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Trusts
This section talks about Trusts.
Click on a topic to learn more about:
- What is a trust?
- What is a trustee?
- What powers does a trustee have?
- What duties does a trustee have?
- What does a trustee need to do when the
settlor dies?
- What is a trust
beneficiary
?
- What rights does a beneficiary of a trust
have?
- When does a trust end?
- Can a trust be cancelled or changed?
- What if the trustee won't tell me what is
going on?
- What can the court do if the trustee is not
doing his or her job?
- Can a trustee resign?
- What if the acting trustee dies or resigns
or can no longer be the trustee?
- How can I find out if someone has a trust?
- How do I know if a particular asset is in
the trust or not?
- What happens if the settlor dies without
having put some of his or her assets in the trust?
- Can I challenge or contest a trust?
- What if the settlor or a beneficiary of the
trust owes me money?
- Can the court help me if I have a question
or concern about the proper interpretation of the trust or
how the trustee is administering the trust?
- What is a trust?
A trust is when one person (trustee) holds title to property
for the benefit of another person (the beneficiary).
A person called the settlor (or trustor) creates the trust
and puts the property in the trust.
The settlor, trustee, and beneficiary can be different
people. But, one single person could be the settlor, trustee
and beneficiary.
For example, one person may create a trust and put property
in it, make himself the trustee, and use the property for
his own benefit. In that case he would be the settlor,
trustee, and beneficiary all at the same time.
- What is a trustee?
The trustee is the person (or people) who holds legal title
to the property that is in the trust. The trustee’s job is
to manage the property in the trust for the benefit of the
beneficiaries in the way the settlor has asked.
- What powers does a trustee have?
A trustee has all the powers listed in the trust document,
unless they conflict with California law or unless a court
order says otherwise. The trustee must collect, preserve and
protect the trust assets.
To do this, the trustee can:
- make reasonable repairs,
- insure the property,
- sell assets,
- make prudent investments,
- pay certain administrative bills and expenses, and
- make distributions and payments to the beneficiaries
according to the trust document.
To read more about the law on a Trustee’s powers, read
Probate Code, Sections 16200
- 16203 and 16220
- 16249.
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- What duties does a trustee have?
The law says the trustee must:
- Do what the trust document says as long as it is
legal;
- Do only things that benefit the beneficiaries;
- Not favor one beneficiary over another;
- Avoid conflicts of interest with the beneficiaries
- Never use trust property or the trustee's powers for
personal benefit, unless the trust authorizes it;
- Keep trust property separate from property owned by
anyone else;
- Not delegate to others anything they can reasonably do
themselves. If the trustee must delegate some duties,
s/he must supervise what the delegated person does;
- Administer and invest the assets of the trust with
care and skill to protect the trust;
- Diversify investments unless it would not be a good
idea to do so;
- Keep detailed records and give periodic reports to the
beneficiaries as required by California law. See Probate
Code
Sections 16060 - 16064 and Sections
1060 -1064);
- Distribute the income as required by Probate Code
Sections 16230 -16375.
- What does a trustee need to do when the
settlor dies?
When the settlor dies, the trustee has other duties:
Notice to beneficiaries and heirs: If the trust is
irrevocable when the settlor dies, the trustee has 60 days
after becoming trustee or 60 days after the settlor's death,
whichever happens later, to give written notice to all
beneficiaries of the trust and to each heir of the decedent.
The notice must provide this information:
- The settlor's name and the date the trust was signed;
- The name, address and telephone number of each trustee
of the trust;
- The address where the administration of the trust will
take place;
- Any information the trust document asks for;
- That beneficiaries can ask for a complete copy of the
trust; and
- That beneficiaries have a deadline of 120 days after
getting notice to start a legal action to object to the
trust, or 60 days after a copy of the trust is mailed or
served upon the recipient, whichever is later.
For more information, see California Probate Code Section
16061.7.
Notice to Assessor's Office: If the trust property
includes real estate in California, the trustee must give
written notice to the Assessor's Office of the county where
each parcel of real estate is.
For more information, see California Revenue and Taxation
Code Section
480(b).
Inventory and appraisal: If there is no
court-appointed executor for the estate of the deceased
settlor, in most case the trustee must make an inventory and
appraisal of all the settlor's assets as of the date of
death (whether or not the assets were in the trust). The
trustee does this to see if federal and state estate tax
returns need to be filed. If they do, the trustee will apply
to the Internal Revenue Service for new tax ID numbers for
the trusts and make sure the returns get filed and any taxes
owed get paid within 9 months of the settlor's death.
If the settlor was acting as trustee of his or her own
trust, the new trustee (called a “successor trustee”)
will also sign an Acceptance of Trusteeship.
Follow trust instructions: The trustee also must do
anything the trust instructs. Often, the trust says the
successor trustee will take care of paying for the settlor's
funeral expenses, the settlor's outstanding debts (like,
recent medical expenses and credit card bills), and then
distribute what is left to the beneficiaries of the trust.
Sometimes, the beneficiaries have the right to get most or
all their inheritance through the trust within days or weeks
of the settlor's death.
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In other cases, the trustee may delay distributing property
to:
- Sell property to pay the settlor's final
bills or taxes,
- Calculate the distribution required by the
trust, or
- Determine if there will be other debts or
taxes to pay at a later date.
Some trusts say the trustee cannot distribute the assets
for a certain number of years, or until the death of someone
else. In these cases, the trustee is responsible for
investing the assets of the trust, perhaps making periodic
distributions to the beneficiaries, until all assets of the
trust are distributed to the beneficiaries.
- What is a trust "beneficiary"?
A beneficiary of a trust is a person who by the terms of the
trust has the current or future right to have the trustee
pay out cash or other trust property to him or her. He or
she is one of the people for whom the trust was established.
- What rights does a beneficiary of a trust
Have?
Unless the trust is revocable by someone else (like a
revocable living trust while the settlor is still alive),
the beneficiary has the following rights, in addition to any
rights listed in the trust:
- The right to receive notice of the
existence of the trust.
- The right to receive a copy of the trust.
- The right to receive trust accountings and
information about the beneficiary's interests in the
trust.
- The right to enforce the terms of the
trust and to hold the trustee accountable for any
wrongful acts or omissions that affect that
beneficiary's interests.
- When does a trust end?
Unless it has been legally revoked, a trust usually ends
only when the trust document says it will end. Trusts
usually end when the settlor dies or when one of the
beneficiaries dies. But, sometimes a trust ends after a
certain period of time or after a certain event takes place,
like when a beneficiary gets married or reaches a certain
age.
But there are other reasons a trust can end. Here are some:
- The term of the trust expires,
- The trust purpose is fulfilled,
- The trust purpose becomes illegal,
- The trust purpose becomes impossible to
fulfill, or
- The trust is revoked.
If the trust ends, the trustee will continue to act as
trustee until s/he finishes up the affairs of the trust.
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- Can a trust be cancelled or amended?
Unless the settlor made the trust irrevocable when s/he
created the trust, the settlor can cancel or change the
trust. Even if a trust is irrevocable, it is possible that
it can be changed in one of the following situations:
If all beneficiaries consent
The law says that if all beneficiaries consent, they
can petition the Court to change or end the trust.
The Court will consider:
- if the trust must continue in order to
carry out the purpose of the trust
- if the reason for changing or ending the
trust outweighs the interest in carrying out the purpose
of the trust
If the settlor and all beneficiaries consent
The law says if the settlor and all beneficiaries consent,
they can change or end the trust.
If any beneficiary does not consent to change or end the
trust, the other beneficiaries, with the consent of the
settlor, can petition the Court to partially change or end
the trust as long as the interests of the beneficiaries who
do not consent are not seriously affected.
If the trust has uneconomically low principal
If the Court decides it is costing more to administer the
trust than the trust is worth, the beneficiary or trustee
can ask the Court to end or change the trust, or appoint a
new trustee.
If the trust principal is worth $20,000 or less, the trustee
can end the trust.
Change or end the trust if circumstances change
The law says the Court may change or end a trust if
circumstances have changed and continuing the trust would
defeat or weaken the trust.
- What if the trustee won't tell me what is
going on?
The trustee must keep the beneficiaries informed about the
trust and its administration. If you make a reasonable
request for information, the trustee must give you a report
about the assets, liabilities, receipts and disbursements of
the trust, what the trustee has done, money paid to the
trustee, any agents hired by the trustee, their relationship
to the trustee and any pay they received, and information
about your interest, including a copy of the trust.
If you waived (gave up) your right to information, you can
withdraw your waiver in writing and get the most recent
report and all future reports. If it has been 60 days or
more since your written request for a report, or 6 months
since your oral request, and the trustee hasn't given you a
report, you can file a petition to ask the Court to make the
trustee file a report. Even if the trust itself says the
trustee does not have to give you a report, the Court can
make the trustee give you a report if you show that the
trustee may have violated his/her duties.
If the trust is revocable, or if you waived in writing your
right to a report, or if the trustee and the beneficiary are
the same person, the trustee does not have to provide
information unless the trust document says s/he must.
- What can the Court do if the trustee is
not doing his or her job?
The Court can remove a trustee and make the trustee pay the
beneficiaries for any loss to the trust. Sometimes the Court
will remove the trustee or suspend the trustee’s powers
while the case is pending if there is reason to believe the
beneficiaries’ interests are at risk.
Some trust documents say the trustee will be liable only for
willful misconduct or gross negligence. But, California law
is more strict, and the Court can remove a trustee for any
of the following reasons:
- Breach of trust;
- Trustee has more debts than assets or
otherwise unfit to act as trustee;
- The trust cannot be administered because
of hostility or lack of cooperation between co-trustees;
- The trustee does not want to be the
trustee;
- The trustee's payment is excessive;
- The law says some people must be
disqualified from serving as a sole trustee. The people
who cannot serve as a sole trustee are listed in Probate
Code Section
21350.
The beneficiary has 3 years from the date of receiving
the trustee’s report to ask the Court to remove the
trustee.
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For more information, see Probate Code Section
17200.
- Can a trustee resign?
Yes. If a trustee wants to resign, s/he can do so:
- As explained in the trust document;
- If the trust is revocable, by getting the
person who has the power to revoke the trust to consent;
- If the trust is irrevocable, by consulting
with all adult beneficiaries; or
- By getting a Court order after filing a
petition asking the Court for permission to resign.
Unless the beneficiaries say they do not want one, the
trustee must file an accounting of all trust transactions
while he or she was acting as trustee.
- What if the acting trustee dies or
resigns or can no longer be the trustee?
If a trustee dies or resigns, is conserved or is declared
“incompetent” by a court, or files for bankruptcy, then
the trustee can no longer act as trustee and must be
replaced.
Some trusts have 2 or more co-trustees and the trust may say
that the remaining co-trustee will be the sole trustee, or
may say how a new trustee will be appointed.
If the vacancy cannot be filled, then a trust company may
agree to serve if all adult beneficiaries agree. If that
fails, any person who has a financial stake in the trust or
any person named as trustee can file a petition to have a
trustee appointed.
Any beneficiary who is 14 years of age or older can nominate
a trustee, even though a minor under the age of 18 is not
legally qualified to serve as trustee.
The public guardian cannot be appointed as trustee of any
trust unless the Court finds that no other qualified person
is willing to act as trustee.
- How can I find out if someone has a
trust?
If you have legal access to the person's files and papers,
look through them to see if there are any trust documents,
or any references to a trust. Look for copies of deeds, bank
or securities account statements that name a trust as the
owner, or a Will
that refers to a trust. Also look for papers that name an
attorney, and call the attorney to see if he or she has any
record of a trust.
You can also visit the County Recorder's Office or contact
the County Assessor's Office to see the title on real estate
owned by the person to see if it is held in the name of a
trust. Click here for the Assessor's Office website: www.scc-assessor.org/.
- How do I know if a particular asset is in
the trust or not?
To know if someone’s house or other real property is in a
trust, go to the County Recorder's office or contact the
Public Service Unit of the County Assessor's Office at (408)
299-5500.
It is not easy to trace the ownership of bank accounts,
brokerage accounts, and personal property. Only the owner
has a right to get copies of statements from a bank or other
institution.
- What happens if the settlor dies without
having put some of his or her assets in the trust?
If a settlor listed property on a schedule when they created
the trust (showing their intent to put the property in the
trust) but dies without changing the title to the property,
the trustee can petition the Court to include the property
as part of the trust.
For more information, read Probate Code Section
17200.
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- Can I challenge or contest a trust?
Yes. But, first read the trust carefully and talk to a
lawyer experienced with trusts. If you challenge a trust and
lose, you may lose your right to receive property from the
trust.
Here are common reasons to challenge a trust:
- You believe the settlor was pressured into
creating or signing the trust.
- You think the settlor was not competent
when s/he signed the trust.
- The person (other than the settler) who
helped set up the trust will benefit from the trust.
- What if the settlor or a beneficiary
of the trust owes me money?
If the trust document says that a beneficiary's share of the
trust income or principal cannot be transferred (a
spendthrift provision), you cannot collect money owed to you
until the income or principal is actually paid to the
beneficiary. But, you can petition the Court to order the
trustee to pay you from the trust assets due to the
beneficiary.
See Probate Code Section
15300, et seq.
If the settlor owes you money and the settlor has the power
to revoke the trust in whole or in part, you can make a
claim against the property during the settlor's lifetime.
In some cases, you can make a claim against the settlor for
the maximum amount available to the settlor under the terms
of the trust, up to all of the property contributed by the
settlor to the trust.
See Probate Code Section
18200.
If the deceased settlor of a revocable trust owes you money,
and there is not enough money in the probate estate to pay
your claims, you must make a claim against the probate
estate.
If you win, your claim will be paid from the property in the
trust.
If no probate petition has been filed with the Court, and
the trustee has not filed a Notice To Creditors with the
court and published it, you can file your own petition to
open a probate estate and file your claim in Probate Court.
If the trustee has filed and published a Notice to
Creditors, and sent a copy of the Notice to creditors the
trustee knows or should know about, you must file your claim
with the court within 4 months after the publication of the
Notice, or within 30 days after the Notice is mailed or
personally delivered to you, whichever is later.
Also, mail a copy of your claim to the trustee. If the
trustee rejects your claim, you will have to file a lawsuit
against the trustee to get your money. There are time limits
for you to file. See Probate Code Section
19255.
The trustee has the right to allow or reject your claim.
After the claim filing period ends, the trustee can file a
petition to ask the Court to allow a compromise, settle
claims that have not been rejected, or to allocate the
claims if two or more trusts may be liable for the claim.
If you do not file a claim during the claim filing period,
or do not file an objection to the trustee's petition to
approve claims, you will not be allowed to take any further
action to collect the debt. The Court's order will be
binding on all claimants and beneficiaries who had notice of
the petition.
- Can the Court help me if I have a
question or concern about the proper interpretation of the
trust or how the trustee is administering the trust?
The law says that unless the trust is revocable, a trustee
or beneficiary can petition the Court about the internal
affairs of the trust or to ask if the trust exists.
Petitioning the Court is complicated. Talk to a qualified
lawyer before filing a petition.
Your petition can ask the Court to do many things,
including:
- Determine the validity of terms of the
trust.
- Identify the beneficiaries and determine
who gets property, and when they get it, if the trust
does not specify that information.
- Settle the accounts and review the acts of
the trustee.
- Tell the trustee to do something, like
report about the trust or account to the beneficiary.
- Grant powers to the trustee.
- Determine or review a trustee’s pay.
- Appoint or remove a trustee or accept a
trustee’s resignation.
- Make the trustee pay for losses to the
trust or a beneficiary that are the trustee’s fault.
- Approve or direct a change in the trust,
or end the trust.
- Approve or direct combining or dividing
trusts.
- Change the trust to make a decedent's
estate qualify for the charitable estate tax deduction
under federal law.
- Authorize transfer of a trust or trust
property to or from another or country.
- Direct transfer of a testamentary trust
from one county to another.
- Approve removal of a testamentary trust
from court supervision.
- Determine the reasonableness of payment
for legal services.
You can petition the Court for other reasons, too. For
more information read California Probate Code Section
17200.
The law says the trustee or any interested person can file a
petition if:
- The trustee has or holds title to real or
personal property, and another person makes a claim
against all or some part of that property.
- Another person has or holds title to real
or personal property and the trustee makes a claim
against all or some part of that property.
- A creditor of the settlor of the trust
makes a claim against the trust.
See California Probate Section
17200.1 and Section
850.
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