Trusts - terminology Flashcards
Why use a trust?
Flexible nature
Separates legal from equitable title
Protect assets from creditors
Avoid probate
Save on taxes
Provide management for grantor if/when mentally incompetent
Settlor
A.k.a. truster
Creates trust; transfers assets in or funds trust
CAN have multiple settlors
CAN be a beneficiary OR a trustee as well
Trustee
Manages the trust; has legal title
CAN have multiple trustees
SOLE Trustee CANNOT also be SOLE beneficiary § 736.0402(1)(e)] – merger rule
Beneficiary
Person(s) for whom trust is administered; has equitable title
CAN have multiple beneficiaries
Doctrine of Merger:
IF SOLE Trustee is SOLE Beneficiary, titles will merge
i.e. IF one person holds both legal and equitable title, titles will merge and trust will cease to exist
Trust
Fiduciary relationship with respect to property, with manifestation of intention to create that relationship and subjecting the person who holds title to the property to duties to deal with it for the benefit of charity or for one or more persons, at least one of whom is not the sole trustee
Inter Vivos Trust
Takes effect during settlor’s lifetime
Testamentary Trust
Takes effect only upon settlor’s death (created as part of a will)
Transfer in trust
transfer property to trust in order to create trust
Self Settled Trust
Settlor = Beneficiary
Self Declared Trust
Settlor = Trustee → trust is made by declaration
Pour over provisions
Names trustee of an inter vivos trust as the beneficiary of the will
Property “pours over” from the probate estate to the trust
Helps protect the identity of the beneficiaries
Res
corpus; trust property
Uniform Trust Code
NOT a federal statute
Model comprehensive codification of law of trusts
Does NOT repudiate common law (supposed to work in conjunction to the extent that provisions do not conflict)
Florida Trust Code
Effective Date – July 1, 2007: ALL trusts created before, on, or after date – UNLESS other date specified
Does NOT abolish common law of trusts - Just codifies, brings up to date and modifies
§ 736.0106: “common law of trusts and principles of equity supplement this code, except to the extent modified by this code or another law of this state”
Primarily default rules – ONLY apply if trust doesn’t expressly address a particular issue