Board of Directors of the Indiana Bar Foundation. He serves on the Board of Directors of the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra and of the Riverview Hospital Foundation, is a member of the Professional Advisors Committee to the Central Indiana Community Foundation and is a member of the Planned Giving Council to the Children's Museum of Indianapolis. \nEric was a Senior Vice President and Senior Trust Officer of Banc One, Indiana (now JP Morgan Chase Bank, N.A.), where he managed personal trust services throughout Indiana from 1981 to 1996; prior to that, he managed the trust department's Estates and Guardianship, Trust Real Estate, Investments, Marketing and Tax Departments. \n\n\n \nMEG .DEVAULL \nEric has spoken throughout the country on estate and \nATTORNEYS AT LAW  \nbusiness succession planning, including The Heckerling Institute on Estate Planning, sponsored by the University of Miami School of Law; the Notre Dame Estate Planning Institute; the Seattle Estate Planning Council - Washington State Bar Association Estate Planning Institute; the Duke Estate Planning Conference; the University of Texas Nonprofit Organizations Institute; the American College of Trust and Estate Counsel Annual Meeting; the ALI-ABA Institute on Estate Planning for Family Business Owners in Boston, Chicago, San Francisco and Santa Fe; the ALI-ABA Estate Planning in Depth Institute at Madison, Wisconsin; the ALI-ABA Sophisticated Estate Planning Institute in Boston; the Annual Spring Symposium of the Real Property, Trust & Probate Section of the American Bar Association; the Kansas City Estate Planning Symposium; The University of Kentucky Estate Planning Institute; Estate Planners Day at Queens University in Charlotte, NC; the Midwest Estate, Tax & Business Planning Institute in Indianapolis; the Annual Probate & Trust Law Section Conference in Minneapolis; the Columbus (Ohio) Annual Estate Planning and Charitable Giving Seminar; the Southwestern Ohio Tax Institute; the Cincinnati Advanced Estate Planning Institute; the Trust Advisors Forum (Pinehurst, NC) and the Estate Planning Councils of Birmingham (AL), St. Louis and Kansas City (MO), Louisville and Lexington (KY), Denver and Grand Junction (CO), Dayton (OH), Rochester (NY) and Kansas City and Wichita (KS). \nEric's article entitled "Planning and Drafting Estate Planning Documents for the Family Business Owner" appeared in the April, 2006 issue of Estate Planning magazine, published by Warren, Gorham & Lamont of RIA. Eric's article entitled "Common Mistakes in Buy-Sell Agreements" appeared in the October-November 2006 issue of the Journal of Practical Estate Planning and the November, 2006 issue of Business Valuation Alert, both published by CCH. Eric's article entitled "Estate Planning for Couples in a Second Marriage" appeared in the April-May 2008 issue of the Journal of Practical Estate Planning and the June 2008 issue of Financial and Estate Planning, both published by CCH. Eric's article entitled "Perfecting Donor Intent on Gifts to Charity: The Gift Agreement" appeared in the February-March 2009 issue of the Journal of Practical Estate Planning, in the July/August 2009 issue of Family Foundation Advisor and in the June, July and August issues of CCH's Exempt Organizations Reports. Eric's article entitled "Incentive Trusts for Children" appeared in the December 2009 — January 2010 issue of the \n\n\n \nMEG -DO/AULT \nJournal of Practical Estate Planning. Eric's article entitled \nATTORNEYS AT LAW \n"Selected Planning Strategies for the Family Business Owner (With Forms)" appeared in the Winter 2010 issue of The Practical Tax Lawyer, published by the American Bar Association. Eric's article entitled "Perfecting Donor Intent on Gifts to Charity —The Gift Agreement (From the Charities' Perspective)" appeared in the June 22, 2010 issue of The Planned Giving Design Center. His article entitled "Minimizing Fiduciary Liability" appeared in the December 2010-January 2011 issue of the Journal of Practical Estate Planning, in CCH's electronic Estate Planning Expert Library and at Paragraph 33,481 in Volume 3 of CCH FINANCIAL AND ESTATE PLANNING. His article entitled "How the IRS Determines Transfer Tax in Buy-Sell Agreements" appeared in the Spring 2012 issue of the Practical Tax Lawyer. \nEric's article entitled "Estate Planning for Couples in a Second Marriage" received the 2009 "Distinguished Writing Award," sponsored by the Library of Congress and the Burton Foundation, as one of the thirty best articles submitted by the nation's 1,000 largest law firms. It also was reprinted in book format (with Stephanie B. Casteel) by ALI-ABA in 2011. \nEric is the author of Critical Elements of Estate Planning With Forms, Fourth Edition (2009) (see [www.ericamanterfield.com](http://www.ericamanterfield.com/)) and of Estate Planning for Second Marriages (2011) and of Buy-Sell Agreements (2012), both published by the American Law Institute — American Bar Association. KD JM-675290_1.DOC \n 
SUMMARY:Getting Family Business Owners Off the Dime: How to get them started on Estate/Succession Planning - Estate Planning Council of St. Louis 
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