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The Florida living trust is an estate-planning document used to
dispose of one’s estate. Its principal advantage
over a regular will is avoiding probate, providing
guardianship planning, offering privacy, and
allowing quicker and easier administration.
The creator of the trust is called
the grantor or trustor and can be the trustee of his
own trust as well as the primary beneficiary of the
trust. Therefore, the same person can play three
roles at one time: grantor, trustee, and
beneficiary.
If the grantors are married, own
everything jointly, and have less than a 5
million estate, they will probably have one joint
trust in which they serve as co-trustees. If they
own assets separately, as can be the case in second
marriages, or have an estate of over 5 million,
then two trusts should be considered.
Successor trustees are those chosen
to manage the trust upon the incapacity of the
grantor (creator). They can serve in first, second
or third order or two can serve as successor
co-trustees. Also, their function begins upon the
death of the last grantor, at which time they would
distribute the estate according to the instructions
in the trust. Successor trustees can reside
anywhere and do not have to be related.
The pour-over will is a document that
“pours over” to the trust everything that is not in
the trust upon the death of the creator of the
trust. It is also a way to bequeath personal
effects, if desired. It replaces any previous will,
and, in fact, becomes the “Last Will.”
Schedule “A” is a list of all assets
that have been transferred to the name of the
trust. Its most useful purpose is to serve as an
inventory list for the successor trustee. Listing
assets on Schedule “A” does not, by itself, transfer
the assets to the trust. Stocks, bank accounts,
etc., must be re-registered or renamed into the
trust. Example: “John Smith and Mary Smith,
Trustees UTD 2/15/04 FBO Same.”
Trusts have become a very popular way
to plan one’s estate. The advantages over having a
simple will are (1) avoiding probate, (2) avoiding
guardianship problems, (3) obtaining privacy, and
(4) providing for efficient administration of the
estate.
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