Lawmakers defer transfer‑on‑death reform and call for task force after expert concerns
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Summary
Senate Bill 262, which would create a transfer‑on‑death framework for securities and accounts, was deferred after estate‑planning experts raised concerns about community‑property rules, spousal consent and conflicts with wills; the sponsor said he will form a task force to produce a workable proposal.
Senator Abraham introduced SB 262 to create a transfer‑on‑death registration framework for assets and securities. Multiple expert witnesses — including Jennifer Willingham of Edward Jones and attorney Russ Stutes — told the committee that Louisiana’s community‑property rules and existing succession law raise complex legal conflicts that could produce more litigation without careful statutory changes.
Willingham and Stutes recommended more work, including a task force to bring together securities experts, estate attorneys, state law‑institute representatives and banking industry members to draft a solution that avoids unintended consequences (such as account freezes, double liability or conflicts with wills). Senator Morris raised concerns about co‑owner consent and whether a TOD designation should override a subsequently executed will.
In response, Senator Abraham said the bill needs more study and proposed a task force and a resolution; he deferred SB 262 pending that work. No committee vote on the bill occurred; the sponsor committed to forming the task force to produce a revised bill.
