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A Trust
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The surviving spouses
portion of an A-B trust. Also called marital trust
or survivors trust.
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A-B Trust
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A trust that includes a
tax-planning provision that lets you provide for
your surviving spouse, keep control over who will
receive your assets after your spouse dies, and
leave up to $4 million (in 2006, 2007 and 2008) to
your beneficiaries, estate-tax free.
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Administration
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The court-supervised
distribution of an estate during probate. Also used
to describe the same process for a trust after the
grantor dies.
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Administrator
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Person named by the court to
represent a probate estate when there is no will or
the will did not name an executor. Female is
administratrix. Also called personal
representative.
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Alternate
Beneficiary
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Person or organization named
to receive your assets if the primary beneficiaries
named in your Trust die before you do.
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Ancillary
Administration
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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.
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Annual
Exclusion
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Amount you can give someone
each year without having to file a gift tax return
or pay a gift tax. Currently $12,000 per recipient
($24,000 if married). The amount of tax-free gifts
is tied to inflation and may increase from time to
time.
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Assets
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Basically, anything you own,
including your home and other real estate, bank
accounts, life insurance, investments, furniture,
jewelry, art, clothing, and collectibles.
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Assignment
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A short document that
transfers your interest in assets from your name to
another. Often used when transferring assets to a
trust.
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B Trust
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The deceased spouses
portion of an A-B trust. Also called credit shelter
or bypass trust.
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Basis
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What you paid for an asset.
The value that is used to determine gain or loss
for income tax purposes.
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Beneficiaries
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In a living trust, the
persons and/or organizations who receive the trust
assets (or benefit from the trust assets) after the
death of the trust grantor.
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By-Pass
Trust
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Another name for the "B" part
of an A-B living trust because the assets in this
trust bypass federal estate taxes.
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C Trust
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See "QTIP."
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Certificate of
Trust
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A shortened version of a
trust that verifies the trusts 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.
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Childrens
Trust
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A trust included in your
living trust. If, when you die, a beneficiary is
not of legal age, the childs 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.
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Codicil
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A written change or amendment
to a Will.
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Co-Grantors
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Two or more persons who
establish one living trust together.
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Co-Trustees
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Two or more individuals who
have been named to act together in managing a
trusts assets. A corporate trustee can also
be a co-trustee.
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Common Trust
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One living trust established
by two or more individuals (usually a married
couple).
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Community
Property
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Assets a husband and wife
acquire by joint effort during marriage if they
live in one of the eight community property states.
(Wisconsin also has a similar law, but does not use
the term "community property.") Each spouse owns
half of the assets in the event of divorce or
death.
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Conservator
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One who is legally
responsible for the care and well-being of another
person. If appointed by a court, the conservator is
under the courts 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.)
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Conservatorship
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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.
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Contest
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To dispute or challenge the
terms of a will or trust.
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Corporate
Trustee
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An institution, generally a
bank or trust company, that specializes in managing
trusts.
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Credit Shelter
Trust
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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.
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Creditor
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Person or institution to whom
money is owed.
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Custodian
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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.
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Deceased
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One who has died.
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Deed
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A document that lets you
transfer title of your real estate to another
person(s). Also see warranty deed and quitclaim
deed.
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Disclaim
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To refuse to accept a gift or
inheritance so it can go to the recipient who is
next in line.
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Discretion
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The full or partial power to
make a decision or judgment.
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Disinherit
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To prevent someone from
inheriting from you.
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Distribution
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Payment in cash or asset(s)
to one who is entitled to receive it.
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Durable Power of Attorney
for Asset Management
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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.
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Durable Power of Attorney
for Health Care
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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.
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Equity
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The current market value of
an asset less any loan or liability.
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Estate
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Assets and debts left by an
individual at death.
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Estate Taxes
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Federal or state taxes on the
value of assets left at death. Also called
inheritance taxes or death taxes.
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Executor
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Person or institution named
in a will to carry out its instructions. Female is
executrix. Also called a personal
representative.
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Federal Estate Tax
Exemption
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Amount of an
individuals estate that is exempt from
federal estate taxes. In 2006, 2007 and 2008, the
exemption amount is $2 million. Under current law,
it is scheduled to increase to $3.5 million by the
year 2009, disappear in the year 2010 (when the
federal estate tax is scheduled to be repealed) and
return in 2011 at $1 million.
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Fiduciary
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Person having the legal duty
to act primarily for anothers benefit.
Implies great confidence and trust, and a high
degree of good faith. Usually associated with a
trustee.
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Funding
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The process of transferring
assets to your living trust.
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Gain
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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.
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Generation Skipping
Transfer Tax (GSTT)
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A steep tax (46% in 2006) on
assets that "skip" a generation and are left
directly to grandchildren and younger generations.
Everyone has an exemption from this tax. In 2006,
the GSTT exemption is $2 million.
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Gift
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A transfer from one
individual to another without fair
compensation.
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Gift Tax
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A federal tax on gifts made
while you are living. Currently $12,000 per person
per year is exempt from gift tax. Also see "Annual
Exclusion."
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Grantor
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The person who sets up or
creates the trust. The person whose trust it is.
Also called creator, settlor, trustor, donor or
trustmaker.
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Gross Estate
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The value of an estate before
debts are paid.
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Guardianship
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See "Conservatorship."
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Health Care
Proxy
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See "Durable Power of
Attorney for Health Care."
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Heir
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One who is entitled by law to
receive part of your estate.
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Holographic
Will
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A handwritten will.
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Homestead
Exemption
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Portion of your residence
(dwelling and surrounding land) that cannot be sold
to satisfy a creditors claim while you are
living.
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Incapacitated/
Incompetent
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Unable to manage ones
own affairs, either temporarily or permanently.
Lack of legal power.
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Independent
Administration
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A form of probate available
in many states. Intended to simplify the probate
process by requiring fewer court appearances and
less court supervision.
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Inheritance
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The assets received from
someone who has died.
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Inter vivos
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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.
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Irrevocable
Trust
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A trust that cannot be
changed (revoked) or cancelled once it is set up.
Opposite of revocable trust.
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Intestate
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Without a will.
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Joint Ownership
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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.
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Joint Tenants with Right
of Survivorship
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A form of joint ownership in
which the deceased owners share automatically
and immediately transfers to the surviving joint
tenant(s).
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Liquid Assets
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Cash and other assets (like
stocks) that can easily be converted into
cash.
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"Living
Probate"
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The court-supervised process
of managing the assets of one who is
incapacitated.
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Living Trust
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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 ones
lifetime.
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Living
Will
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A written document that
states you do not wish to be kept alive by
artificial means when the illness or injury is
terminal.
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Marital
Deduction
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A deduction on the federal
estate tax return that lets the first spouse to die
leave an unlimited amount of assets to the
surviving spouse free of estate taxes. However, if
no other tax planning is used, and the surviving
spouses 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.
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Marital Trust
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See "A Trust."
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Medicaid
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A federally-funded health
care program for the poor and minor
children.
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Medicare
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A federally-funded health
care program, primarily for Americans over age 65
who are covered by Social Security or Railroad
Retirement benefits.
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Minor
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One who is under the legal
age for an adult, which varies by state (usually
age 18 or 21).
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Net Estate
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The value of an estate after
all debts have been paid. (Federal estate taxes are
based on the net value of an estate.)
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Net
Value
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The current market value of
an asset less any loan or debt.
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Payable-on-Death
Account
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See "Totten Trust."
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Per Capita
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A way of distributing your
estate so that your surviving descendents will
share equally, regardless of their
generation.
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Per Stirpes
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A way of distributing your
estate so that your surviving descendents will
receive only what their immediate ancestor would
have received if he/she had been living at your
death.
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Personal
Property
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Movable property. Includes
furniture, automobiles, equipment, cash and stocks.
Opposite of real property that is permanent (like
land).
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Personal
Representative
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Another name for an executor
or administrator.
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Pour Over Will
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A short will often used with
a living trust. It states that any assets left out
of your living trust will become part of (pour
over into) your living trust upon your
death.
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Power of
Attorney
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A legal document giving
someone legal authority to sign your name on your
behalf in your absence. Ends at incapacity (unless
it is a durable power of attorney) or
death.
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Probate
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The legal process of
validating a will, paying debts, and distributing
assets after death.
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Probate Estate
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The assets that go through
probate after you die. Usually this includes 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.
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Probate
Fees
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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.
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Qualified Domestic Trust
(QDOT)
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Allows a non-citizen spouse
to qualify for the marital deduction.
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Qualified Terminable
Interest Property (QTIP)
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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.
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Qualifying Subchapter S
Trust (QSST)
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Trust that meets certain IRS
qualifications and is allowed to own Subchapter S
stock.
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Quitclaim
Deed
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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.
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Real Property
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Land and property that is
permanently attached to land (like a building or a
house).
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Recorded Deed
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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.
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Revocable Trust
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A trust in which the person
setting it up retains the power to change (revoke)
or cancel the trust during his/her lifetime.
Opposite of irrevocable trust.
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Required Beginning Date
(RBD)
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The date you must begin
taking required minimum distributions from your
tax-deferred plans. Usually, it is April 1 of the
calendar year following the calendar year in which
you turn age 70 1/2. 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).
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Required Minimum
Distribution (RMD)
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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.
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Separate
Property
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Generally, all assets you
acquire prior to marriage and assets acquired by
gift or inheritance during marriage.
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Separate Trust
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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."
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Settle an
Estate
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The process of handling the
final affairs (valuation of assets, payment of
debts and taxes, distribution of assets to
Beneficiaries) after someone dies.
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Settlor
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See "Grantor."
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Special Gifts
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A separate listing of special
assets that will go to specific individuals or
organizations after your incapacity or death. Also
called special bequests.
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Special Needs
Trust
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Allows you to provide for a
disabled loved one without interfering with
government benefits.
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Spendthrift
Clause
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Protects assets in a trust
from a beneficiarys creditors.
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Spouse
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Husband or wife.
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Stepped-up
Basis
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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
owners 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."
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Subchapter S Corporation
Stock
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Stock in a corporation which
has chosen to be subject to the rules of subchapter
S of the Internal Revenue Code.
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Surviving
Spouse
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The spouse who is living
after one spouse has died.
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Survivors
Trust
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See "A Trust."
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Successor
Trustee
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Person or institution named
in the trust document who will take over should the
first trustee die, resign, or otherwise become
unable to act.
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Tax-Deferred
Plan
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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.
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Taxable Gift
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Generally, a gift of more
than $12,000 in one year to someone other than your
spouse. The value of the gift is applied to your
federal gift and estate tax exemption, and no gift
tax is required to be paid until the exemption has
been exhausted. (This amount is tied to inflation
and may increase from time to time.)
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Tenants-in-Common
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A form of joint ownership in
which two or more persons own the same property. At
the death of a tenant-in-common, his/her share
transfers to his/her heirs.
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Tenants-by-the
Entirety
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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.
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Testamentary
Trust
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A trust in a will. Can only
go into effect at death. Does not avoid
probate.
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Testate
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One who dies with a valid
will.
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Title
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Document proving ownership of
an asset.
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Transfer Tax
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Tax on assets when they are
transferred to another. The estate tax, gift tax
and generation skipping transfer tax are all
transfer taxes.
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Trust
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An entity that holds assets
for the benefit of certain other persons or
entities.
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Trust Company
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An institution that
specializes in managing trusts. Also called a
corporate trustee.
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Trustee
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Person or institution who
manages and distributes anothers assets
according to the instructions in the trust
document.
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Trustor
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See "Grantor."
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Totten Trust
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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.
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Unified
Credit
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The amount each person is
allowed to deduct from any federal estate taxes
owed after death. In 2006, the credit is $780,800,
which is the amount of estate taxes owed on the
first $2 million in assets.
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Uniform Transfer to Minors
Act (UTMA)
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Law enacted in many states
that lets you leave assets to a minor by appointing
a custodian. In most states, the minor receives the
assets at legal age.
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Unfunded
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Your living trust is unfunded
if you have not transferred assets into it.
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Warranty Deed
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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.
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Will
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A written document with
instructions for disposing of assets after death. A
will can only be enforced through the probate
court.
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