Estate
Planning Glossary
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Adjusted Gross Estate
- The gross estate less debts, administration expenses, and
losses during administration.
Adjusted Taxable Estate - The adjusted gross estate
less any marital and/ or charitable deductions.
Adjusted Taxable Gifts - Gifts that exceed the
unified credit, or $600,000 exemption, and the annual gift tax exclusion.
Gifted amounts over and above the exemption and annual exclusion
at death are added back to the taxable estate and are subject to
estate taxes.
Administration - The formal process of settling
an estate. Various duties include valuing the estate, filing tax
returns, paying taxes, and distributing assets to heirs.
Administration Expenses - Expenses incurred while
administering an estate. These include legal fees, appraisal fees,
and distribution and disposition costs.
After-born Child - A child born after the death
of a parent.
Alternate Valuation Date - A date used by the
personal representative to value a decedent's estate that is not
to exceed six months after date of death. The value of the assets
must be lower and result in a reduction of the gross estate and
a reduction in the estate tax liability to qualify for its use.
Annual Gift Tax Exclusion - The right of each
individual to make small annual gifts to other individuals each
year to the extent of $10,000 (under current law). The number of
these gifts is unlimited. These small annual gifts are in addition
to the unified credit, or $600,000 exemption equivalent, amount.
They do not reduce the unified credit, or exemption equivalent.
Ascertainable Standards - Involves the right of
a surviving spouse to invade the family trust, or B trust, without
causing the property to be included in his or her estate. The power
is limited to such needs as health, education, maintenance, and
support.
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Basis - The original amount paid to acquire an asset or
the fair market value of an asset on the date it was acquired.
Beneficiary - The persons and/or organizations
that receive trust property after the death of the trust grantor;
also refers to those who receive property under a contract (such
as an annuity or life insurance policy) through a beneficiary designation.
Bequest - A specific bequest is a gift by will
of a designated class or kind of property (e.g., a gift of the descendent's
residence to a named individual). A general bequest is one
that is accomplished from the general assets of an estate (e.g.,
a bequest of a sum of money without reference to any particular
account or investment from which it is to be distributed).
Book Value - Value that equals assets less liabilities
in valuing businesses. It is the net worth of the business.
B Trust - A trust created at death under a provision
in the will (testamentary) or by provision in a trust. This
trust is often referred to as the family trust and usually
holds the unified credit, or exemption equivalent, amount (in spousal
estates) of the first spouse to die. It also qualifies assets placed
into the trust for the use of the unified credit.
Bypass Trust - A trust designed not to qualify
for the unlimited estate tax marital deduction. Commonly referred
to as the family trust, or B trust, it is designed to make use of
the lifetime $600,000 exclusion (unified credit).
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Capitalization of Earnings - The measure of earning capacity
when valuing a business.
Charitable Deduction - A deduction allowed for
a gift to a qualified charitable organization.
Charitable Gifting - Gifts of cash or other assets
made to qualified charities (under the IRS definition) for
which the donor receives various tax deductions.
Charitable Remainder Trust (CRT) - The donation
of property or money to a charity, whereby the donor reserves the
right to use the property or to receive income from it for a specified
time. When the agreed-upon period is over, the property belongs
to the charitable organization. The donor in turn receives various
tax deductions and tax advantages. The most common CRTs are the
charitable remainder annuity trust (CRAT) and the charitable remainder
unit trust (CRUT).
Codicil - A revision, change, or modification
to an existing will.
Community-Owned Property - Property acquired during
marriage in which both husband and wife have an undivided one-half
interest. Not more than one-half of community property can be disposed
of by a will. The nine current community property states are Arizona,
California, Idaho, Louisiana, New Mexico, Nevada, Texas, Washington,
and Wisconsin.
Corpus - The principal property of a trust. Separate
from trust income, it is property transferred to the trust and is
also referred to as principal.
Credit Estate Tax - A state death tax imposed
to take full advantage of the amount allowed as a credit against
the federal estate tax.
Crummey Power - The power held by the beneficiary
of a trust to withdraw a certain amount annually from the trust.
This amount is limited to $5,000 or 5 percent of the trust corpus
each year.
Curtesy - A man's entitlement through common law
to all property held or owned by his wife. (See also dower.)
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Death Tax - Tax imposed by the federal government
that can be in excess of 55 percent and that is imposed by some
state governments.
Deemed Transferor - The parent of the transferee
most closely related to the grantor. A parent related to the grantor
by blood or adoption is deemed closer than one related by marriage.
This relationship is important in understanding the taxation of
generation skipping transfers.
Devise - Legally, a gift of real estate under
a will as distinguished from a gift of personal property.
Direct Skip - The transfer of assets or gifts
made directly to second-generation beneficiaries, skipping
the middle generation. For example, gifts made by a grandfather
to a grandchild while skipping the grandfather's children.
Domicile - State and place of one's official residence.
Donee - The recipient of a gift, but may also
refer to the recipient of a power of appointment and to an individual
or entity capable of owning property.
Donor - A person who makes a gift or grants a
power of appointment. Limited to individuals only.
Dower - A woman's entitlement to an interest in
all the property of her husband that was owned during their marriage.
Dynasty Trust - An irrevocable life insurance
trust (ILIT) used by wealthy people to create nontaxable generation
skipping transfers to several generations.
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Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981 (ERTA) - A broad-based
tax reform legislation signed into law under the Reagan administration.
The legislation, as it pertains to estate planning, created
the unlimited marital deduction, increased the estate and gift tax
exemption, and restructured the estate and gift tax rates.
Estate Analysis - A formal written estate plan
that analyzes estate taxation, property ownership, probate
costs, current planning, etc., and formulates a plan to achieve
various objectives. It is a road map for achieving the objectives,
format, and execution of an effective estate plan.
Estate Freeze - Method whereby highly appreciating
businesses and personal assets are shifted out of an estate so that
future appreciation will not be included in the gross estate.
Estate Planners - Individuals who specialize and
devote 100 percent of their time to the issues and practice of planning
estates and whose backgrounds can vary from law to finance.
Estate Tax - A tax that may be imposed not only
by the federal government but also by state governments on the right
of a person to transfer property at death. This transfer tax
is generally applicable to estates valued over and above the $600,000
exemption amount.
Estate Tax Base - An amount on which the federal
estate tax is levied that is determined by subtracting the allowable
expenses, deductions, and exclusions from the gross estate and adding
back in any adjusted taxable gifts.
Estate Tax States - Those states that impose a
death tax direct to the estate and do not share in revenues collected
by the federal government.
Excess Accumulations Estate Tax - A 15 percent
additional estate tax imposed on qualified retirement plans as a
penalty for over funding these plans and not taking IRS guideline
distributions.
Excess Distribution Tax - A 15 percent penalty
tax on excessive distributions from a qualified retirement plan.
Exemption Equivalent - The unified credit amount
(currently $600,000) that is exempt from estate and gift taxes.
Each individual is allowed this exemption.
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Fair Market Value - The value at which estate
property is included in the gross estate for federal estate tax
purposes; the price at which property would change hands between
a willing buyer and a willing seller under any compulsion to buy
or sell with both having knowledge of all the relevant facts.
Family Allowance - Money available from an estate
for the testator's spouse and children while the estate is being
settled.
Family Limited Partnership (FLP) - A legal entity
that provides ultimate control and management of assets while at
the same time providing asset protection.
Family Trust (See B trust)
Federal Estate Tax - An excise tax levied by the
federal government on the right to transfer property at death. It
is imposed on and measured by the value of the estate left behind
by the deceased.
Fee Simple - Outright ownership of property with
absolute rights to dispose of, or gift, it to anyone at death.
Fiduciary - A person in the position of great
trust and responsibility such as the executor of a will or the trustee
of a trust.
Five and Five Power - A provision that allows
a trust beneficiary to withdraw the greater of $5,000 or 5 percent
of the principal from a trust without causing the entire trust property
to be included in his or her estate for federal estate taxation.
Foreign Asset Protection Trust - A revocable living
trust established under the laws of a foreign country.
Foreign Death Tax Credit - A credit against estate
and gift taxes on an amount that is paid to foreign governments
as a death tax.
Formal Written Estate Plan Summary (See
estate analysis)
Format - The planning tools used in the process
of estate planning. Trusts, wills, CRTs, etc., are all estate planning
formats.
Funded Insurance Trust - An insurance trust provided
with income producing property, the income from which is used to
pay the premiums on the policies held in the trust.
Future Interest - The postponed right of use or
enjoyment of property.
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Generation-Skipping Transfer (GST) - A transfer
of property, usually in trust, that is designed to provide benefits
for two or more generations of beneficiaries who are younger than
the generation of the grantor.
Generation-Skipping Transfer Tax (GSTT) - A transfer
tax generally assessed on gifts in excess of $1 million to grandchildren,
great-grandchildren, or others at least two generations below
the donor.
Gift Splitting - A provision allowing a married
couple to treat a gift made by one of them to a third party as having
been made as one-half by each, provided it is consented to by the
other on a gift tax return.
Gift Tax Marital Deduction - A deduction allowed
for a gift made by one spouse to another. Outright gifts and life
estates qualify for the deduction if the donee has the right
to the income from the property for life and a general power of
appointment over the principal. Certain qualified terminable interest
gifts also qualify. The amount of the deduction is unlimited.
Grantor - The person who establishes a trust who
is also called the creator, settlor, donor, or trustor.
Gross Estate - The total value of all property
in which a deceased had an interest that must be included in his
or her estate for federal tax purposes.
Guardian - A person appointed to have custody
over the person or the property or both of a minor or incapacitated
person.
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Health, Education, Maintenance, and Support (HEMS)
(See ascertainable standards)
Heir - A person who is entitled to inherit assets
of the decedent when the decedent left no will; also specified as
next of kin.
Holographic Will - A will written entirely in
the testator's own handwriting.
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Inheritance Tax - A tax imposed by a number of
states that is based on the value of the property that taxpayers
inherit. It is levied on the right to receive property, not on the
right to transfer property.
Insurance Trust - A trust established to own insurance
policies in order to prevent them from being included in an estate.
Intangible Property - Property that does not have
physical value, such as a stock certificate or savings bond.
Inter Vivos Trust - A trust, also called a living
trust, created during a person's lifetime. It operates during
that person's lifetime as opposed to a testamentary trust, which
does not operate until the grantor dies.
Intestacy Laws - Individual state laws governing
the distribution of the property of a person who dies without leaving
a valid will.
Intestate - A person who dies without having a
valid will; that person is said to have died intestate.
Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust (ILIT) - A trust
that cannot be changed or canceled once it is created.
Irrevocable Trust - A trust created for the permanent
transfer of property.
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Joint-and-Last-Survivor Life Insurance - A relatively
new type of life insurance that provides an insurance benefit
at the death of the surviving spouse or partner. Generally,
this method of providing estate liquidity for married couples is
the most cost-effective strategy. It is also known as survivorship
insurance and second-to-die insurance.
Joint Ownership - Ownership that occurs when two
or more people own the same property. The death of a joint owner
immediately transfers ownership to the surviving joint owner(s).
Joint Tenancy - Ownership shared with an unlimited
number of individuals whereby each tenant owns an equal undivided
share of the property.
Joint Tenancy With Rights of Survivorship (JTWRS)
- The holding of property by two or more individuals in a manner
that, on the death of one tenant, the survivor or survivors succeed
to full ownership by operation of law.
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Lapse - The failure of a bequest in a will because
the intended recipient died before the testator.
Last Will and Testament - The usual formal term
referring to a will.
Legacy - A gift of personal property by will that
is usually referred to as a bequest; the recipient is called the
legatee.
Leverage - A true cost discount by which one can
pay a few dollars now to create a significantly larger sum later.
Leveraged Dollars - The present use of a sum of
money to create a true discount in the future; using current
premium dollars now to create a large amount of dollars in the future
in life insurance contracts.
Life Estate - The title to the income interest
vested in a life tenant.
Life Insurance - Insurance customarily used to
discount actual tax liability.
Life Interest or Life Estate - An interest that
a person has in property enjoyed only during life.
Life Tenant - The person, often referred to as
the income beneficiary, who receives the income from a legal life
estate or from a trust fund during his or her own life or that of
another person.
Limited Power of Appointment - A special power
granted to a donee that is limited in scope as opposed to being
general.
Liquid Assets - Cash or assets that can be easily
converted into cash without any serious loss, such as bonds,
life insurance proceeds paid in a lump sum, bank accounts, and certificates
of deposit.
Liquidity - The measure of liquid assets. In estate
planning it is detrimental to measure the amount of liquid
assets available for paying death taxes and expenses.
Living Trust (See revocable living
trust)
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Marital Deduction - The portion of a deceased
spouse's estate that may be passed to the surviving spouse without
becoming subject to the federal estate tax.
Marital Trust - A trust consisting of the property
that qualifies for the marital deduction.
Multiple Probate - Property owned by a decedent
in states other than the state of domicile that will be subject
to probate; usually refers to real estate owned in several states
that becomes subject to each individual state's probate system at
time of death.
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Net Taxable Estate - The total value of an estate
after all deductions have been subtracted.
Nonliquid Assets - Assets that are not easily
converted into cash without the risk of serious loss, such as real
estate, a business interest, or art objects.
Nonmarital (nonmarital deduction) Trust - A trust
consisting of property that does not qualify for the marital deduction.
Nonprobate Property - Property passing outside
the administration of the estate other than by will or intestacy
laws. Examples include jointly held property passing by right of
survivorship (law), life insurance proceeds payable to a named
beneficiary (by contract), and property in a living trust (property
not titled to an individual).
Nonresident Alien - Usually the noncitizen (alien)
spouse of a deceased U.S. citizen. Special rules apply to prevent
this spouse from removing property from the United States. Use of
the marital deduction is usually not allowed unless certain
conditions are met.
Nonskip - The transfer of property to the next-in-line
generation such as when a father transfers property directly to
his children as opposed to his grandchildren.
Nuncupative Will - An oral will dictated by the
testator before witnesses during a final illness and later converted
to writing.
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Objectives - In estate planning, the formulation
of each individual's needs and desires regarding distribution of
his or her estate and the various intricacies involved in the transfer.
One Percent Solution - A formula involving 1 percent
of the total gross estate to fund the purchase of life insurance
inside an irrevocable trust. The purpose is to provide liquidity
for estate tax payment or to replace the loss of estate property
as a result of taxation on a leveraged basis.
Operation of Law - Assets that pass outside of
a probate estate by certain ownership. Property held between spouses
as joint tenants with rights of survivorship passes to the surviving
tenant by operation of law.
Optimal Marital Deduction - Using the unlimited
marital deduction in a trust arrangement to gain a tax liability
of $0 at the death of the first spouse.
Outright Ownership - Complete ownership of property
by an individual that can pass directly to another individual at
death.
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Payable on Death (POD) - An arrangement whereby
a depositor elects that a sum of money or account be payable to
named individuals on death; similar to a beneficiary arrangement.
Per Capita - A way of distributing an estate so
that the surviving descendents will share equally regardless of
generation.
Personal Representative - A person appointed by
the court to settle an estate.
Per Stirpes - A way of distributing an estate
so that the surviving descendents will receive only what their immediate
ancestor would have received if he or she had been alive at the
time of death.
Posthumous Child - A child born after its parents'
death.
Pour Over - Refers to the transfer of property
from one estate or trust to another estate or trust that is triggered
by the occurrence of an event such as a death. For example, property
disposed of by will can "pour over" into an existing trust.
Power of Appointment - The right given to a donee
to dispose of property that the donee does not fully own within
the limits set forth by the donor, which can cause the value of
the asset to be included in the estate of a donee who holds the
power of appointment.
Present Interest - As applied to a gift, the present
right to use or enjoy the property. A gift must have this characteristic
to qualify for the annual $10,000 gift tax exclusion.
Pretermitted Heir - A child or other descendant
omitted from a testator's will.
Principal - The property funding a trust, from
which income is expected to be earned. Trust principal is also known
as res or corpus.
Probate - The process of providing the validity
of a will in court and executing its provisions under the guidance
of the court. When a person dies, the will must be filed before
the proper officers of the court, giving the court jurisdiction
in the matter to enforce the document commonly referred to as "filing
the will for probate." When the will has been filed, it is
said to be "admitted to probate." The process of probating
a will involves recognition by the court of the personal representative
named in the will (or appointment of an administrator if none has
been named), the filing of proper reports and papers as required
by law, determination of the validity of the will if it is contested,
and distribution and final settlement of the estate under the supervision
of the court.
Probate Property - Property that passes under
the terms of a will. If there is no will, it passes under the state
intestacy laws.
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Qualified Charity - A charity that qualifies to
receive gifts for which an income tax charitable deduction is allowable.
Qualified Domestic Trust (QDOT) - A special trust
to which assets are transferred so that a spouse who is not a U.S.
citizen (a nonresident alien) will be entitled to claim the benefit
of the unlimited marital deduction.
Qualified Terminable Interest Property (QTIP) -
Property qualifying for the marital deduction at the election of
the donor or the decedent's personal representative. The spouse
retains a qualified income interest in the property for life, with
the income payable at least annually. The corpus ultimately passes
to a specified remainderman under a special power of appointment
given to the spouse.
Qualified Terminable Interest Trust (QTIP trust)
- A trust that qualifies for the unlimited marital tax deduction.
No estate tax is imposed on the value of the property transferred
to the surviving spouse in a QTIP trust on the first spouse's death
as long as the surviving spouse receives all income at least annually.
The purpose of the QTIP trust is to enable an estate to avoid tax
while the grantor still designates who will receive the property
remaining in the trust on the second spouse's death.
Quarterback - An estate planner who specializes
in the practice of estate planning and who coordinates the entire
effort for a client. The effort involves designing the plan, based
on the objectives; suggesting a format; and executing the plan in
conjunction with other professionals or providing outlets for the
accounting, legal, and all additional aspects of execution.
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Remainder Interest - A future interest that comes
into existence after the termination of a prior interest. For example,
individual A creates a testamentary trust under a will in which
the principal is to be retained with income paid to individual B
until B's death, at which time the principal or remainder interest
will be passed to individual C.
Remainderman - The person entitled to receive
the principal of a trust when the intervening life estate or estates
terminate.
Remedy of Partition - The separation of shares
of property held jointly by the direction of a court.
Residuary Estate - The remaining part of a decedent's
estate after debts, expenses, and distributions have been made.
Wills usually contain a clause on disposing of the residue of the
estate that the decedent has not otherwise bequeathed.
Reverse QTIP - The use of a QTIP trust to preserve
a decedent's $1 million generation skipping exemption.
Reversionary Interest - The possibility that property
will return to the donor after it has been given away.
Reversionary Trust - A trust limited to a specified
term of years or for the life of the beneficiary at the end of which
period the trust is terminated and the property returned to the
grantor.
Revocable Living Trust - A written legal document
into which grantors place all their property with instructions for
its management and distribution on their disability or death.
Revocable Trust - A trust that can be altered,
amended, terminated, or revoked during the grantor's lifetime with
all property being recovered by the grantor.
Right of Survivorship - Property held jointly
whereby at the death of one joint owner, the other owner or owners
succeed to full ownership by surviving under law.
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Semiliquid Assets - Assets that can be converted
to cash within a reasonable amount of time usually within one
year.
Settlor - Another term for the grantor or creator
of a trust.
Shrinkage - A reduction in the amount of property
that passes at death caused by loss of capital and income resulting
from payment of death costs. It may be greatly increased if assets
must be sold for cash to pay such costs.
Skip Person - In generation skipping transfers,
the person of the generation that is skipped. The child of a parent
who makes gifts favoring only grandchildren is considered a skip
person.
Sprinkling or Spray Trust - A trust under which
the trustee is given discretionary powers to distribute any of the
income among beneficiaries in equal or unequal shares and to accumulate
any income not distributed.
State Death Tax Credit - A format of many states
to calculate and collect their portion of state imposed death taxes.
Step-Up in Basis - A decedent's capital gains
property that passes to others and escapes the capital gains
tax when sold by the person who inherits the property. Persons inheriting
capital gains property receive the property at date-of-death fair
market value. In effect the basis in this property is deemed to
be "stepped up" and does not reflect the decedent's original
cost basis for determining applicable capital gains tax on the sale
of the property.
Super Trust - A package of trust instruments that
includes a revocable living trust, an A/B bypass trust, and an irrevocable
life insurance trust.
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Tangible Property - Property that has physical
substance, such as a house or car.
Taxable Distributions - Distributions from qualified
retirement plans that are fully taxable and that can also refer
to distributions from a trust when working with generation skipping
transfers.
Taxable Terminations - In generation skipping
transfers, interests in trusts
That Terminate (e.g., income rights)
Tax Reform Act of 1986 (TRA '86) - An encompassing
tax act that made many changes in estate and gifting rules.
Tenancy by Entirety - Ownership of property by
a husband and wife so that such property may not be disposed of
during life by either spouse without the other's consent; at one
spouse's death, the property goes to the survivor.
Tenancy in Common - Ownership of property by two
or more persons so that each has an undivided interest and, at the
death of one, is passed by will to the deceased's heirs. It does
not pass automatically to the surviving tenants in common.
Terminable Interest - An interest in property
that will terminate in the future; usually associated with the right
to income from a trust that terminates at the death of the grantor.
Testamentary - At death.
Testamentary Trust - A trust set up in a will
that only takes effect after death.
Testate - A person who dies with a will.
Testator, Testatrix - A person who dies with a
will. A male is a testator; a female is a testatrix.
Transferee - The person receiving property transfers.
transferor The person who makes transfers of property to others.
Trust - An arrangement for holding legal property
and managing the property for the benefit of another trustee. The
holder of legal title to property for the management, use, or benefit
of another.
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Unfunded Insurance Trust - An insurance trust
that is not provided with cash or securities to pay the life insurance
premium, which is usually paid by someone other than the trustee.
Unified Credit - An amount up to $600,000 in assets
that every taxpayer is allowed to exclude from the estate and gift
tax.
Unified Credit Against Estate Tax - A credit of
up to $192,800 in 1987 and later years that can be applied directly
against the federal estate tax to the extent that it has not been
applied to gift tax obligations.
Unified Credit Against Gift Tax - A credit of
up to $192,800 in 1987 and later years that can be applied directly
against the federal gift tax but thereby reduces the available unified
credit against the estate tax.
Unified Credit Trust - A trust in spousal estates
designed to hold part of or the full unified credit amount ($600,000)
at the death of the first spouse. (See family trust)
Unified Probate Code - A standardized probate
process adopted by many states in an effort to simplify the probate
process.
Unitrust (See charitable remainder
trust)
Unlimited Marital Deduction - Property that qualifies
as marital deduction property. Under ERTA ’81, the ability
to pass unlimited amounts of property that qualifies for the marital
deduction became law. At present unlimited amounts of marital deduction
property may pass to a surviving spouse without estate or gift tax
consequences.
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Wealth Replacement Trust (WRT) - An irrevocable
life insurance trust that replaces the value of gifted assets made
to charities used in conjunction with charitable remainder trusts
(CRTs).
Wealth Transfer - Process and strategy for transferring
property to others with minimal estate and gift tax liability.
Will - A written document with instruction for
disposition of property at death that can be enforced only through
the probate court.
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