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  Using Trusts To Protect Assets  Putting It All Together
  Name A Guardian  TRACK 1: The Value Of Your Estate Is Under The Applicable Exclusion Amount

Important Legal Documents & Trusts

Using Trusts To Protect Assets

Throughout this section, we mention transferring assets to loved ones. The problem is once your heirs receive their property, is it possible to continue to protect them from outside creditors or even themselves? You can accomplish these objectives by making transfers to a trust.

A Trust is a separate legal entity that controls the assets you place into it. (These assets are called the Trust Principal or Trust Corpus.) You are known as the Grantor of the trust, since you were the one who created it. The grantor decides who gets income and/or actual principal payouts from the trust. The people receiving the payouts are known as Beneficiaries. The person who administers the trust and makes sure all the beneficiaries are provided for is the Trustee. The rules that you dictate the trust to follow (how long the trust should last, who gets what, and other rules the trustee has to follow) are known as the Trust Terms. An attorney is needed to do the paperwork to get a trust started. The document that defines the trust is known as the Trust Agreement. Trusts become active as soon as they receive assets, either by you transferring assets to the trust during your life or when you die.

Trusts can be powerful tools when used properly. Let’s go through a hypothetical example. If you want to give your child a large inheritance, but you want to make sure that he is a certain age before he manages the money, while at the same time the money is available if your spouse faced an emergency, your trust might say (we’ll simplify the language here - an actual trust agreement would be much longer):

  • Trustee shall collect and invest all income until such time that David (your son) becomes twenty five, then pay him one half the amount in the trust. At age thirty, the trustee shall pay the balance of the trust principal to David.
  • The trustee at any time shall be allowed to make distributions to David or Jack (your father) to pay for expenses related to their health, education, safety or well being.
  • If David dies before Jack, distribute all principal to Jack immediately. If Jack dies before David, and David dies before age 25, the trustee shall give all trust principal to the Easter Seals Society.

Work with your attorney to develop specific language for any trust arrangement you make.

When prepared properly, a trust can protect the assets from creditors of the beneficiaries. It is also difficult for spouses of your beneficiaries to attack the principal in a divorce proceeding or as a right of election if your beneficiary dies. The best part is that the beneficiaries can’t waste the entire amount in the trust, just the amount that is distributed to them.

 

CAUTION: The instructions that you give the trustee in the trust agreement should be very clear and designed to avoid any confusion. Any gray areas may lead to legal troubles, and battles between trustees and beneficiaries can become complex and cost a lot of money and aggravation.

HOT TIP: Always pick a trustee who will be fair to all beneficiaries. As is the case with executors and guardians, pick alternate trustees. The trustee and all alternates should be trustworthy and have ordinary good business sense. This could be an individual. However, it may make sense to name a bank or trust company to oversee your estate or trust.

 

HOT TIP: If the amount being transferred is very small, you may want to give the amount outright. If you do decide to create a trust, consider giving the trustee the right to pay out principal if the amount in the trust becomes very small.



Article Content by Truebridge, Inc. All rights reserved. Copyright 2001-2010


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