Trusts, Alienability, and the Rule Against Perpetuities - Jan. 31 Flashcards
What is a trustee? (Barros)
The trustee is the legal owner of the assets held in trust. (171)
What is a beneficiary? (Barros)
The beneficiaries are the equitable owners of the assets. (171)
What are the two basic fiduciary duties? (Barros)
The two basic fiduciary duties are the duty of loyalty and the duty of care. (172)
What is duty of loyalty? (Barros)
Duty of loyalty makes the interests of the beneficiary paramount. The trustee must place the beneficiary’s interests above her own. The duty of loyalty prevents, among other things, self-dealing—the trustee, for example, cannot have the trust purchase an asset that she owns. (172)
What is duty of care? (Barros)
The duty of care requires the trustee to act in a careful and professionally prudent manner. These duties are strictly enforced, and courts take breaches of fiduciary duties very seriously. (172)
What is a settlor? (Barros)
A settlor is the person who creates a trust. (172)
What is the rule against perpetuities? (Barros)
“No interest [subject to the Rule] is good unless it must vest [in a closed class], if at all, no later than 21 years after some life in being at the creation of the interest.” (175)
An interest is valid only if it must vest or fail within 21 years after some life in being at the creation of the interest (Eason - Jan. 31)
What does the rule aginst perpetuities apply to? (Barros)
It applies to: Contingent remainders, Executory Interests, Vested Remainders in an Open Class, Option and similar contracts. (175)
What does the rule against perpetuities not apply to? (Barros)
It does not apply to:
Future interests created in the grantor: Reversions, Possibilities of Reverter, Rights of Entry
Vested interests not in an open class created in the grantee: Indefeasibly Vested Remainders, Vested Remainders Subject to Divestment (175)
How does the rule against perpetuities further the alienability of property? (Barros)
The Rule aids alienability by limiting the amount of time for the contingencies in contingent remainders and executory interests to resolve themselves, and for the open classes in vested remainders in an open class to become closed. It also aids alienability by destroying interests that do not comply with the Rule. (176)
What is the dead hand issue? (Barros)
Problems might arise when a person tries to control land or other assets after their death. (176)
How do we apply the rule against perpetuities? (Barros)
To apply the Rule, we
(1) Classify the future interests created by the grant without regard to their validity under the Rule.
(2) See if any of these interests are subject to the Rule.
(3) Test those interests to see if they vest or fail in a closed class within the perpetuities period. If they do, they are valid. If they do not, they are void.
(4) If any of the interests are invalid under the Rule, we reclassify the valid interests created by the grant. (177)
What are the two major ways to test whether an interest satisfies the rule against perpetuities? (Barros)
The common-law approach and the wait-and-see approach. (177)
What is the common-law approach? (Barros)
The common-law approach looks forward from the time an interest is created and asks whether the interest is certain to vest or fail in a closed class within the perpetuities period. (177)
What is the wait-and-see approach? (Barros)
Rather than looking forward from the date of creation of the interest, this approach waits to see how facts actually develop. It looks backward at the end of the perpetuities period and asks whether the interests in question have vested or failed in a closed class. Any interest that satisfies the common-law approach will also satisfy the wait-and-see approach: if we have proved with certainty that the interest will vest or fail in a closed class during the perpetuities period, we don’t have to wait and see how things actually turn out. (177)