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Trusts
The term trust describes the holding of
property by a trustee (which may be one or more persons
or a corporate trust company or bank) in accordance with the provisions
of a written trust instrument for the benefit of one or more persons
called beneficiaries. A person may be both a trustee and
a beneficiary of the same trust. A trust created by your will
is called a testamentary trust and the trust provisions are contained
in your will.
If you create a trust during your lifetime, you
are described as the trust's grantor or settlor,
the trust is called a living or inter vivos trust,
and the trust provisions are contained in the trust agreement
or declaration. The provisions of that trust document
(rather than your will or state law defaults) will usually determine
what happens to the property in the trust upon your death.
A living trust may be revocable (subject to change
and terminated by the settlor) or irrevocable. Either type of
trust may be designed to accomplish the purposes of property management,
assistance to the settlor in the event of physical or mental incapacity,
and disposition of property after the death of the settlor of
the trust.
Trusts are not only for the wealthy. Many young
parents with limited assets choose to create trusts either during
life or in their wills for the benefit of their children in case
both parents die before all their children have reached an age
deemed by them to indicate sufficient maturity to handle property.
This permits the trust estate to be held as a single undivided
fund to be used for the support and education of minor children
according to their respective needs, with eventual division of
the trust among the children when the youngest has reached a specified
age. This type of arrangement has an obvious advantage over an
inflexible division of property among children of different ages
without regard to their level of maturity or individual needs
at the time of such distribution.
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