coogan accounts what protects child actors and their parents presented by financial filosophy f....

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Coogan Accounts What protects child actors and their parents Presented by financial filosophy F. John Deyeso, CFP® www.financialfilosophy.com [email protected] 917-916-2207

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Page 1: Coogan Accounts What protects child actors and their parents Presented by financial filosophy F. John Deyeso, CFP®  John@financialfilosophy.com

Coogan AccountsWhat protects child actors and their parents

Presented by financial filosophy

F. John Deyeso, CFP®www.financialfilosophy.com

[email protected]

Page 2: Coogan Accounts What protects child actors and their parents Presented by financial filosophy F. John Deyeso, CFP®  John@financialfilosophy.com

Disclosure• financial filosophy is a registered investment advisor operating under

the jurisdiction of the State of New York. This presentation is for informational purposes only and does not constitute a complete description of our investment services or financial planning advice or practices. This presentation is speaking informational about various financial topics and is in no way investment advice or financial planning. Investment advice or comprehensive financial planning would require individual work based on individual aspects and not generalizations. Neither we nor our information providers shall be liable for any errors or inaccuracies, regardless of cause, or the lack of timeliness. THERE ARE NO WARRANTIES EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED, AS TO ACCURACY, COMPLETENESS, OR RESULTS OBTAINED FROM ANY INFORMATION PRESENTED. THIS IS ALSO NO WAY LEGAL ADVICE.

Page 3: Coogan Accounts What protects child actors and their parents Presented by financial filosophy F. John Deyeso, CFP®  John@financialfilosophy.com

Gary Coleman

• Best known as Arnold from “Different Strokes”– Sued parents for mis-management of his $8.3

million dollar Trust Fund– Argued successfully that his parents had

accumulated $770,000 for themselves– Later filed for Bankruptcy

Page 4: Coogan Accounts What protects child actors and their parents Presented by financial filosophy F. John Deyeso, CFP®  John@financialfilosophy.com

Jackie Coogan

• Jackie Coogan-famous child star in silent picture era.– Best known staring with Chaplin in “The Kid”– At 21, he demanded his earnings from his parents– $4,000,000 in 1935 ($47,617,344.96 in today’s dollars)– They refused, and had only about $200,000 left– Later sued and received slightly more than $100,000

($1,190,433) 2.5% of his earnings– Under California Law, Jackie had no rights to the money

he earned. – The law was later changed, trust accounts for child

actors are now called Coogan Accounts

Page 5: Coogan Accounts What protects child actors and their parents Presented by financial filosophy F. John Deyeso, CFP®  John@financialfilosophy.com

Parents versus Kids

• Parents accused of mismanagement often claim 2 defenses– To the child it was “simply playing”– The financial strain on the family

• Children – Numerous child actors have acknowledged the

lack of “play” and that they were working

Page 6: Coogan Accounts What protects child actors and their parents Presented by financial filosophy F. John Deyeso, CFP®  John@financialfilosophy.com

The life lesson

• While the child may have a passion for performing, this is a business

• The actor is being compensated for “missing out” on “normal” child activities

• While there may be family sacrifices to allow your child to follow their passions, this is true for many families and not specific to acting

• Do you think Tiger Woods paid for his golf lessons as a child, or travel expenses to golf events? I think not

• DO NOT let money strain your relationship with your child. • Coogan accounts were designed to protect the child actor• I think they protect the family as well

Page 7: Coogan Accounts What protects child actors and their parents Presented by financial filosophy F. John Deyeso, CFP®  John@financialfilosophy.com

California “Coogan Law”

• Enacted in 1939 after the public outrage of the Jackie Coogan case.

• Requires the production company to directly deposit 15% of income directly into the child’s trust account.

• A parent or guardian will be Trustee of the account. Withdrawals are not permitted (blocked trust).

• The funds must be turned over at the age of Majority. In California age 18 (New York 21)

• Residency does not matter, if work originates in California then a Coogan Account is required

Page 8: Coogan Accounts What protects child actors and their parents Presented by financial filosophy F. John Deyeso, CFP®  John@financialfilosophy.com

What Coogan information MUST be provided

• The following two documents MUST be provided with the work permit– The Trustee Statement– The deposit instruction– Some Banks provide these two forms as one.– Regardless, remember the Bank is holding the

funds, you are the trustee and in charge of overseeing that the funds get deposited

Page 9: Coogan Accounts What protects child actors and their parents Presented by financial filosophy F. John Deyeso, CFP®  John@financialfilosophy.com

Trustee Statement

• The law indicates that the following information should be on a Trustee Statement:

• Name, Address & Phone # of Financial Institution • Name of Minor (beneficiary) • Account Name • Account Number • Trustee Name • Signed under penalty of perjury by trustee

Page 10: Coogan Accounts What protects child actors and their parents Presented by financial filosophy F. John Deyeso, CFP®  John@financialfilosophy.com

Deposit Instructions

• Usually given to the 2nd AD or whoever is in charge of payroll• Contains the following information• Financial Institution Logo • Name of Account • Name of Minor • Name of Trustee • Routing Number• The account number • Social Security Number • Financial Institution contact information

Page 11: Coogan Accounts What protects child actors and their parents Presented by financial filosophy F. John Deyeso, CFP®  John@financialfilosophy.com

Submitting the proper paperwork

• Work Permits, required in New York and California are valid for 10 days without Coogan information, will be voided if Coogan Information is not provided to the production company

Page 12: Coogan Accounts What protects child actors and their parents Presented by financial filosophy F. John Deyeso, CFP®  John@financialfilosophy.com

Parental Due Diligence

• Since the Coogan laws only currently apply to California and New York, not all payment processors know how to process this payment– Check the paystub for a withholding equal to 15%

of earnings. Likely mislabeled – If missing payment, contact the production

company– If more than 180 days have passed check with the

Actors Fund

Page 13: Coogan Accounts What protects child actors and their parents Presented by financial filosophy F. John Deyeso, CFP®  John@financialfilosophy.com

New York “Coogan-Like”

• Passed in March of 2004• Child Performer Education and Trust Act of 2003 • Same 15% deposited directly into an account for

the child. • Turned over to the Child at the age of Majority

(New York this can be 18 or 21 depending of account)

• Once account reaches $250,000 a trust company must be appointed as Custodian.

Page 14: Coogan Accounts What protects child actors and their parents Presented by financial filosophy F. John Deyeso, CFP®  John@financialfilosophy.com

East Coast versus West CoastThe difference between NY and CA

• California, with the creation of the Coogan account requires a blocked trust. Meaning that the money in the account cannot be spent

• New York requires, a California Coogan Account, A New York UGMA or UTMA

• The problem with UGMA and UTMA accounts, they can be spent, if the expenses are for the child. Meaning these type of accounts are not Blocked Trusts

Page 15: Coogan Accounts What protects child actors and their parents Presented by financial filosophy F. John Deyeso, CFP®  John@financialfilosophy.com

Why California Coogan Accounts are best!

• California will not honor a New York “Coogan-like account” If work originates in California, you will be required to open a Coogan Account.

• If you already have a NY Coogan-like account, you will now have two accounts that cannot be combined unless into the California Coogan.

• More difficult to manage from an investment standpoint• Coogan accounts remove the temptation to use the funds

for “acting” expenses• NY “Coogan-like” accounts later likely be challenged and

changed in the Courts

Page 16: Coogan Accounts What protects child actors and their parents Presented by financial filosophy F. John Deyeso, CFP®  John@financialfilosophy.com

Investments within Coogan Accounts

• Do not “chase” investments, “hot” investments

• Understand that at age of majority this is your child’s money, they earned it, and have a right to it.

• Your job as a parent is to protect it, by investing it well

Page 17: Coogan Accounts What protects child actors and their parents Presented by financial filosophy F. John Deyeso, CFP®  John@financialfilosophy.com

Investing well

• Diversification across asset classes(companies)– Example – U.S. domestic equity fund (small, medium large)– International equity fund– Global bond fund

• Doing it cost effectively (low expense ratios, index funds)

• Reduces trading and commissions• Risk decreases as the child gets closer to the age of

majority

Page 18: Coogan Accounts What protects child actors and their parents Presented by financial filosophy F. John Deyeso, CFP®  John@financialfilosophy.com

Investing well

• Diversification is NOT owning ALL the OIL stocks or ALL the TECH stocks

• Two unique problems in investing– The cash flow into the account is not know– Achieving diversification without a known future

cash contributions• A solution- fee-only third party advice,

protects parents and children

Page 19: Coogan Accounts What protects child actors and their parents Presented by financial filosophy F. John Deyeso, CFP®  John@financialfilosophy.com

Using Coogan Accounts for future goals

• Many parents will want the money to go toward a child’s future goals (i.e. College)

• Problematic – The impact to financial aid– The child earned the money and little can be done

to prevent them for using it as they want– At 18, even 21, what they want to use it for and

what you want them to use it for may not agree– They earned it, they win if there is a disagreement

Page 20: Coogan Accounts What protects child actors and their parents Presented by financial filosophy F. John Deyeso, CFP®  John@financialfilosophy.com

The best a parent can do

• Place assets in a blocked trust• Hire outside fee-only Certified Financial Planner

Professional to help with investment management• Keep the children involved in the whole process

(involvement increases with age)• This protects the child’s assets, protects the

parent/child relationship and decreases the chance that the child will simply blow the cash

• They still may not go to college with that money, but they still may not blow it

Page 21: Coogan Accounts What protects child actors and their parents Presented by financial filosophy F. John Deyeso, CFP®  John@financialfilosophy.com

Important websites

• NY Department of Labor– http://www.labor.state.ny.us/– Worker protection (top) – Child Performer (left)

• List of Coogan Banks– http://www.childreninfilm.com/images/cooganbankbook

.pdf• SAG Credit Union– http://www.aftrasagfcu.org/

• financial filosophy– www.financialfilosophy.com