What is the basic premise of a trust?
Split legal title and equitable title.
Legal title → trustee / equitable title → beneficiary
How are trusts classified?
What are the elements of a valid trust?
What are the two prongs of intent?
*present intent - at time settlor owned property. No expressions of hope, wish, mere suggestion
identifiable corpus
Ascertainable with certainty. Existing interest in existing property.
Qualified beneficiary
On the date the beneficiary’s qualification is determined, is: a current beneficiary or first-line remainder man.
May have additional rights
Class gifts
May be unascertainable when created but must be ascertainable when they are to benefit.
Will a trust fail because a trustee dies, refuses to accept the position, or resigns?
No.
How does a person accept a trusteeship?
When can the court remove a trustee?
On its own motion or by request of settlor, beneficiary, co-trustee.
Grounds include:
Inter vivos trust
Created while settlor is alive either by settlor declaring themself trustee for another or by transferring property to another as trustee.
Formalities of inter vivos trust
For trust of land → in writing (SOF), signed by person entitled to impress trust upon property
*part performance
Delivery of an inter vivos trust by declaration of trust requires:
No conveyance of property is needed as long as the property is identified and segregated.
Delivery of an inter vivos trust by conveyance in trust requires
Settlor must convey property to trustee.
Real property → by deed / personal property → physical delivery or written assignment
Can a pour-over trust be the initial trust funding?
Yes if:
Testamentary trust
created in a settlor’s valid will
What is a secret trust?
Settlor agrees with a will beneficiary that beneficiary hold the property in trust for someone else, but the will does not state the nature of the gift.
*Constructive trust imposed
What is a semi-secret trust?
The will makes a gift in trust but fails to name the beneficiary.
The gift fails and the named trustee holds the property in a resulting trust for the testator’s successors in interest.
May a beneficiary freely transfer their interest in a trust?
Yes, absent restrictions by statute or trust instrument.
What is a discretionary trust?
Trustee is given discretion whether to apply or withhold payments of income and principal to a beneficiary.
Before trustee exercises discretion, beneficiary’s interest is not assignable or reachable by creditors.
What is a spendthrift trust?
Precludes beneficiary from voluntarily or involuntarily transferring their interest in trust, and beneficiary’s creditors are precluded from reaching it.
Can a settlor use a spendthrift trust to protect own property from creditors?
No.
What is a support trust?
Directs the trustee to pay only so much of income and/or principal as is necessary for beneficiary’s support.
How can a trust be modified?