TRUSTS RULES! Flashcards

1
Q

Trust Elements

A

A trust is a device where a trustee holds property for the benefit of another. To create, (1) settlor delivers (2) legal title of res, (3) to trustee, (4) for ascertainable beneficiaries, (5) with intent, & (6) valid trust purpose.

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2
Q

Res – Trust Property

A

Any transferable property so long as it is identifiable. Can be empty if trust names direct beneficiary for life ins.

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3
Q

Ascertainable Beneficiaries

A

Be named or at least identifiable – language sufficient to allow court to identify.

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4
Q

Intent

A

No magic words, intention can be manifested by words orally or in writing, or by conduct (not “I desire, hope”).

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5
Q

Valid Purpose

A

Any purpose that is not impossible or not contrary to public policy.

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6
Q

Honorary Trust

A

No charitable purpose & no human beneficiary. Valid for animals for its life, or grave maintenance for 21 years.

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7
Q

Revocable Trust

A

All trust presumed revocable unless terms provide otherwise. Settlor can also be trustee in revocable trust.

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8
Q

Beneficiary as Trustee

A

Yes, as long as there is either an additional beneficiary or trustee.

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9
Q

Totten Trust

A

Settlor deposits $ in an account in his own name as trustee for another. Revocable by any manifestation of intent (withdrawal). Reachable by creditors even after death. Can be revoked by will. EE admissible to show no trust.

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10
Q

Oral Trust

A

Valid to both real & personal property so long as terms can be established by C & C evidence. Can’t self settle.

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11
Q

Oral Promise to Make Devise in Will

A

A promise to devise real property must be in writing & supported by consideration. Becomes constructive.

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12
Q

Secret Trust

A

One declares a devise in will was supposed to be trust, nothing admissible; cannot disrupt plain meaning of will.

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13
Q

Semi-Secret Trust

A

Valid, even if beneficiary not identifiable (X to Y as trustee for purposes I already told him). T can do anything.

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14
Q

Rights of Creditors

A

Creditor can attach to trustee by court order AND intercept his money from trustee until paid off.

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15
Q

Spendthrift Clauses

A

Clause that precludes beneficiary from voluntarily & involuntarily transferring his trust interest. Cannot restrict only involuntary action or self-settle – clause is invalid. Creditor reaches mandatory dist. if not distributed.

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16
Q

Trustee Duties

A

Duties of (1) loyalty, (2) invest prudently, (3) preserve/protect res, (4) impartiality, & (5) account & inform.

17
Q

Trustee Duty of Loyalty

A

T cannot buy/sell trust res to himself, borrow trust funds, sell assets from one trust to another, or self-deal.

18
Q

Trustee Duty to Preserve Property

A

T may not commingle trust funds.

19
Q

Trustee Duty to Invest Prudently

A

Must keep trust productive & diversify investment. Portfolio view: look into total return on portfolio. However, a trustee may delegate investment decisions if he uses reasonable care/skill/caution in (1) selecting agent, (2) defining scope & terms of delegation, & (3) periodically reviewing agent’s actions & decisions.

20
Q

Trustee with Revocable Trust

A

A trustee of a revocable trust who acts with settlor’s consent, cannot be liable to beneficiary.

21
Q

Multiple Trustees – Majority

A

Trustee must act with majority consent of trustees unless trust provides otherwise

22
Q

Resigning Trustee

A

Trustee must give written notice settlor – if alive, co-trustees, & all living beneficiaries. He must appoint new trustee if trust requires, but with unanimous consent of beneficiaries.

23
Q

Trustee Liability

A

Beneficiary can (1) ratify transaction (waive), (2) sue for loss, or (3) trace – recover property & its appreciation.

24
Q

Termination of Trust

A

By unanimous consent of beneficiaries, & no further trust purpose is served. EXCEPTIONS:

o Guardian can consent on behalf of minors or unborn

o Court can terminate or modify if non-consenting beneficiaries are adequately protected

o Court can terminate or modify if the material purpose is outweighed by modification

o Court can terminate or modify if the trust is insufficient to justify the costs of administration

o Trustee can terminate a trust with property worth less than $50,000 and can’t pay administration

25
Q

Charitable Trust

A

Generally, same rules as private trusts, but must be for charitable purpose not an ascertainable beneficiary, and the beneficiaries must be a reasonably large number and unidentifiable.

26
Q

Charitable Trust – Cy Pres Doctrine

A

As near as possible; trust may be modified if exact charitable purpose becomes illegal or impracticable.

27
Q

Resulting Trust

A

May arise upon failure of express one, or when trust purpose is accomplished & corpus not exhausted.

28
Q

Purchase Money Resulting Trust

A

Presumed when consideration for property is paid by one other than person taking title (no family member).

29
Q

General Power of Appointment

A

Presumed if donee wills away her property without mention of the appointment.

30
Q

Specific Power of Appointment

A

Must be referenced by donee in will, but a generic reference is presumed enough. Rebuttable by showing he did not know of the power.