Remainder Beneficiary: Typically receive trust principle upon death of income beneficiary (when trust dissolves)
Regular BFY: pulls from principle (Like takes $20 annually from the trust)
Unitrust: when person receives percentage of the principle (like 3% each year)
Mandatory distribution: “A shall pay B”, usu a rqmt that income be paid to income beneficiary each year.
Discretionary distributions: “A may pay B”, often have a safety net allowing BFYs to receive principle in case of medical emergency, support, etc.
Trustee: holds legal title to assets, but holds a fiduciary responsibility to BFYs and can be held accountable for misuse of funds. If trustee purchased something, opened account, would say: A, trustee of the J & J trust
Revocable Trusts
Reasons to Create (always created during lifetime)
Avoid Probate
Avoid Conservatorship- crt supervised proceeding (like probate) created for mentally incapacitated person
Revocable trusts DO NOT
Save Income Tax – tax ID is same as indiv’s SSN revocable trust is simply an alter ego during your life
Still have to report income from assets held in RT on your individual tax return during your life
Save Estate Tax – assets held in RT will be included in your gross estate for fed estate tax purposes when you die (just like assets held in your individual capacity)
may have provisions to help mitigate estate tax like will, but per se RT has no special way of reducing it
Provide Asset Protection – RT is your alter ego assets are treated as your own
Trust is revocable – you can revoke/amend/defund it during your lifetime
Only difference = you are doing it in your fiduciary capacity
Creditors can reach RT assets (just like assets held in indiv. capacity) b/c> complete control over them
Will substitute – provides dispositive terms for the distribution of trust assets without the need for probate
Settlor’s death> successor trustee immediately>RT trustee>starts administering trust/ distributing assets to BFYs
NO PROBATE– assets are held by trustee of RT in fiduciary capacity NOT by trustee in individual capacity
Assets held in your name as individual>subject to probate unless have JT or BFY designation
Funding = all assets are held in RT
Assets with Formal Title – should be held by individual in his fiduciary capacity as trustee of revocable trust
Magic words = transfer deed/account from A as an individual to “A, trustee of the A revocable trust”
Examples of Assets = bank account, real property, brokerage accounts, partnership, etc.
Assets not susceptible to Formal Title – e.g., Tangible Personal Property (or intangible if no> formal title)
General Assignment – broad to assign all other assets to RT (used to get tangible personal property into RT)
ALWAYS do it cause want everything in RT other than retirement plans
Could be a schedule attached to RT or a separate document
Magic words = “I hereby transfer [all my tangible personal property] into my revocable trust”
NO GUARANTEE that broad language will actually be sufficient to avoid probate (but it might work)
GUARANTEED to work for tangible personal property as well as intangible w/ no formal title
DON’T USE FOR IRREVOCABLE TRUST- only used for specific transfers
Exception = retirement plans are an exception to rule that you should hold all assets in a RT
RT CANNOT hold retirement plans – fed law prohibits anyone other than employee frm owning retire plan
No practical consequence – retirement plans avoid probate anyway b/c it has a BFY designation no real reason why you would want to put retirement plan in revocable trust even if you could
Pour Over Will
Signed when you sign a revocable trust
Contains only one dispositive provision = “everything that is subject to this will gets distributed at the end of probate according to the terms of my revocable trust”
NOTE: pour over will must pass through probate but assets will still be disposed of according to terms of pour over will instead of through rules of intestacy
Goal = fully fund revocable trust – you want to put all assets into RT if you can b/c ONLY the assets held in revocable trust are subject to terms of revocable trust upon death
Pour over will = superfluous if revocable trust fully funded
Pour over will = necessary to transfer to revocable trust any assets not held in revocable trust
Property not held in revocable trust subject to probate under terms of pour over will
Administrative Trust: when settlor dies, RT becomes irrevocable Administrative Trust
Fiduciary duties are same that PR of estate has to do, w/o crt involvement (unless BFY file objections)
Control Distributions – allows distributions to be controlled over time
E.g., Settlor does not think it prudent to give X $1MM outright rather than gifting money outright, Settlor can put money in trust so that X cannot access that money all at once (restrict recipient’s access)
Asset Protection
Outright gift of money to X allows creditors to come after X; BUT, creditors can’t access assets in an IrrT
Tax Reasons- allocate GST exemption to that trust (and no estate tax either) + all lifetime gift tax benefits
Two Irrevocable Trust Types
Inter Vivos – trust that is created during the lifetime of the Settlor
Testamentary – trust> comes into existence upon death of the Settlor a new entity=recipient of a bequest
Created under Will OR Revocable Trust (e.g., “when I die, I want $X to go to A irrevocable trust, which will be created upon my death and administered under these terms”)
Funding – functions as a gift to that irrevocable trust
Same way as you would fund RT – title to any property transferred to X, trustee of the Y irrevocable trust
Testamentary Irrevocable Trust
Created by fully-funded Revocable Trust assets do not pass through probate
Created by Will irrevocable trust would be funded after will passed through probate
Clearly defined assets – you need to identify specific assets and put those assets into the irrevocable trust
NO General Assignment
You no longer own assets that are transferred to irrevocable trust – like a gift
Beneficiaries
Two Types for Irr. trusts
Income Beneficiaries- net income from trust (dividinds on stock, interest on bonds, income frm real estate)
Could have successive Income BFY’s but won’t have Remainder until trust dissolves
Remainder Beneficiaries- whatever left over is given to Remainder BFY when trust is dissolved
Clarity important
TO WHOM can assets be distributed?
WHEN can assets be distributed?
Under what circumstances MAY assets be distributed?
Under what circumstances MUST assets be distributed?
Distributive Provisions – limited only by imagination of Settlor
Distributions can be
Mandatory or Discretionary
Income or Principle
Income= dividends, interests, etc. (generated income)- put million in stocks> income is extra that stocks make (often have an income BFY who gets paid based on how well the $ did)
Principle= original money- put million in trust> that million is the principle
Typical Scenario: income BFY=adult child of Settlor; remainder BFYs=grandkids of adult child of Settlor
Powers of Appointment – apply only to those assets subject to the Power of Appointment (Optional)
Can only be exercised in the manner that the trust instrument prescribes
Purpose = builds flexibility into dispositive plan (allow for circs that Settlor can’t foresee when trust is created)
Scope = limited only by terms of trust – can be broad or narrow
Can say which assets it governs
Can say who Permissible Appointees are
Can say if assets can be put in trust or not
Terminology
Settlor = creator of PofA (grandma-donor)
Holder = persons who holds PofA (daughter-donee)
Usually, holder = income beneficiary of trust, but doesn’t have to be
Takers-in-Default = those who will get prop if Holder does not exercise PofA (grandkids)
Permissible Appointees = person to whom prop can be distributed (or held in trust) under PofA
Class of Permissibles can be broad or narrow – Settlor can make them anyone he wants:
E.g., everyone in world broad Power of Appointment
E.g., X’s kids, issue, or charity narrow Power of Appointment
Function
If Holder does nothing Takers-in-Default get property in equal shares
If Holder exercises Powers estate plan has flexibility b/c Holder can change dispositive plan
E.g. can alter proportions, put some funds in trust for another, remove someone completely as BFY, etc.
Example: Grandma creates IrrT for Daughter w/ D as income BFY & D’s children as remainder BFYs
Problem = G doesn’t know how grandkids will turn out (e.g., drug problem; independently wealthy)
So, G gives D Power of Appointment to alter percentages GC get – now D has flexibility
Can reduce or eliminate share (e.g., if doesn’t need or deserve the money)
Can provide that a GC’s portion is held in further trust with other conditions
Types
General Power of Appointment – term of art – if Power of Appointment is exercisable in favor of the Holder, Holder’s estate, Holder’s creditors OR creditors of Holder’s estate General Power
Consequences = Bad
Assets subject to General PofA will be taxed as part of Holder’s estate for federal tax purposes
Holder’s creditors can reach assets held in trust and subject to General Power
Limited Power of Appointment – term of art – limited if it is not general
Almost always preferable to a general power
Assets will not be taxed as part of Holder’s estate–at least PofA by itself won’t cause this
PofA itself won’t cause trust assets to be accessible to Holder’s creditors
Amending Trusts
Trust instrument will prescribe procedures for how trust can be amended
Failure to follow procedures amendment NOT valid
Why create
When create
Funding
Trustee
Beneficial Interests
Termination
Revocable Trust
Avoid Probate.
Avoid Conservatorship
Lifetime
-Real Estate
-Bank accounts
-Brokerage accounts
-General Assignment
-NOT retirement plan
Settlor
Settlor
Death
Irrevocable Trust
Control Distributions
Asset protection
Taxes
Inter-vivos (in life)
Testamentary (death)
SAME but not general assignment
Corporate Individual
BFYs
Whenever the terms of the trust terminates. There are “dynasty trusts” designed to last forever
Incapacity & Conservatorship
Definitions
Incapacity – physical or mental inability to manage one’s own financial affairs
Conservatorship (aka lifetime probate)– crt supervised entity created when an individual is deemed> incapacitated
Conservatee = incapacitated individual
Conservator = fiduciary appointed to manage conservatee’s affairs
Process – more difficult cause crt wants to ensure that conservatee’s civil rights are not taken away from him/her (usually for the rest of conservatee’s life) unless it is absolutely necessary
Similar to probate process (including all the headaches)
Same expenses, delays, inconveniences, and public disclosure as probate
Additional process– special protections to ensure necessity of taking away conservatee’s civil rights (right to manage own assets, to K, etc.; crt wants> more careful supervision) conservatorship can be even worse than probate
Physician’s certificate – crt declaration that person is actually incapacitated
Court investigator often appointed– interviews proposed conservatee to make sure> really needs conservatorship
PVP Attorney(Probate Volunteer Panel)-pool of attorneys some crts use to appoint attorney to represent cnsrvtee
Conservator Duties – same fiduciary responsibilities as PR owed to conservatee
Avoiding Conservatorship– assets held in your name as individual are subject to conservatorship if you are incapacitated UNLESS
Revocable Trust = best way
If fully funded, RT allows successor trustee to step in immediately after incapacity to manage assets – assets are held in name of trustee in his fiduciary capacity not in name of conservatee in his individual capacity
MAKE SURE RT is fully funded– otherwise assets subject to conservatorship (lifetime probate) regardless of trust terms
Successor trustee owes incapacitated Settlor a fiduciary duty during lifetime of incapacitated Settlor
Durable Power of Attorney = adequate
Agent under durable power of attorney could manage assets held in individual’s name after incapacitated
But financial institutions are less leery of and more comfortable with revocable trusts b/c the fact that assets are actually held in trust means the person really intended for the asset to be in the trust in the first place
Representation of Minors
Problem = minors (<18) cannot protect his/her interests as a beneficiary of trust/estate
Solution = get someone else involved who will protect minor’s interests
If no conflict of interest parents can provide protection (e.g., notice can be sent to parents)
If conflict of interest parents cannot effectively represent minor (e.g., two competing wills submitted to probate where one leaves everything to parents and other leaves everything to children of parents)
Virtual Representation – if parents are unavailable kid representative needs court approval
Doctrine of Virtual Representation = a person may represent the minor’s interest in the proceeding if he/she has identical interests to those of the minor
KEY = identical interest
Ex – a will leaves residue to four people in equal shares one of whom is a minor any of the other 3 residual beneficiaries can represent that minor child b/c they have identical interest
Ex – remainder BFY& a contingent remainder BFY – trust provides that X is income BFY& remainder goes to Y when X dies, but if Y is not alive at time of Xs death, then prop goes to Ys nieces & nephews
Y = remainder BFY and Y’s nieces and nephews are contingent remainder BFYs Y can represent his nieces and nephews b/c the only interest they would have is identical to that of Y
Critical ?= is person who wants to virtually represent minor really in position to look out for minor’s interest?
Depends on the issue involved
Example – income beneficiary and remainder beneficiary interests are not identical at all
Income BFY: wants investments made to ensure as much income as possible (e.g., high-yielding bonds)
Remainder BFY – wants investments made to ensure growth of estate (e.g., growth stocks)
So, if parents are income BFYs & children are remainder BFY parents could not effectively represent minor children’s interests (conflicts as parents and conflicts as virtual representation)
Guardian ad Litem
Appointed by crt for this particular issue/proceeding to represent interests of the minor who is not in a position to represent his/her own best interests
Usually a trust/estate lawyer in whom the court has confidence