Decanting Trusts: Irrevocable, Not Unchangeable
Date
2013
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Texas Tech Estate Planning & Community Property Journal
Abstract
Attempts to demystify the issues by looking at decanting and trust modifications from statutory, common law, and trust agreement standpoints. Decanting is simply a form of trust modification initiated by a trustee. In the strictest sense, a trustee accomplishes the modification by moving assets from one trust to a new trust, with different terms. Although the future of trust beneficiaries may be unknown, especially to beneficiaries, estate planning attorneys continue to draft trusts designed to last for generations. Decanting comes from this standpoint: a desire for changes in an otherwise irrevocable trust. Overall discusses common law decanting, statutory decanting, and also tax issues that might arise because of decanting.
Description
Keywords
Decanting, Trusts, Beneficiaries, Modification, Tax, Trustee, Common law, Texas, Statutory decanting
Citation
Melissa J. Willms, Decanting Trusts: Irrevocable, Not Unchangeable, 6 Est. Plan. & Cmty. Prop. L. J. 35 (2013).