Asset protection is its own form of legal planning—one that incorporates the other types of legal planning, as well as fields such as risk management.
Business owners engage in asset protection planning to have a viable defense against litigants and creditors. Asset protection is the process of employing risk management products and legally acceptable solutions to ensure a person’s wealth is not unjustly taken.
The importance of asset protection planning becomes all the more important when considering the increasingly litigious nature of society. Compounding the problem is the readiness of juries to side with less affluent plaintiffs against defendants with wealth.
Avoiding litigation is always the preferable objective. Indeed, the best asset protection plans are never even tested in court. When a plaintiff evaluates the way a successful business owner’s assets are structured, he or she should conclude that going to court would be too costly and difficult, and that the logical course of action is to settle.
For an asset protection plan to be effective, timing is a major consideration. While there are “things” that can be done once a lawsuit has been filed, it’s usually necessary to put the plan and strategies in place before they’re needed. A good way to think about asset protection planning is that it’s a form of pre-litigation planning.
The wealthy avoiding paying their legitimate debts is not well received by the courts. That means asset protection strategies employed to protect the assets of the successful business owner have to make economic sense within the context of an overall financial or legal plan.
The successful business owner has to derive more than strict asset protection if the plan and the strategies are to be acceptable to the court system. It’s also important to have the moral high ground.