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Indianapolis Indiana Lawyers
Wills, Trusts, Estates and Complex
Litigation, Living Trust, Living Will, Probate, Corporate & Securities Law, International Business Law
Immigration, Real Estate, Estate Planning & Administration
ESTATE PLANNING RESOURCES - Types of
Trusts
A trust is a legal
arrangement by which the settlor (person creating the trust) creates
in a third party (trustee) the power to hold an asset for the
benefit of the beneficiaries. Fundamentally, a trust allows the
trustee to control the assets of the trust (trust res) for the
benefit of the trust's beneficiaries. Assets of the trust are
managed pursuant to the terms of the trust, after title to each
asset specified in the trust is legally transferred to the trust. If
title is not transferred to the trust, the trustee has no legal
authority to manage the trust property for the benefit of the
beneficiaries.
Where the terms of the trust are not specified, state law will
provide the terms of the trust. This is similar to the rules of
intestate succession, which a state applies there is no will or when
the will is improperly created.
Click
here to read an article
about the IRS and Trusts which the IRS considers suspect.
Please select a link below for information on specific types of
trusts
Charitable Trust
A charitable
trust is established to provide support to specified charities,
during the decedent's life or after death. By forming a charitable
trust, the decedent's estate is allowed a deduction for the value
of property donated to a qualified charity. If a gift is made
during a person's life, the donor is entitled to an income tax
deduction. Such a donation also reduces the taxable estate,
reducing the taxes owed by the decedent's estate.
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Children's Trusts
These trusts
merely prevent children from receiving their inheritance before
the decedent wishes. There are income tax consequences to consider
when making Children's Trusts. Failure to create a trust for a
minor child will force their inheritance to be governed by a
court-appointed guardian during their minority and to be
distributed outright at the age of 18. Through the use of a
children’s trust, one can specify the ages at which they want
their child(ren) to receive distributions of the principal (e.g.
25, 30, 35) based upon their health, education, maintenance and
support needs. Additional restriction may be added.
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Credit Shelter Trusts
The Credit
Shelter Trust is the simplest method of protecting both spouses’
$1,000,000 lifetime exemptions. This allows a married couple to
shelter a combined $2,000,000 in assets from estate tax,
regardless of which spouse dies first, assuming that their Credit
Trusts are fully-funded. This type of trust is generally
established to reduce the amount of estate taxes owed upon the
death of the surviving spouse. This type of trust generally
distributes 100% of the trust's income to the surviving spouse, in
addition to the principal (of the trust) as necessary for the
surviving spouse's "health, education, maintenance and support."
The amounts do not reduce the "unified credit." At the death of
the surviving spouse, the remaining trust property may be held in
trust for children and grandchildren.
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Discretionary Trust
A discretionary
trust is a trust where the trustee has great latitude in paying
out the and/or investing the assets of the trust for the benefit
of the eligible beneficiaries.
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Irrevocable Life
Insurance Trusts
These trusts are
established to allow a decedent's life insurance to be kept out of
the "gross estate" by making the life insurance trust the
beneficiary (for a preexisting life insurance policy) or by making
the trustee the owner of the new life insurance policy for the
benefit of the beneficiaries of the trust. As payments are made to
the trust, instead of a person, the payments are not part of the
estate. Because it is the "gross estate" which is taxable, the
amount of death taxes owed by the estate is reduced. This type of
trust is irrevocable..
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Living
Trusts
A living trust is
to created during the lifetime of the settlor and may be
established for the benefit of the settlor and/or other
beneficiaries.. This can help avoid probate of the estate by
courts. It offers no tax advantages over trusts created by wills.
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Pour Over Wills
The Pour Over Will covers assets
not protected or under the control of the Living Trust. Items not
included in the living trust are subject to probate and taxable,
however, with a Pour Over Will, the assets subject to probate will
be only those assets not identified as trust assets. The Pour
Over Will indicates the deceased's intent, which was to include
the forgotten assets in the trust for distribution as part of the
trust estate.
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"QTIP" Trusts
A QTIP Trust is a
trust that provides a surviving spouse with trust income during
his or her lifetime and passes the remaining trust principal to
the decedent’s children at the surviving spouse’s death. This type
of trust is often selected by the client in a second marriage who
wants to maintain control over the ultimate distribution of the
trust asset(s). In other words, the surviving spouse’s interest in
the trust terminates at death and he or she has no power to
appoint their interest, leaving the remainder beneficiary
designation up to the decedent.
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Spendthrift Trust
A spendthrift
trust is created where the grantor allows the trustee to use
discretion in making distributions to a beneficiary who handles
money poorly (i.e. a spendthrift). Those provisions are referred
to as 'spendthrift provisions.' Such a provision allows the
trustee to pay money to third parties, rather than directly to the
beneficiary, as long as the payment benefits the beneficiary. The
trustee may also withhold any and all payments, when deemed
appropriate. Another benefit of spendthrift provisions is creditor
protection. Beneficiaries are protected from creditors because
creditors cannot attach payments before the trustee makes payments
to the beneficiary.
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Support
Trust
A support trust
is a trust created to provide the means for the education, health
care, and general support of the beneficiary. The trustee is
directed to distribute only so much of the income and principal as
is necessary for the specified support. The difference between
this and other trusts is that the needs of the beneficiary are
taken into account when determining the level of payments to the
beneficiary.
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Totten
Trust
A Totten Trust is
also known as a payable-on-death account. The trust is owned and
controlled by the grantor during his or her lifetime. Money can be
added or removed by the grantor, as the grantor wishes, with the
beneficiary having no opportunity to stop the actions of the
grantor. The beneficiary, specified during the life of the
grantor, does not obtain control of the account until the
grantor’s death. Note that the beneficiary may be changed during
the life of the grantor..
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"Contingency" Trusts
There are other trusts, which can
be created to meet unforeseen contingencies faced by the estate
upon the decedent's death. Such contingencies include the death
of the person inheriting assets according to the terms of a trust
prior to the termination of the trust, when heirs are left. There
are other contingencies that may be considered, which we would be
happy to discuss with you.
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