Part of creating a trust is determining who is best suited to handle different situations that could arise. During the trust design process, we will help you brainstorm who could make a good agent for your power of attorney, successor trustee, or member of your incapacity panel. The same person might not be the best fit for each role. Let’s take a look at each type of position and the responsibilities it encompasses: Successor Trustees Successor trustees manage your assets for you in ...
Who Wants to Be a Trustee? – Part 3 – Tasks
Trustees are obligated to meet their duties, described in Part 2 of this series. To do so, the trustee must complete a number of tasks throughout his or her service as trustee. Throughout, the trustee must consider whether he or she has the power to take a particular action. Well-drafted trusts include a lengthy section spelling out exactly what the trustee may do in administering the trust. Generally speaking, if an action benefits the beneficiaries, the trustee may do that act if ...
Who Wants to Be a Trustee? – Part 2 – Duties
In this second entry in our trustee series, we look at the duties a trustee must follow under state law. Here are the basics: Duty to Follow Trust Document Although perhaps it seems obvious, the trustee must follow the trust document. If there is any confusion, the trustee has to try to figure out what the grantor intended. So, a trustee must read (and re-read) the entire trust document to make sure she understands what the terms of the trust say. Then she has to follow those terms, even ...
Who Wants to Be a Trustee? – Part 1 – Overview
Estate planning attorneys use trusts to solve all sorts of problems for their clients. Any time there is a trust, there must be a trustee - the person who manages the assets in a trust. This post, along with the next several ones, will talk about what it means to be a trustee. Wait, what's a trust again? A trust is an agreement in which the grantor designates a trustee to manage assets for the beneficiary. One person might fill more than one of these roles. In a revocable living trust ...
Who Does What in My Estate Plan — Or What is a Fiduciary?
We've had some questions lately about the roles people play in estate plans. These people (which lawyers call a "fiduciary"), include your personal representative, your trustee, your "agents," and the guardians for your minor children. Personal Representative Your Personal Representative (or "PR") is a person you designate in your Will. His or her job is simply to wrap up your financial affairs after you die. (The out-of-date name for this job was the "executor." We don't use that term ...