Estate Planning Terms

Missouri Estate Planning Law Firm of PlaskettLaw, LLC

A Trust

The surviving spouse’s portion of an A-B trust. Also called marital deduction trust or survivor’s trust.

A-B Trust

The two “sub-trusts” created when a person dies, one of which – the “A” Trust – will be maintained for the benefit of the surviving spouse – and the other of which – the “B” Trust – will contain assets of a value equal to the deceased spouse’s remaining estate tax exclusion amount. The B-Trust, sometimes referred to as the “By-Pass Trust” or the “Credit Shelter Trust”, will also be held for the benefit of the surviving spouse during his or her lifetime, but upon the death of the surviving spouse, will pass to the children (or other beneficiaries) without any additional estate tax, irrespective of the value of the B-Trust at that point.

This can save a substantial amount in estate taxes and leave more money for your beneficiaries. For example, in 2021, when the federal estate tax exemption is $11.7 million, an A-B trust will let a married couple transfer up to $23.4 million to their beneficiaries estate tax- free.

Under prior law, only the decedent could use his or her estate tax exemption, so it was important to create the B Trust in order to earmark this exemption.  Since the concept of portability is now part of the law, not everyone will need the complexity of the A-B trust structure in order to take advantage of his or her estate tax exemption. Portability allows the surviving spouse to use the unused estate tax exemption of the first spouse to die.

Administration

The court-supervised process during which the executor or personal representative collects the decedent’s assets, pays all debts and claims, and distributes the residue of the estate according to the will or the state law intestacy rules (when there is no will).

Administrator

The individual or corporate fiduciary appointed by the Probate Court to manage the probate estate where no executor has been designated, or where the designated executor is unable or unwilling to serve. Female is administratrix. Also called personal representative.

Advance Medical Directive

The legal instrument in which a person nominates another to make medical decisions when one is unable to do so, and also expresses the person’s wishes as to the extent of “extraordinary” medical care desired in case of imminent death from an irreversible condition, or in the case of a persistent vegetative state. The Advance Medical Directive includes both a “living will” and a “durable power of attorney for health care decisions”.

Alternate Beneficiary

Person or organization named to receive your assets if the primary beneficiaries named in your Trust die before you do.

Ancillary Administration

An additional probate in another state. Typically required when you own real estate in another state that is not titled in the name of your trust.

Annual Exclusion

Amount you can give someone each year without having to file a gift tax return or pay a gift tax. Currently $15,000 per recipient ($30,000 if married). The amount of tax-free gifts is tied to inflation and may increase from time to time. Payments made directly to providers of education or medical care services also are tax-free and do not count against the annual exclusion or gift tax exemption amounts.

Applicable Exclusion Amount

Another name for the estate tax exemption amount (formerly called the unified credit), which shelters a certain value of assets from the federal estate and gift tax. This amount is $11.7 million and is inflation adjusted annually.

Ascertainable Standard

A standard, usually relating to an individual’s health, education, support, or maintenance, that defines the permissible reasons for making a distribution from a trust. Use of an ascertainable standard prevents distributions from being included in a trustee/beneficiary’s gross estate for federal estate tax purposes. Depending on state law, the use of an ascertainable standard may provide less protection for a beneficiary from creditors.

Asset

Basically, anything you own, including your home and other real estate, bank accounts, life insurance, investments, furniture, jewelry, art, clothing, and collectibles. Anything of value; property. Resource, capital, estate, money, belongings, means, chattel, possessions, holding, fund equity, valuable, goods, financial resource, inventory, reserve, wealth.

Assignment

A short document that transfers your interest in assets from your name to another. Often used when transferring assets to a trust.

Attorney in Fact

The person appointed under a Power of Attorney to conduct the affairs and deal with the property of another. The attorney-in-fact need not be a lawyer; any competent adult individual may serve. Under many recent state statutes, the term “Attorney-In-Fact” has been replaced by the term “Agent” under the Uniform Powers of Attorney Act.

B Trust

The deceased spouse’s portion of an A-B trust. Also called credit shelter or bypass trust. Also commonly referred to as the family trust.

Basis

What you paid for an asset. The value that is used to determine gain or loss for income tax purposes.

Beneficiary

The individual or entity who receives the benefit of a transaction (e.g., a beneficiary under a will or living trust, the beneficiary of a life insurance policy). This is the person, entity, or group for whom a trust is established.  Not all beneficiaries are created equal however as their interests can be vested and certain, contingent and future or something in between.  For example, a beneficiary may be a present interest beneficiary, entitled to receive distributions from a trust right now, or a future interest beneficiary, entitled to receive distributions at some point in the future. They may also be vested, where their rights under the trust cannot be taken away, or contingent, where their rights are still subject to conditions that may or may not occur in the future.

BDIT: Beneficiary Defective Inheritor’s Trust

This is a type of third-party settled trust (a trust funded with assets never held by the trust beneficiary) designed: (1) to give the Inheritor’s Trust primary beneficiary control and beneficial enjoyment of trust property such that the primary beneficiary can use and manage the trust assets without compromising the trust’s ability to avoid transfer taxes at the primary beneficiary’s death, (2) to protect the trust assets from the primary beneficiary’s creditors; (3) and yet be structured in a way that it is still taxable to the grantor for income tax purposes.

C Trust

See “QTIP.”

Capacity

The legal competence to effectively perform a given act (e.g. to write a Will or Trust, to enter into a binding contract).

Certificate of Trust

A shortened version of a trust that verifies the trust’s existence, explains the powers given to the trustee, and identifies the successor trustee(s). Does not reveal any information about the trust assets, beneficiaries, or their inheritances.

Charitable Lead Trust

A trust created during lifetime or at death that distributes an annuity or unitrust amount to a named charity for life or a term of years, with any remaining trust assets passing to designated non-charitable beneficiaries upon termination of the trust.

Charitable Remainder Trust

A tax-exempt trust created during lifetime or at death that distributes an annuity or unitrust amount to one or more designated non-charitable beneficiaries for life or a term of years, with the remaining trust assets passing to charity upon termination of the trust. If appreciated assets are transferred to a charitable remainder trust and sold by the trust, the trust does not pay capital gains tax.  Instead, the non-charitable beneficiaries are taxed on a portion of the capital gains as they receive their annual distributions and, in this manner, the capital gains tax is deferred.

Children’s Trust

A trust included in your living trust. If, when you die, a beneficiary is not of legal age, the child’s inheritance will go into this trust. The inheritance will be managed by the trustee you have named until the child reaches the age at which you want him/her to inherit.

Codicil

A formally executed document that amends the terms of a will so that a complete rewriting of the will is not necessary. The codicil may modify, add to, subtract from, qualify, alter or revoke provisions in the will. The codicil is a separate document that is signed with the same formalities as a will. The codicil can be changed, revoked, canceled, or destroyed.

Co-Grantors

Two or more persons who establish one living trust together.

Co-Trustees

Two or more individuals who have been named to act together in managing a trust’s assets. A corporate trustee can also be a co-trustee.

Common Trust

One living trust established by two or more individuals (usually a married couple).

Community Property

Assets a husband and wife acquire by joint effort during marriage if they live in one of the nine community property states. (Arizona, California, Idaho, Louisiana, Nevada, New Mexico, Texas, Washington and Wisconsin.) Alaska is an opt-in community property state that gives the parties the option to make their property community property. Each spouse owns half of the assets in the event of divorce or death.

Conservator

One who is legally responsible for the care and well-being of another person. If appointed by a court, the conservator is under the court’s supervision. May also be called a guardian. (Duties and titles can vary by state. For example, in Missouri, there is a guardian of the person and a conservator of the estate.)

Conservatorship

A court-controlled program for persons who are unable to manage their own affairs due to mental or physical incapacity. May also be called a guardianship.

Contest

To challenge or dispute the terms of a will or trust.

Contingent Beneficiary

A person who may or will receive a benefit, but only if the primary beneficiary becomes disqualified for the benefit (e.g., by death).

Corporate Trustee

An institution, generally a bank or trust company, that specializes in managing trusts.

Credit Shelter Trust

Another name for the B Trust in an A-B living trust because this trust “shelters” or preserves the federal estate tax “credit” of the deceased spouse.

Creditor

Person or institution to whom money is owed.

Crummey Trust

An irrevocable Trust established to qualify contributions for the annual federal gift tax exclusion (currently $15,000) for gifts of a present interest. Named for the first person to use such a structure because the Trust contains “Crummey Powers”, enabling a beneficiary to withdraw assets contributed to the Trust for a limited period of time.

Custodian

Person named to manage assets left to a minor under the Uniform Transfer to Minors Act. In most states, the minor receives the assets at legal age.

Deceased/Decedent

One who has died.

Deed

A document that lets you transfer title of your real estate to another person(s). Also see warranty deed and quitclaim deed.

Descendants

An individual’s children, grandchildren, and more remote persons who are related by blood or because of legal adoption. An individual’s spouse, stepchildren, parents, grandparents, brothers, or sisters are not included. The term “descendants” and “issue” have the same meaning.

Designated Beneficiary

An individual beneficiary of a retirement account (IRA, 401(k), 403(b), etc.) who qualifies as a person whose life expectancy may be used for determining required minimum annual distributions. The term “designated beneficiary” is a term of art under the I.R.S. regulations, one of which requires that to qualify as such the beneficiary must be an individual with an ascertainable life expectancy. Thus, for example, a charitable organization cannot qualify as a “designated beneficiary”.

Digital Assets

The term “digital assets” means, files, including but not limited to, emails, documents, images, audio, video, and similar digital files which exist or may exist in the future, such comparable items, stored on digital devices, including, desktops, laptops, tablets, peripherals, storage devices, mobile telephones, smartphones, and any similar digital device which exists or may exist in the future or comparable items, regardless of the ownership of the physical device upon which the digital asset is stored.

Disclaim

To refuse to accept a gift or inheritance so it can go to the recipient who is next in line.

Disclaimer

The renunciation or refusal to accept a gift or bequest or the receipt of insurance proceeds, retirement benefits, and the like under a beneficiary designation in order to allow the property to pass to alternate takers. To be a qualified disclaimer and thereby not treated as a gift by the disclaimant (the person who makes the disclaimer), the disclaimer must be made within nine months and before the disclaimant has accepted any interest in the property in order to avoid a tax triggering event.  In light of the current high gift and estate tax exemption amounts, it may be feasible in many instances to disclaim even after that time period to accomplish non-tax goals.  State laws addressing disclaimer may differ, and some wills and trusts might include express provisions  governing what happens to assets or interests that are disclaimed.  Be certain to consider all these issues before disclaiming.

Disclaimer Trust

A trust (set of instructions) established to receive, then manage and distribute, assets that would otherwise have been distributed to a prior beneficiary had that prior beneficiary not declined to accept (disclaimed) such assets.

Discretion

The full or partial power to make a decision or judgment.

Disinherit

To prevent someone from inheriting from you.

Distribution

Payment in cash or asset(s) to one who is entitled to receive it.

Durable Power of Attorney for Asset Management

A legal document that gives another person full or limited legal authority to sign your name on your behalf in your absence. Valid through incapacity. Ends at death.

Durable Power of Attorney for Health Care

A legal document that lets you give someone else the authority to make health care decisions for you in the event you are unable to make them for yourself. Also called a health care proxy or medical power of attorney.

Equity

The current market value of an asset less any loan or liability.

Equitable Title

Beneficial ownership of an asset; the right to use, spend, consume and/or enjoy an asset or its income.

Estate

Any interest in real or personal property; the extent of one’s interest in real or personal property… everything of value that you own in whole or in part. Assets and debts left by an individual at death.

(Life &) Estate Planning

The process of planning for future events, so you can keep control over your assets while you are alive, take care of yourself and your loved ones if you should become disabled, and leave what you have to whom you want, the way you want and when you want, all the while saving every last tax dollar, professional fee and court cost possible. The process of arranging one’s property and affairs so as to insure their current management and ultimate disposition in the most efficient, effective, economical, and private manner, taking into consideration the effect of state and federal tax and administrative laws and regulations.

Estate Taxes

Tax imposed by U.S. government and some states on the transfer of property from a decedent to his or her heirs or beneficiaries. The estate tax is levied on and measured by the size of the decedent’s estate, rather than on the amount received by any particular beneficiary.  An estate tax is to be contrasted with an inheritance tax imposed by certain states on a beneficiary’s receipt of property. The death taxes imposed by the state and federal governments on the transfer of assets upon the death of the owner. The amount “exempted” from estate taxes is subject to the political process and has fluctuated wildly, especially over the past several decades. 

Exclusion Amount

The new term “applicable exclusion amount” used by the Internal Revenue Code to identify the value of assets owned by a decedent effectively exempt from the federal estate tax. For deaths occurring in 2021, the applicable exclusion amount is $11,700,000.

Exemption Equivalent

Old term for applicable exclusion amount. (See above.)

Executor (male) /Executrix (female)

Person or institution named in a Will and thereafter appointed by the Probate Court to manage and distribute a decedent’s estate in accordance with the terms of the Will. May also be referred to as a Personal Representative.

Family Office

An arrangement to coordinate the legal, tax, and other needs of one or more families, either through a true office staffed with employees or through outsourcing to the family’s regular advisors. Frequently, a family’s private trust company serves as the family office.

Family Trust

A Trust established to benefit one’s spouse, children and/or other family members. Often used in reference to the By-Pass Trust discussed above.

Federal Estate Tax Exemption

Amount of an individual’s estate that is exempt from federal estate taxes. In 2021, the exemption is $11,700,000.

Fiduciary

An individual or a bank or trust company designated to manage money or property for beneficiaries and required to exercise the standard of care set forth in the governing document under which the fiduciary acts and state law. Fiduciaries include executors and trustees.

Fiduciary Responsibility

A serious responsibility of trust imposed upon one by the law, requiring the utmost degree of integrity and prudence in dealing with the property entrusted to the fiduciary (e.g. Trustee, Administrator, Executor, Guardian, Conservator, Agent).

Fractional Interest

The less than 100% share of ownership held by a co-owner of an asset.

Funding A Trust

Re-registering legal title to one’s assets in the name of the Trustee of the Trust.

Gain

The difference between what you receive for an asset when it is sold and what you paid for it. Used to determine the amount of capital gains tax due.

Generation Skipping Transfer Tax (GSTT)

A 40% federal tax designed to prevent people from being able to avoid paying estate taxes by making gifts or transfers in trust directly to grandchildren or great-grandchildren instead of passing them on to each generation. The GST tax is also applied when a transfer is made to a non-relative with at least a 37.5 year age difference. The GST exemption amount is 11.7 million in 2021 through 2025 and is inflation indexed.

Gift

A transfer from one individual to another without fair compensation.

Gift Tax Annual Exclusion

The federal government allows a donor to exclude $15,000 (adjusted periodically for inflation) of a gift from gift tax liability if the gift is of a “present interest” to a specific individual donee. A present interest is one where the donee has an immediate, unrestricted right to use and enjoy the gift.  Only the State of Connecticut imposes a separate state gift tax

Gift Trust

An Irrevocable Trust established to act as the repository of gifts to its beneficiaries, drafted such that the gifts to the Trust will be excluded from the donor’s taxable estate at death. (See “Crummey Trust”.)

Grantor

A person, including a testator, who creates, or contributes property to, a trust. If more than one person creates or contributes property to a trust, each person is a grantor with respect to the portion of the trust property attributable to that person’s contribution except to the extent another person has the power to revoke or withdraw that portion. The grantor is also sometimes referred to as the “settlor,” the “trustor,” the “trustmaker” or the “donor.” Contrast with the use of the term “grantor trust” to imply a trust the income of which is taxed to the person considered the “grantor” for income tax purposes.

Grantor Trust

A trust over which the grantor retains certain control such that the trust is disregarded for federal (and frequently state) income tax purposes, and the grantor is taxed individually on the trust’s income and pays the income taxes that otherwise would be payable by the trust or its beneficiaries. Such tax payments are not treated as gifts by the grantor to the trust or its beneficiaries.   Provided the grantor does not retain certain powers or benefits, such as a life estate in the trust or the power to revoke the trust, the trust will not be included in the grantor’s estate for federal estate tax purposes. Contrast with the non-tax reference to a person who forms or makes gifts to a trust as the “grantor.”

Gross Estate

The value of an estate before debts are paid.

GST Exemption

The federal tax exclusion that allows a certain value of generation-skipping transfers to be made without the imposition of a generation-skipping tax. The GST exemption amount is $11.7 million in 2021).

Guardian

An individual or bank or trust company appointed by a court to act for a minor or incapacitated person (the “ward”). A guardian of the person is empowered to make personal decisions for the ward. A guardian of the property (also called a “committee”) manages the property of the ward.

Guardianship

Court proceeding initiated to supervise management of the personal affairs (e.g. living accommodations, nursing home selection) of a minor or an incapacitated person. In some states the term “guardianship” also refers to the procedure used to manage property and legal affairs of such a person. (Referred to in some states, as a “Conservatorship.”)

Health Care Power of Attorney

A document that appoints an individual (an “agent”) to make health care decisions when the grantor of the power is incapacitated. Also referred to as a “health care proxy.”

Health Care Proxy

See “Durable Power of Attorney for Health Care.” or “Health Care Power of Attorney” above.

Heir

The person entitled to distribution of an asset or property interest under applicable state law, in the absence of a Will or Trust. (Note that “heir” and “beneficiary” are not synonymous, though they may, in a particular case, refer to the same individual.) Your heirs are the ones who will inherit your property if you die with no valid Will or Trust in effect.

Holographic Will

A handwritten will.

Homestead Exemption

Portion of your residence (dwelling and surrounding land) that cannot be sold to satisfy a creditor’s claim while you are living.

Incapacitated/Incompetent

Unable to manage one’s own affairs, either temporarily or permanently. Lack of legal power.

Income

The earnings from principal, such as interest, rent, and cash dividends. This is a fiduciary trust accounting concept and is not the same as taxable income for income tax purposes.

Independent Administration

A form of probate available in many states. Intended to simplify the probate process by requiring fewer court appearances and less court supervision.

Inheritance

The assets received from someone who has died.

Inheritance Tax

Tax imposed by some states on the amount received by a particular heir or beneficiary.

Insurance Trust

An irrevocable Trust established to own life insurance on a person, so designed as to exclude the proceeds of the policy – the death benefit – from the insured person’s taxable estate at death.

Interest of a Beneficiary

The right to receive income or principal provided in the terms of a trust or will.

Inter Vivos Trust

Latin term that means “between the living.” An inter vivos trust is created while you are living instead of after you die. A revocable living trust is an inter vivos trust.

Intestate/Intestate Succession/Intestacy

Dying without leaving a valid Will or Trust in effect. The transfer of property to the relatives of a person who died without even a valid will. In most states, a statute will specify which relatives receive intestate shares, what they receive, and when they receive it. This is the unintended default estate plan for 70% of Americans.

Inventory

A list of the assets of a decedent or trust that is filed with the court.

IRA

Individual Retirement Account (see “Retirement Accounts).

Irrevocable Trust

A Trust that cannot be revoked, modified or amended (except to a very limited extent) once it has been established. Irrevocable Trusts are often used in tax planning to get property “out” of a person’s taxable estate so that it will not be subject to estate tax upon his or her death. As modern trust law continues to evolve, however, it may be possible to effect changes to irrevocable trusts through court actions or a process called decanting, which allows the assets of an existing irrevocable trust to be transferred to a new trust with different provisions. Opposite of revocable trust.

Issue

All persons who have descended from a common ancestor (i.e., children, grandchildren, great-grandchildren, etc.).

Joint Ownership

A form of ownership in which two or more persons own the same asset together. Types of joint ownership include joint tenants with right of survivorship, tenants in common, and tenants by the entirety.

Joint Tenancy

A form of property ownership by two or more persons designated as “joint tenants with right of survivorship.” When one joint tenant dies, his/her interest in the asset automatically passes to the surviving joint tenant(s) outside of and beyond the control of the decedent’s will. The asset passes outside the grip of probate. However, probate is not avoided if one of the joint tenants is disabled or at the death of the surviving joint tenant. Also called “tenancy by the entirety” in some states (i.e., Missouri) when between husband and wife, joint tenancy can be “legal dynamite” for the unwary. Consult a qualified attorney before taking title to assets in this manner.

Land Trust

Often used for privacy. Title is transferred to a corporate trustee or corporation, but you keep control over how the property is managed. Because the title is in the name of the corporate trustee or corporation, no one knows the property belongs to you. In all financial transactions and dealings, your personal name never comes up. Also called a title holding trust.

Legal Title

“Registered ownership” of an asset. Refers to the person(s) whose name is on the deed, signature card, registration certificate, etc.

Life Tenant/Life Beneficiary

A beneficiary whose interest in an asset consists solely of the use of and income flow from the asset during his/her lifetime.

Life Estate

The interest in property owned by a life beneficiary (also called life tenant) with the legal right under state law to use the property for his or her lifetime, after which title fully vests in the remainderman (the person named in the deed, trust agreement, or other legal document as being the ultimate owner when the life estate ends).

Liquid Assets

Cash and other assets (like stocks) that can easily be converted into cash.

"Living Probate"

The court-supervised process of managing the assets of one who is incapacitated. Also see guardianship/conservatorship

Living Trust

A written legal document that creates an entity to which you transfer ownership of your assets. Contains your instructions for managing your assets during your lifetime and for their distribution upon your incapacity or death. Avoids probate at death and court control of assets at incapacity. Also called a revocable inter vivos trust. A trust created during one’s lifetime.

Living Will/Advance Directive

Also known as a “Health Care Treatment Directive,” when properly executed, this document allows you to specify the extent of life support/medical treatment you would want under various conditions, if you did not have the capacity to then communicate your own desires at the time of need. Many people, even attorneys, mistake “Living Trusts” and “Living Wills.”

Marital Deduction

There is both a federal gift tax and a federal estate tax marital deduction. The deduction pertains only to assets given to one’s spouse, whether during life or at death. The federal tax laws have certain rules to determine whether the asset given to a spouse qualifies for the marital deduction.

Marital Deduction

A deduction on the federal estate tax return that permits the first spouse to die leave an unlimited amount of assets to the U.S. citizen surviving spouse free of estate taxes. However, if no other tax planning is used, and the surviving spouse’s estate is more than the amount of the federal estate tax exemption in effect at the time of his/her death, estate taxes will be due at that time. (See QDOT below with respect to non-U.S. citizen spouses.)

Marital Trust

A trust established to hold property for a surviving spouse in A-B trust planning and designed to qualify for the marital deduction. A commonly used marital trust is a qualified terminable interest property trust, or QTIP trust, which requires that all income must be paid to the surviving spouse.

Medicaid

A federally-funded health care program for the poor and minor children.

Medicare

A federally-funded health care program, primarily for Americans over age 65 who are covered by Social Security or Railroad Retirement benefits.

Minor

A person who is under the age of legal competence. In most states, the age of the majority is either 18 or 21.

Net Estate

The value of an estate after all debts have been paid. (Federal estate taxes are based on the net value of an estate.)

Net Value

The current market value of an asset less any loan or debt.

Non-Resident Alien

An individual who is neither a resident nor a citizen of the United States.  A non-resident alien nonetheless may be subject to federal estate tax or probate with regard to certain assets located in the United States.  An estate tax treaty between that individual’s home country and the United States may affect this result.

No-Contest Clause

A provision in a will or trust agreement that provides that someone who sues to receive more from the estate or trust or overturn the governing document will lose any inheritance rights he or she has.  These clauses are not permissible in all instances or in all states. Missouri does permit and enforce such clauses, but Missouri has a statute that allows a beneficiary to obtain a Court ruling as to whether or not an intended challenge violates a trust’s no-contest clause.

Operation of Law

The way some assets will pass at your death, based on state law or the titling (ownership) of the asset, rather than under the terms of your will.

Payable-on-Death Account (POD)

A bank account titled in the name of the original owner but directing distribution to a named beneficiary upon the owner’s death. POD accounts avoid probate administration. See (Totten Trust below.)

Per Capita

A way of distributing your estate so that your surviving descendants will share equally, regardless of their generation.

Divided equally among all individuals, usually in a “class” (such as “my children”)

Per Stirpes

A way of distributing your estate so that your surviving descendants will receive only what their immediate ancestor would have received if he/she had been living at your death.

Personal Property

Movable property as contrasted with “real property,” which is fixed. Can be tangible or intangible.

Personal Representative

Another name for an executor or administrator.

Pour-Over Will

A short Will used in conjunction with a Revocable Living Trust to dispose of any property owned by the decedent at time of death which was not transferred to the Trust during the Trustor’s lifetime. The Pour-Over Will also revokes all prior Wills, but unlike traditional Wills it does not contain detailed dispositive provisions; rather it directs distribution of all individually owned property of the Testator to the Trustee of his/her Trust. The Trust instrument contains detailed instructions relating to the distribution of the property. Like all Wills, a Pour-Over Will is subject to probate administration. A short will often used in conjunction with a living trust.

Power of Appointment

A power given to an individual (usually a beneficiary) under the terms of a trust to appoint property to certain persons upon termination of that individual’s interest in the trust or other specified circumstances. The individual given the power is usually referred to as a “holder” of the power. The power of appointment may be general, allowing the property to be appointed to anyone, including the holder, or limited, allowing the property to be distributed to a specified group or to anyone other than the holder. Property subject to a general power of appointment is includible in the holder’s gross estate for federal estate tax purposes.

Power of Attorney

A legal instrument whereby one appoints and empowers another person as agent to deal with one’s property and affairs. (See Attorney-in-Fact above). A General Power of Attorney is one which gives the Attorney-in-Fact broad, plenary powers; a Special Power-of-Attorney limits the Attorney-in-Fact’s authority to a particular property or transaction. A Durable Power-of-Attorney is one which remains effective even after the maker becomes incapacitated. Most comprehensive estate plans include a General Durable Power-of-Attorney.

Power of Withdrawal

A presently exercisable power in favor of the power holder other than a power exercisable in a fiduciary capacity limited by an ascertainable standard, or which is exercisable by another person only upon consent of the trustee or a person holding an adverse interest in the trust.

Present Interest

To be eligible for the annual $15,000 exclusion from the Federal Gift Tax, the gift must be of a “present interest”. In other words, the gift must belong to the donee with “no strings attached.” (However, see “Crummey Trust” above.)

Principal

The property (such as money, stock, and real estate) contributed to or otherwise acquired by a trust to generate income and to be used for the benefit of trust beneficiaries according to the trust’s terms. Also referred to as trust corpus.

Private Trust Company

An entity formed by a family to serve as fiduciary for the estates and trusts of extended family members.  Often referred to as a family trust company.

Probate

The process, usually administered by a probate court or an official subject to the court’s authority, established in all fifty states to supervise the transfer of legal title to property from a decedent to his heirs or beneficiaries, or to supervise the management of the property and affairs of one incapable of handling his or her own affairs.

The probate court has jurisdiction over both the personal representative and the assets of the decedent. The primary purposes of probate are to:

  1. Protect the heirs from fraud & embezzlement;
  2. Protect the government so all taxes are paid by the estate; and
  3. Protect creditors of the decedent so they are paid.

Probate usually begins with the will being admitted to the probate court and the personal representative being granted “Letters Testamentary.” Probate ends after all taxes are paid, creditors are paid, and assets are accounted for and distributed as provided in the will. In certain instances, administering an estate through probate may be appropriate given the orderly nature of probate. Why? The probate process is overseen by a judge who ensures that the willmaker’s wishes are carried out. Probate also can be very efficient and effective when the estate is well-organized prior to death, minor children are involved and/or sensitive issues like family members with special needs, or even substance abuse issues affecting one or more heirs, are at stake.

Probate Estate

The assets that go through probate after you die. Usually these include assets you own in your name and those paid to your estate. Usually does not include assets owned jointly, payable-on-death accounts, insurance and other assets with beneficiary designations. Assets in a trust also do not go through probate.

Probate Fees

Legal, executor, and appraisal fees and court costs when an estate goes through probate. Probate fees are paid from assets in the estate before the assets are fully distributed to the heirs.

Property

Anything that may be the subject of ownership, whether real or personal, legal or equitable, or any interest therein.

Prudent Man Rule

A legal principle requiring a trustee to manage the trust property with the same care that a prudent, honest, intelligent, and diligent person would use to handle the property under the same circumstances. See Prudent Investor Act.

Prudent Investor Act

A law that provides for how fiduciaries must invest trust, estate, and other assets they hold in a fiduciary capacity, such as a trustee or executor.

Qualified Domestic Trust (QDOT)

A marital Trust used for the benefit of a non-U.S. citizen spouse containing special provisions specified by the Internal Revenue Code such that transfers to the QDOT qualify for a limited estate tax marital deduction, until they are actually withdrawn from the Trust.

Qualified Personal Residence Trust (QPRT)

An Irrevocable Trust established to hold title to residential property. The owner transfers ownership of the house to the Trust, retaining the right to reside in the home rent-free for a period of years. Used to reduce the transfer tax cost of leaving a residence to one’s beneficiaries.

Qualified Terminable Interest Property (QTIP)

A trust that delays estate taxes until your surviving spouse dies so more income will be available to provide for your spouse during his/her lifetime. You can also keep control over who will receive these assets after your spouse dies.

Qualifying Subchapter S Trust (QSST)

Trust that meets certain IRS qualifications and is allowed to own Subchapter S stock.

Quit-Claim Deed

Document that allows you to transfer title to real estate. With a quitclaim deed, the person transferring the title makes no guarantees, but transfers all his/her interest in the property.

Real Property

Land and property that is permanently attached to land (like a building or a house).

Recorded Deed

A deed that has been filed with the county land records. This creates a public record of all changes in ownership of property in the state.

Required Beginning Date (RBD)

The date you must begin taking required minimum distributions from your tax-deferred plans. Usually, it is December 31 of the calendar year in which you turn age 72. If your money is in a company-sponsored plan, you may be able to delay your RBD beyond this date if you continue working (providing you are not a 5% or greater owner of the company).

Required Minimum Distribution (RMD)

The amount you are required to withdraw each year from your tax-deferred plan after you reach your Required Beginning Date. This amount is determined by dividing the year-end value of your tax-deferred account by a life expectancy divisor found on a chart provided by the IRS.

Residue

The property remaining in a decedent’s estate after payment of the estate’s debts, taxes, and expenses and after all specific gifts of property and sums of money have been distributed as directed by the will.  Also called the residuary estate.

Retirement Accounts

Any of the various accounts, funds or plans established to provide retirement benefits for an individual, created pursuant to federal law and regulations and providing for tax-deferred accumulation during the life of the account, including IRAs, 401(k)s, 403(b)s, Pension and Profit Sharing Plans, etc. These accounts, with the exception of “Roth IRA’s,” are subject to income tax upon withdrawal. They (including Roth IRA’s) are also includable in the estate of the owner for Estate Tax purposes.

Revocable Living Trust

A Trust established by an individual, or a married couple, that becomes effective immediately upon establishment while the Trustor is still alive (thus “Living”), remains revocable and amendable during the lifetime of the Trustor (thus “Revocable”), and is used to (1) avoid probate; (2) facilitate some tax planning; (3) provide for management during periods of incapacity without need for guardianship or conservatorship; (4) address family circumstances; and (5) provide for ultimate distribution of the estate. The Trust is a comprehensive set of instructions for the management and ultimate distribution of the property, accounts and other assets you own. Opposite of irrevocable trust.

Roth IRA

A special form of IRA for which the owner receives no income tax deduction for contributions, but the account does accumulate tax-deferred. Most significantly, withdrawals from the Roth IRA are not subject to income taxation.

S Corporation

A corporation that has made a Subchapter S election to be taxed as a pass-through entity (much like a partnership). Certain trusts are permitted to be shareholders only if they make the appropriate elections.

Self-Dealing

Personally benefiting from a financial transaction carried out on behalf of a trust or other entity, for example, the purchasing of an asset from a trust by the trustee unless specifically authorized by the trust instrument.

Separate Property

Generally, all assets you acquire prior to marriage and assets acquired by gift or inheritance during marriage.

Separate Trust

A trust established by one person. A married couple has separate trusts if each spouse has his/her own trust with its own assets. In contrast, see “Common Trust.”

Settle an Estate

The process of handling the final affairs (valuation of assets, payment of debts and taxes, distribution of assets to Beneficiaries) after someone dies.

Settlor

Term frequently used for one who establishes or settles a trust. Also called a “trustor” or “grantor.”

Special Gifts

A separate listing of special assets that will go to specific individuals or organizations after your incapacity or death. Also called special bequests.

Special Needs Trust

A Trust established for a disabled person to provide supplemental support without disqualifying the beneficiary from eligibility for governmental assistance programs by limiting the use of trust assets for purposes other than the beneficiary’s basic care.

Spendthrift Clause

A trust provision restricting both voluntary and involuntary transfers of a beneficiary’s interest, frequently in order to protect assets from claims of the beneficiary’s creditors.

Sprinkling Trust

Provisions within a trust that allow the trustee to “sprinkle” income and/or principal among the trust beneficiaries. The sprinkling trust provides flexibility to base distributions on actual needs.

Spouse

Husband or wife.

Stepped-up Basis

Assets are given a new basis when transferred by inheritance (through a will or trust) and are re-valued as of the date of the owner’s death. If an asset has appreciated above its basis (what the owner paid for it), the new basis is called a stepped-up basis. A stepped-up basis can save a considerable amount in capital gains tax when an asset is later sold by the new owner. Also see “Basis.”

Subchapter S Corporation Stock

Stock in a corporation which has chosen to be subject to the rules of subchapter S of the Internal Revenue Code. See “S Corporation.”

Successor Trustee

Person or institution named in the trust document who will take over should the first trustee die, resign, or otherwise become unable to act.

Surviving Spouse

The spouse who is living after one spouse has died.

Survivor’s Trust

See “A Trust.”

Tangible Personal Property

Property that is capable of being touched and moved, such as personal effects, furniture, jewelry, and automobiles. Tangible personal property is distinguished from intangible personal property that has no physical substance but represents something of value, such as cash, stock certificates, bonds, and insurance policies. Tangible personal property also is  distinguished from real property, such as land and items permanently affixed to land, such as buildings.

Tax-Deferred Plan

A retirement savings plan (like an IRA, 401(k), pension, profit sharing, or Keogh) that qualifies for special income tax treatment. The contributions made to the plan and subsequent appreciation of the assets are not taxed until they are withdrawn at a later time — ideally, at retirement, when your income and tax rate are lower.

Taxable Gift

Generally, a gift of more than $15,000 in one year to someone other than your spouse. The value of the taxable gift is applied to your federal gift tax exemption which is currently 11.7 million. After you have used up your exemption, additional gifts will be taxed, usually at the highest estate tax rate in effect.

Tenancy in Common

Generally, a gift of more than $15,000 in one year to someone other than your spouse. The value of the taxable gift is applied to your federal gift tax exemption which is currently 11.7 million. After you have used up your exemption, additional gifts will be taxed, usually at the highest estate tax rate in effect.

Tenants-by-the Entirety

A form of joint ownership in some states between husband and wife. When one spouse dies, his/her share of the asset automatically transfers to the surviving spouse. The most important difference between a joint tenancy or tenancy in common is that a tenant by the entirety may not sell or give away his or her interest in the property without the consent of the other spouse. Tenancy by the Entirety provides some creditor protection in some states.

Terms of a Trust

A trust created under the terms of a living trust or under the terms of a will. For example, a testamentary trust is a preferred method to protect an inheritance for (and even from) beneficiaries.

Testamentary Trust

A Trust established in a person’s Will. A Testamentary Trust only comes into operation after the Will has been probated and the assets have been distributed in accordance with the probate court order. In many states, Testamentary Trusts remain subject to the jurisdiction of the probate court.

Testate

One who dies with a valid will.

Testator

A person who makes a will . . . a “willmaker.”A “testatrix” is a female “testator.”

Title

Document proving ownership of an asset.

Totten Trust

A “pay-on-death” account. A bank account that will transfer to the beneficiary who was named when the account was established. The terms “transfer on death” (“TOD”), “in trust for” (“ITF”), “as trustee for” (“ATF”), and “pay on death” (“POD”) often appear in the title.

Transfer On Death Designation

A beneficiary designation for a financial account (and in some states, for real estate) that automatically passes title to the assets at death to a named individual or revocable trust without probate. Frequently referred to as a TOD (transfer on death) or POD (payable on death) designation.

Transfer Tax

Tax on assets when they are transferred to another. The estate tax, gift tax, and generation-skipping transfer tax are all transfer taxes.

Trust

An entity that holds assets for the benefit of certain other persons or entities. A legal arrangement in which “legal title” (registered ownership) to assets is transferred to a “Trustee”, who thereafter has a fiduciary duty to manage and distribute the Trust assets for the benefit of the beneficiaries of the Trust, all in accordance with the instructions contained in the Trust document (“Declaration of Trust”). The beneficiaries hold “equitable title” (right to use and enjoy) to those assets. Trusts of various types are frequently used in estate planning to achieve tax, financial, and personal objectives.

Trustee

One who holds legal title to Trust assets, managing and distributing those assets in accordance with the terms and conditions specified in the Declaration of Trust and has a duty to act in the best interests of the trust and its beneficiaries. The term usually includes original (initial), additional, and successor trustees. The trustee has a “fiduciary” obligation to the trust’s beneficiaries and is subject to the highest legal responsibility under the law. A Trustee may be an individual or a bank or trust company licensed to serve as a Trustee. A Trust may have one or more Trustees (Co-Trustees) who act together. A trustee must act personally (unless delegation is expressly permitted in the trust instrument), with the exception of certain administrative functions.

Trust Company

An institution that specializes in managing trusts. Also called a corporate trustee.

Trust Estate (Trust Property)

The assets transferred to the Trustee by re-registering their legal titles in the name of the Trustee. The Trust Estate can include real estate, bank accounts, stocks, bonds, brokerage accounts, partnership interests, tangible personal property, and many other types of financial and legal interests.

Trust Instrument

A document, including amendments thereto, executed by a grantor that contains terms under which the trust property must be managed and distributed.  Also referred to as a trust agreement or declaration of trust.

Unified Credit

The amount each person is allowed to deduct from federal estate taxes owed after death. In 2021, the credit is $4,625,800. This is the amount of estate taxes that would be due on $11,700,000 in net assets. After applying this credit, the result is that $11,700,000 is “exempt” from estate taxes in 2021.

Uniform Custodial Trust Act

A law enacted by some states providing a simple way to create a trust for a minor or adult beneficiary without the need for a complex trust document. Such a trust typically is used for a trust of modest size, particularly for a disabled beneficiary. An adult beneficiary may terminate the trust at any time, otherwise the trust may continue for the life of the beneficiary.

Uniform Transfer to Minors Act (UTMA)

A law enacted by some states providing a convenient means to transfer property to a minor. An adult person known as a “custodian” is designated by the donor to receive and manage property for the benefit of a minor. Although the legal age of majority in many states may be 18, the donor may authorize the custodian to hold the property until the beneficiary reaches age 21. Formerly called the Uniform Gifts to Minors Act.

Unfunded

Your living trust is unfunded if you have not transferred assets into it.

Virtual Representation

A mechanism provided in a will or trust, or in some instances by state law, to permit a beneficiary to make decisions on behalf of another beneficiary who can claim or receive property only under or after them.

Warranty Deed

Document that allows you to transfer title to real estate. With a warranty deed, the person guarantees that the title being transferred is clear (free of any encumbrances). If the title is defective, the person making the transfer is liable. Compare to quitclaim deed.

Will

A legal document that allows one to name the backup parents for minor children left orphaned, as well as give the probate court instructions on your last wishes for family and assets. While it is better than no planning at all, it is a “go-to-jail card” straight to probate and has no power to control assets in joint tenancy or with beneficiary designations.