Trust
A way to give property to one person (the trustee) to manage for and distribute to another person (beneficiary)
The trustee has
rights associated with legal title, such as right to manage the assets and distribute them to the beneficiary
Beneficiary
retains rights to use the assets and enjoy the assets for her own benefit
Trustee may not use the assets in the trust for her own benafit, as doing so would
constitute self dealings and violate one of the trustees fiduciary duties
People in the 3 way triangle consisting of the settlor, trustee, and beneficiary
any of the three persons can be occupide by more then one person
For a valid trust there must be at least 1 beneficiary who is
not also a trustee
except with inter vivos trust or new forms of asset protection trusts
3 advantages of a trust
2 categories of trusts
Revocable trust
AKA living trust or inter vivos trust
Trust should state whether it is
revokable or irrevocable
- if revocable, it should specify the procedure
If the settlor wants to revoke the trust, the settlor can
email (or snail mail) the trustee to state that hte trust is revoked
UTC 602 a
What if the trust instrument fails to indicate whether the trust is revokable or irrevocable?
provides that the trusts are presumed revocable unless the trust instrument “expresssly” provides that the trust is “irrevocable”
- The assumption is that a settlor would more likely to intend to retain the power to revoke the trust
How having personal property in a revocable trust makes no difference to a persons daily life
If the client owns property in another state, what may be a good idea?
Irrevocable trusts arise in 3 ways
Testamentary trusts are created by
a will and comes in to existence upon the testators death
“pour over trust” is essentially
a standalone trust that recieves assets that the will “pours into” at the testators death
Charitable trusts
4 key differences between charitable trusts and the private trusts
In general, remedial trusts arise when
someone made a drafting error in a will, when someone acquired property through fraud, or when a trust fails.
- They are not actual trusts, they are legal fictions that exist to fix a problem or remedy a fraud
remedial trusts
2 important things to remember
3 remedial trusts
remedial trusts
constructive trust (think fraud)
A court can impose a constructive trust on property someone has acquired through fraud, and creates the legal fiction that it being held for the rightful owner
- important because cts arent allows to take away property to giv eto rightful owner
Remedial trusts
Resulting trust (assets with nowhere to go)
arises from
faulty drafting and the failure to think ahead
- this trust by operation of law happens when a trust fulfils its purpose and there are still funds remaining in the trust
- The funds or property returns to settlor or is distributed through the settlors estate if they are dead
Remedial trusts
merger (two become one)
occurs when
the trustee and the sole beneficary becomes the same person
and the trust property/funds is now the persons property in fee
- merger would not occur if the trust provides for the beneficiary’s decedent, even if they had no descendants when the co-beneficary/settlor died.