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Published bySydney Scott Modified over 9 years ago
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A. Time when trust takes effect 1. Inter Vivos or Living Trust = while Settlor alive ▪ Declaration: Trustee = Settlor ▪ Conveyance or Transfer: Trustee ≠ Settlor 2. Testamentary = when Settlor dies ▪ Will validity is condition precedent of trust validity
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B. Type of beneficiary 1. Private trust (individual) 2. Charitable trust (charity)
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A. Trust intent Split of title into legal and equitable interests, and Settlor imposed enforceable duties on the holder of legal title (trustee).
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B. Consideration Consideration is not needed. A “non” element.
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C. Statute of Frauds compliance General Rule: ▪ Written evidence of trust’s terms which is ▪ Signed by the settlor (or the settlor’s agent).
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C. Statute of Frauds compliance Personal property exceptions: ▪ Oral trust: ▪ Settlor transfers title to a trustee who is neither the settlor nor a beneficiary, and ▪ Settlor expresses simultaneously with or prior to the transfer the intention to create a trust. ▪ Self-declaration of trust with insufficient writing
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C. Statute of Frauds compliance Part performance exception ▪ If trustee acts as if he/she is a trustee, trustee will be estopped from raising Statute of Frauds defense.
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C. Statute of Frauds compliance Changes to written trust ▪ Changes to a written trust must be in writing even if settlor could originally have created the trust orally.
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D. No violation of Rule Against Perpetuities Private trust = An interest is not good unless it must vest, if at all, not later than 21 years after some life in being at the time of the creation of the interest, plus a period of gestation. Mandatory reformation, including use of cy pres, if RAP violated. Charitable trust = RAP does not apply.
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E. Legal purpose Not illegal. Not against public policy.
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F. Settlor had capacity Inter vivos trust = capacity to make an inter vivos gift. Testamentary trust = testamentary capacity
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G. Property Settlor must transfer property: ▪ Property must be transferable, and ▪ Settlor must actually transfer the property.
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H. Trustee Acceptance ▪ Conclusive = sign trust or separate written acceptance ▪ Presumption = exercise power or perform duty
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H. Trustee Bond required unless: ▪ Settlor waives in trust instrument ▪ Corporate trustee
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I. Beneficiary Private trust = clearly ascertainable Charitable trust = benefit society/community
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A. Revocable by settlor? Presumed Irrevocable if: ▪ Settlor provided for irrevocability in the trust. ▪ Settlor is dead.
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B. Limits on beneficiary’s interest? Spendthrift ▪ Beneficiary cannot transfer interest. ▪ Beneficiary’s creditors cannot attach interest. ▪ Exceptions: ▪ Settlor = Beneficiary ▪ Child support ▪ Federal taxes
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B. Limits on beneficiary’s interest? Mandatory or discretionary distribution? Limited by a purpose or standard? ▪ Health ▪ Education ▪ Maintenance ▪ Support
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A. By Parties Settlor (presumed amendable) Beneficiaries (with court consent via deviation) Settlor plus beneficiaries Trustee (trust permission, divide/combine, non- judicial cy pres) Trustee plus beneficiaries (merger)
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B. By Court Deviation ▪ Purposes of trust fulfilled ▪ Purposes of trust have become illegal ▪ Purposes of trust are impossible to fulfill ▪ Change will further the purposes of trust because of circumstances the settlor did not know and could not anticipate ▪ Necessary or appropriate to achieve settlor’s tax objectives and is not contrary to settlor’s intent
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B. By Court Deviation (continued) ▪ Modification of administrative provision is necessary or appropriate to prevent waste or avoid impairment of trust’s administration ▪ Continuance of the trust is not necessary to achieve any material purpose of trust, and all beneficiaries consent (directly, by virtual representation, or through guardian ad litem) ▪ Change is not inconsistent with material purpose of trust, and all beneficiaries consent (directly, by virtual representation, or through guardian ad litem)
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B. By Court Cy pres ▪ Charitable trust ▪ Substitute equitably equivalent charity ▪ Settlor had general charitable intent
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Express terms of trust Settlor (presumed revocable) Exhaust property Court-ordered termination (deviation) Merger No beneficiary Uneconomic (< $50,000)
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A. What powers did trustee have and did trustee exceed them? Trust instrument Trust Code Implied or granted by equity Court order No such thing as “absolute discretion” – trustee must always act honestly and in good faith
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B. Effect of grant of “discretion” No such thing as “absolute discretion” – trustee must always act honestly and in good faith
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C. Delegation Generally = allowed if reasonable Investment and management = allowed if a prudent trustee of comparable skills could properly delegate If delegation proper, trustee not liable to beneficiaries for agent’s acts – trustee’s due diligence in ▪ Selecting ▪ Establishing scope and terms of delegation ▪ Reviewing agent’s actions
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C. Delegation (continued) Exceptions: ▪ Agent is an affiliate of the trustee ▪ Trustee or beneficiary is required to arbitrate ▪ Statute of limitations is shortened
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D. Prudently invest Prudent investor Portfolio approach – view investments collectively, not individually Factors (e.g., income, safety, appreciation, tax, need for income/liquidity, property preservation, etc.). Diversify
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D. Prudently invest (continued) Review investments Follow settlor’s instructions ▪ Lower standard ▪ Exculpate negligent breaches
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E. Did trustee properly respond to requests for accountings? Within 90 days of beneficiary’s request Meeting statutory requirements
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F. Maintain loyalty Earmark trust property Avoid commingling Support trust Make no profit Not buy/sell trust assets to self or affiliate Not loan trust assets to self or affiliate (except for expressly authorized loans and certain corporate deposits)
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F. Maintain loyalty (continued) Not purchase own securities for trust Not sell from one trust to another Deal fairly with beneficiary on non-trust business Be leery about hiring self to perform other services for trust Exculpatory clauses are strictly construed
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G. Liability to third parties Contract, unless ▪ Contract expressly excludes personal liability ▪ Trustee signed, “as trustee” (rebuttal presumption) Tort, reimbursement/direct suit allowed only if ▪ Common incident ▪ Strict liability ▪ Conversion Contract and tort plaintiffs have duty to notify beneficiaries
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H. Allocation between principal and income Be prepared on: ▪ Basic allocation of receipts rules ▪ How adjustment power operates ▪ Basic allocation of expenditures rules ▪ Unitrusts
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I. Compensation Trustee entitled to reasonable compensation unless trust provides otherwise.
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A. Procedural Matters Plaintiff must having standing (interested person) Jurisdiction ▪ District court ▪ Statutory probate court Venue – multiple venues possible Virtual representation
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B. Against trustee Money damages ▪ Lost value to trust ▪ Profit made by trustee ▪ Lost profits ▪ Punitive damages for intentional breach Removal of trustee ▪ Enumerated grounds or for other cause ▪ No statute of limitations
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B. Against trustee (continued) Decree to carry out trust Injunction Receivership Require or increase bond Declaratory judgment Criminal sanctions
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C. Against beneficiary D. Against trust property Tracing Subrogation Marshaling BFP and similar protections for people dealing with trustee E. Against third parties
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F. Are remedies barred? Settlor’s approval in trust Beneficiary release or ratification Court decree Statute of limitations (4 years from discovery) Laches
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A. Trust bank accounts “A in trust for B” Not a true trust, just an account with financial institution B only receives funds if B outlives A No split of title and no fiduciary duties; A may withdraw money at any time for any (or no) reason
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B. Resulting trusts Express trust property excessive and instrument is silent Failure of express trust Purchase-money resulting trust
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C. Constructive trust Equitable remedy to prevent unjust enrichment ▪ Fraud ▪ Abuse of confidential relationship ▪ Promise in contemplation of death
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