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22 Feb 2019

Joe and Lisa White are a married couple. Joe is 63 and Lisa is 61. Joe is thinking about retiring in a few years, and the Whites have come to you for an insurance evaluation. Lisa plans to continue working even after Joe retires. The following provides a summary of the Whites’ insurance planning situation.

Life Insurance

Joe owns a $500,000 universal life insurance policy. Joe is the insured and their son David, age 37, is the beneficiary. The policy has a cash value of $50,000 and a living benefits provision; all account earnings are used to offset premium expenses. Lisa owns a 20 year $350,000 level term life policy that she purchased five years ago. She pays approximately $1,000 per year in premium costs. Lisa is the insured and Joe is the beneficiary.

Property and casualty insurance

Joe and Lisa own a home as JTWROS. The home has a market and replacement value of $675,000. The house is insured with the standard HO-3 policy for $550,000. The policy requires that the Whites pay a $500 deductible per claim occurrence. Other provisions include the following:

10% coverage on detached structures

Coverage up to $250 for cash

Coverage up to $1,500 for collectibles, artwork, and similar assets

Personal property contents coverage equal to 20% of the insured dwelling

Living expenses coverage for six months

Coverage up to $100,000 for personal liability

A replacement cost coverage endorsement is in place

The Whites’ two cars are insured under a personal automobile policy with split limit coverage of 250,000/500,000/50,000. They also have a $1 million excess liability policy.

Health insurance

The Whites are covered under Lisa’s group health insurance plan. The traditional plan has a lifetime maximum benefit equal to $5 million for the family, a $500 per person deductible, and an 80% coinsurance clause, with the family stop-loss limit of $2,500.

Using this information, please answer the following questions.

3. If Joe were to die today, how would the universal life insurance policy benefits be distributed? Would there by any taxes involved: income tax, estate tax, gift tax? Explain your response completely.

4. What will be the tax consequences if Lisa decides to cancel her term life insurance policy? Justify your answer.

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Jarrod Robel
Jarrod RobelLv2
24 Feb 2019

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