Posted On: DECEMBER 2024
Over your lifetime, you’ve likely accumulated various tangible assets. These may include automobiles, personal property or art. It’s relatively easy to account for such assets in your estate plan, but what about intangible assets, such as intellectual property (IP)? These assets behave differently from other types of property, so careful planning is required to preserve their value for your family.
What is IP?
IP generally falls into one of four categories: patents, copyrights, trademarks and trade secrets. Let’s focus on only patents and copyrights, creatures of federal law intended to promote scientific and creative endeavors by providing inventors and artists with exclusive rights to benefit economically from their work for a certain period.
In a nutshell, patents protect inventions. To obtain patent protection, inventions must be novel, “nonobvious” and useful. The two most common patent types are utility and design patents:
Under current law, a utility patent protects an invention for 20 years from the patent application filing date. A design patent lasts 15 years from the patent issue date. For utility patents, it typically takes at least a year to a year and a half from the date of filing to the date of issue.
When it comes to copyrights, they protect the original expression of ideas that are fixed in a “tangible medium of expression,” typically in the form of written works, music, paintings, sculptures, photographs, sound recordings, films, computer software, architectural works and other creations. Unlike patents, which the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office must approve, copyright protection kicks in as soon as a work is fixed in a tangible medium.
For works created in 1978 or later, an author-owned copyright lasts for the author’s lifetime plus 70 years. A “work-for-hire” copyright expires 95 years after the first publication date or 120 years after the date the work is created, whichever is earlier. More complex rules apply to works created before 1978.
What are the estate planning considerations?
For estate planning purposes, IP raises two important questions:
1. What’s the IP worth?
2. How should it be transferred?
Valuing IP is a complex process. So it’s best to obtain an appraisal frm a professional with experience valuing this commodity.
After you know the IP’s value, it’s time to decide whether to transfer it to family members, colleagues, charities or others through lifetime gifts or bequests after your death. The gift and estate tax consequences will likely affect your decision. However, you also should consider your income needs and who’s in the best position to monitor your IP rights and take advantage of their benefits.
For example, if you continue to depend on the IP for your livelihood, hold on to it until you’re ready to retire or no longer need the income. You also might want to sell or retain ownership of the IP if your children or other transferees lack the desire or wherewithal to take advantage of its economic potential and monitor and protect it against infringers.
Whichever strategy you choose, it’s important to plan the transaction carefully to ensure your objectives are achieved. There’s a common misconception that when you transfer ownership of the tangible medium on which IP is recorded you also transfer the IP rights. IP rights are separate from the work and are retained by the creator — even if the work is sold or given away.
Turn to a professional
Having your assets distributed according to your wishes after your death is a primary
reason for having an estate plan. And whether artistic or scientific endeavors are the
source of your wealth or simply meaningful diversions, it’s likely that you care deeply
about who ultimately possesses your works and enjoys their benefits. Contact us to
help ensure your estate plan correctly accounts for your IP.
© 2024