The State Bar Association of North Dakota Spring 2014 Gavel Magazine | Page 13

A PLAN TO DIE AT YOUR DESK ISN’T THE BEST OF PLANS The past few years have been a bit rough in terms of the economy and there are few signs that things will dramatically improve anytime soon. The national debt continues to rise and there are still way too many who are unemployed or under employed. For those who went into this extended downturn living paycheck to paycheck, the past few years have been particularly hard. There is a lesson that can be taken from all this however. There is value in planning ahead in order to be financially prepared for the unexpected. How prepared are you? Perhaps it will come as no surprise; but I see the failure of an attorney to appropriately plan ahead as not only a financial misstep but a risk management concern as well. I constantly meet and work with attorneys who have done, and will continue to do, all that they can to provide quality legal services to their clients for a fair and reasonable fee. This is a good thing. However, add into the mix a desire to provide a decent wage and some sort of benefit package to keep and reward competent and dedicated staff then couple this with the all the other costs of running a law practice and financially things starts to get complicated. Of course there are also the realities of life that might include raising a family, providing a college education for the kids, purchasing a home for the family, caring for elderly parents, covering unexpected medical bills, rebuilding the nest egg after a divorce, recovering from that one hot investment tip that unfortunately led to a large loss, or taking the vacations that helped you keep it all together. You see where this starts to go. Life happens, whether we want it to or not, and it also happens at a speed that can take so many of us off guard. For some, as the retirement years finally near, there is a harsh awakening to the reality that somewhere along the line the retirement plan that was always meant to be a priority never actually did become one and therein lies the problem. I have visited with attorneys who shared that they simply aren’t able to retire because there is no adequate retirement fund. Life and/or the practice kept getting in the way. Unfortunately claims and disciplinary matters can and do arise as a result of financial pressures and sometimes the reason is as simple as an attorney no longer had the energy or desire to practice law but couldn’t afford not to. When one’s heart is no longer in it, the odds of a misstep go up. When I stumble upon an “unable to retire” situation, I often wonder whether it might have been prevented with appropriate financial advice and planning. I suspect that for some it truly could have. Too many attorneys fail to develop formal business plans for their practices, see that their own wills get drafted and signed, or set up retirement accounts just for starters. Perhaps one reason is that they’re too busy seeing that these kinds of things get