Introduction Flashcards
What are the two key components of a trust?
- property component
- obligation component
What is property component?
There must be identifiable trust property
What respective interests do a trustee and a beneficiary have in trust property?
A trustee has an the legal interest in the property - it is responsible for managing the property
A beneficiary has an equitable interest - it is it benefit from the property (beneficial interest)
What can be held on trust?
There is no limit.
Can be physical property or intangible property such as debt or a company share.
What happens if the trust property is destroyed without any fault on the part of the trustee?
The trust ceases to exist
What happens if the trust property is destroyed and the trustee is at fault?
The trust continues to exist.
Trustee must restore the property and if not possible, personally compensate trust for loss
What is the obligation requirement under trust?
A trust must have a trustee who manages the trust property for the benefit of the beneficiaries
What is the objects requirement of the trust?
A trust must have a beneficiary or a permitted purpose
Can a trustee also be a beneficiary of the trust?
Yes but must exercise trustee’s duties and power for all beneficiaries not just themselves
What are the benefits of using trusts?
- separation of ownership and management of property
- expertise - trustee can be an expert in managing property
- protection - protects those who are incapable of managing their own property
- flexibility - can create different interests in property, share interests etc
- control - allows original owner to retain degree of control over property in way outright gift doesn’t
- ringfencing on insolvency
- tracing and proprietary claims - can recover property more easily using trusts, if trusts issuesd
- tax benefits
What key uses are there for trusts in commercial context?
- share ownership arrangements
- investment funds
- pension funds
- other forms of tax-efficient
- employee remuneration
- corporate tax avoidance
What key uses are there for trusts for individuals?
- testamentary planning
- land ownership
- tax planning