Trusts Flashcards

1
Q

Trust

A
  • entity property that involves separation of management and benefit
  • separation of legal title (trustee) and equitable/beneficial title (beneficiary)
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2
Q

Parties Involved in Trust

A
  • settlor
  • trustee
  • beneficiary
  • individual can function as more than one persona (can be settlor and trustee, or trustee and a beneficiary) BUT can’t create own trust in which you’re both trustee + beneficiary
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3
Q

Trust - Basic Process of Formation

A
  • Settlor makes a declaration, either by deed of trust during life or by will, that the assets are subject to a trust -> declaration conceptually splits assets into two components: legal and equitable
  • legal title goes to trustee -> retains possession of the assets + is charged w/ their management
  • equitable title belongs to beneficiary - entitled to enjoy the benefits of the trust
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4
Q

General Duty of Trustee

A
  • must manage the property for the sole benefit of the beneficiary subject to restrictions put in by settlor
  • off-the-rack (default) fiduciary duties
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5
Q

Numerus Clausus Safety Valve

A
  • complexities of trusts are contained w/in the trust itself + largely irrelevant to third parties (makes it easier to overcome numerus clausus)
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6
Q

Trust Assets

A
  • usually fully alienable, b/c legal title in trustee

- third parties only take subject to beneficial interest if they have notice or did not give value

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7
Q

Broadway National Bank v. Adams

A
  • deals w/ trust where there’s a spendthrift clause (creditors can’t reach the trust assets before they’re dispensed to the beneficiary) -> says valid (not an unreasonable restraint on alienation)
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8
Q

Fiduciary Duties of Trustees

A
  • trustees are hard to monitor + beneficiary often vulnerable -> strict fiduciary duties
    includes duties of loyalty, impartiality, and prudence
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9
Q

Duties of Loyalty

A
  • preclude trustee from self-dealing or engaging in transactions that create conflict of interest w/ obligations to settlor + beneficiaries
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10
Q

Duties of Impartiality

A
  • require that trustees act fairly towards all beneficiaries, not favoring one class of beneficiary over another
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11
Q

Duties of Prudence

A
  • require that trustee invest + manage the trust assets in a fashion that entails an appropriate degree of risk, given the circumstances of the beneficiaries + the nature of the trust property
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12
Q

Rothko v. Reis - Facts

A
  • Reis persuades Rothko to write will naming Reis + two others as executors + leave all 798 of his unsold paintings to a foundation with a rather vague purpose
  • After Rothko’s death, the three executors move to sign contract w/ Marlborough Gallery - gallery gets exclusive right to sell the paintings at 50% commission (Reis is placed on retainer + made director of the gallery in exchange, + controller of the gallery Frank Lloyd dangles favorable sales arrangements for Stamos, an artist, third executor goes along b/c his lawyer says its permissible)
  • the executors sold all of the paintings to the gallery w/in three weeks of probate
  • Daughter + son take 50% forced share of the estate + file suit charging breach of fiduciary duty
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13
Q

Rothko v. Reis - Procedural Posture

A
  • trial court entered temporary restraining order against further disposition of the paintings -> Lloyd violated this by having an additional 57 paintings shipped out of the country
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14
Q

Rothko v. Reis - Ruling

A
  • trial court rules for the children -> makes Lloyd + executors jointly liable for up to $9.2 million in damages, computed on the basis of the value of the paintings sold in violation of the restraining order as of the time of the trial
  • NY Court of Appeal affirms
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15
Q

Cy Pres Doctrine

A
  • deals w/ issue of changed circumstances not anticipated by settlor - allows courts to revise trusts in light of these changes
  • American courts initially applied very restrictive version - required that the specific charitable purpose be impossible or illegal + that the instrument of trust reflect a “general charitable intent” in addition to the specific purpose
  • BUT courts more willing to invoke the doctrine recently - Restatement of the Law Third Trusts went so far as to say that cy pres should be available when carrying out the original trust would be “wasteful”
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16
Q

Wilber v. Owens - Facts

A
  • Bamford dies leaving no relatives closer than 1st cousins - writes elaborate will establishing a trust, the income of which is to be devoted to “continue and carry forward to a completion + publish for popular understanding” a set of materials written by Bamford (his own musings)
  • not enough money to fully fund the trust described in paragraph 10 - if this is funded, the subsequent bequests (including trust for extended relatives) would be unfunded
17
Q

Wilber v. Owens - Procedural Posture

A
  • executor asks probate court for construction of the will
  • Princeton, as potential trustee under paragraph 10 trust, argues the trust should be reformed under cy pres (argued there was a more general philosophical purpose behind the papers)
18
Q

Wilber v. Owens - Decision + Reasoning

A
  • court reconstructs trust under cy pres (Bamford’s notes unintelligible + irrational) -> express purpose of the trust is impossible, but testator had general charitable intent so trust = valid charitable trust -> judge proposes reformulating the paragraph to provide the money be used by Princeton Philosophy Dept. “in some fitting manner for scientific or philosophical research”
  • B technically wrote of his notes something along the lines of “if they prove to be of value” -> court basically uses this false modesty to say B had general intent
19
Q

Traditional Test for Cy Pres

A

Two components:

  • first, court must determine that the settlor of the trust has a general charitable intent
  • second, the court must find that the specific charitable intent specified by the settlor is impossible to fulfill, would violate public policy, or has been rendered problematic by changed circumstances