Glossary
of Terms
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Alphabetical
Listing of Terms:
[A]
[B]
[C] [D]
[E]
[F] [G]
[H]
[I] [J]
[L]
[M]
[N] [P]
[Q]
[R] [S]
[T]
[U] [V]
[W]
A ___________
actuarial - calculations based
on statistics, especially of life expectancy.
adjusted
basis - the cost of value of property
in the hands of the owner, plus additions and
minus deductions required by law.
adjusted
gross estate - arrived at by deduction
estate settlement from the gross estate, also
known as the taxable estate (see gross estate).
administration
- the management of deceased person's estate (see
estate).
administrator
- an individual appointed by a court to settle
the financial and legal affairs of a person who
dies without a Will.
- ancillary
- a person who is appointed to take charge
of that portion of an estate which exists in
a state or country other than that of the deceased
person's residence.
- temporary
- a person or agency appointed to initiate the
management of an estate until a regular appointee
is named.
- of
undistributed assets (de bonis non)
- the person or agency named by the court to
replace a personal representative or administrator
who has not completed the settlement of an estate
due to incapacitation, death or removal by court.
- with
the will annexed (cum testamento annexo)
- one who is appointed to settle an estate when
the original personal representative failed
to qualify, or when the court refused to approve
the one nominated in the Will.
administratrix
- a female administrator.
affidavit
- a statement in writing sworn to or affirmed
before an official (usually a notary public) who
has authority to administer an oath or affirmation.
after-born
children - children born after a Will
has been executed.
alternate
valuation date - the date six months
after death, which may be used for determining
the value of an estate's assets.
ancillary
administration - administration of a
deceased person's estate in a state where he had
property other than the state he resided in at
his death.
annuity
- the right to receive a series of payments on
a yearly basis or at other regular intervals for
a specific period of years, or for the lifetime
of the income recipient.
annuity
trust - donor transfers cash or securities
to a charitable remainder trust naming one or
more charitable organizations as the eventual
beneficiary. This qualifies for a charitable contribution
deduction and provides income at a fixed percentage
of the fair market value of the assets originally
transferred.
ante-nuptial
agreement - a contract or agreement between
a man and a woman before marriage, but in contemplation
and generally in consideration of their marriage,
whereby the property rights and interests of either
the prospective husband or wife, or both of them,
are determined, or where property is secured to
either or both of them or to their children.
appreciated
property - assets which have increased
in value during the time a person has owned them.
assessed
valuation - the value placed upon land
for purpose of taxation. This valuation does not
necessarily correspond to the market value.
attestation
clause - that clause in a Will in which
the witnesses certify that the Will has been signed
before them and describes how all parties signed
the Will.
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beneficiary
- a person named in a Will to receive something
from a deceased person's estate.
bequest
- a transfer of personal property by
Will. Distinguished from a devise which is a transfer
of real property by Will.
bond
- an insurance agreement under which one party
becomes surety to pay, within stated limits, the
financial loss caused to another by specified
acts of defaults of a third party. An interest
bearing security evidencing a long term debt,
issued by a government or corporation, and sometimes
secured by lien on property.
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capital
gain - a gain from the sale of an investment,
the increase in value of property over its original
acquisition price plus improvements and minus
depreciation.
charitable
annuity - a transfer of property to a
charitable institution, part of which is payment
for an annuity and the balance of which is a charitable
gift, also known as a gift annuity.
charitable
deduction - deduction allowed for gifts
made to charitable organizations.
charitable
remainder - the trust property given
to a charity upon the termination of the trust.
co-administrators
- two or more persons named in a Will to settle
an estate. A frequent arrangement is to name a
bank or Trust company, along with individual-such
as a spouse, lawyer or friend-to settle an estate.
codicil
- the only legal document which can change a Will.
It is a supplement to a Will, which adds, takes
from, or alters the Will's provisions. It must
be executed with the same formalities as a Will.
common
disaster - when two or more persons (usually
husband and wife) die as a result of the same
accident, or when the death of each follows within
a relatively short period of time.
common
disaster clause - a clause under the
Will which prescribes the order of death as between
two or more people who die at the same time.
common
trust fund - a group of securities managed
by the same trustee on behalf of a number of Trusts,
usually for the purpose of diversifying the investments
of a Trust.
community
property - in some states property which
is acquired by the efforts of either husband or
wife constitutes a common fund in which each has
an equal interest.
competency
- legally qualified, mentally and physically,
to execute a document, such as a Will.
conservator
- a person who is appointed by the court to protect
the interests of an incompetent person, such as
a minor, insane person, convict, or the like.
corporate
fiduciary - a bank or Trust company exercising
the powers of a fiduciary under statutory authorization.
corpus
(principal) - a capital fund from which
income is derived.
corpus
of the trust - property held by a trustee.
cost
basis - the acquisition price of a security
or property plus expenses for improvement and
less depreciation.
co-trustee
- a joint trustee to whom specific duties are
assigned. He is not to delegate such duties to
another person.
curtesy
- a husband's life estate in the property of his
deceased wife. By statute in most states, it is
a life estate in one-third of the land she owned
during their marriage. Curtesy has been abolished
by statute in most states (see life estate).
custodian
- a person who manages, invests and reinvests
a donor's gift to a minor without court approval.
The custodian is empowered to pay or apply income
and principal for the support, benefit, maintenance
and education of the minor. Unpaid and unapplied
income is accumulative.
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death
tax - tax levied by individual states
on property after the owner's death.
decedent
- a person who has died.
deduction
- a legislatively granted privilege to a taxpayer
to subtract from his or her income the value of
a gift, loss expense incurred, etc., for certain
events or transactions.
devise
- a gift of real property through a Will (see
property).
domicile
- a person's home or principle residence although
he may also have living quarters in another location.
donor
(settlor) - in estates or trusts, the
person who creates, grants or donates the Trust.
dower
- an estate for life to which a married woman
is entitled by law at the death of her husband.
In most states, it is a life estate of one-third
of the value of all land which the husband owned
during their marriage. Dower has been abolished
by statute in some states. The reason for requiring
a wife's joining in the deed of any land by her
husband is the release by her dower right.
durable
power of attorney - an instrument in
writing by which one person authorizes another
to act for him in specific actions described in
the instrument, with authority covering periods
of disability and incompetency.
E
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estate
- the property of a deceased person (see property
and administration).
estate
administration - the management of an
estate which includes paying all debts and claims,
satisfying specific legacies and then ascertaining
individual shares in whatever is left of the estate
and distributing those shares.
estate
plan - an arrangement for managing and
disposing of a person's property during his lifetime
and after his death. This can be accomplished
by a Will, one or more Trusts, gifts made during
life, or a combination of these.
estate
tax - a tax a deceased person's estate
pays on his or her property and interest in property.
exclusion,
annual - the continuing right of a donor
to make a tax-free gift of up to $10,000 to any
number or recipients in any year. This applies
only to gifts of present interest.
executor
- a person or agency named in a Will to administer
the estate of a deceased person (synonymous with
personal representative).
executrix
- a female executor.
exemption,
lifetime - the amount a donor is allowed
to give tax-free to other people during his or
her lifetime or at his or her death.
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fair
market value - the price at which property
would change hands between a willing buyer and
a willing seller, neither being under any compulsion
to buy or sell and both having reasonable knowledge
of relevant facts.
fiduciary
- a person charged with taking certain actions
on behalf of another person. In a Trust case,
the fiduciary is the trustee who manages the trust
property, distributes income and makes final disposition
of the trust property.
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general
power of appointment - a power given
by the owner of the property to another to dispose
of it to anyone, including himself, his estate,
his creditors, or the creditors of his estate.
gifts
- a voluntary transfer of property from one person
to another without money or other consideration.
There are four essential elements to a gift: (1)
the intention to give, (2) renunciation of the
right of ownership by the donor, without the power
to revoke it, (3) delivery of possession by the
donor to the recipient, and (4) the donor must
have mental capacity at the time he or she makes
the gift.
gift
annuity - a transfer of property to a
charitable institution, part of which is payment
for an annuity and the balance of which is a charitable
gift.
gift
tax (federal) - a tax paid by a donor
on the gift of property, securities, cash of other
value given to another person.
gift
tax marital deduction - a provision under
the Federal Gift Tax law which allows a gift of
an unlimited amount to pass gift tax free from
one spouse to another.
grantor
- a person who owns property placed in a trust,
a donor to a Trust.
gross
estate - all assets which a deceased
person owned at his death or made a transfer of
before death which the state tax laws required
to be included in the donor's taxable estate prior
to deductions and exemptions.
guardian
- a person who has the legal duty and power to
take care of the person and property of another
who because of some disability, usually age or
incompetence, is considered incapable of administering
his or her own affairs.
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heirs
and next of kin - individuals entitled
to the estate of a person who dies without leaving
a Will under the laws of descent and distribution.
holographic
will - one which is written entirely
in the maker's own handwriting, not attested by
subscribing witnesses.
I
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incident
of ownership - pertaining to ownership
of life insurance; the retention of an interest
by the deceased person of more than five percent
of the policy.
income
beneficiary - a beneficiary whose interest
is limited to income earned from assets in a Trust.
incompetent
- a person judicially declared to be incapable
of managing his affairs. May include a person,
who by reason of old age, disease, weakness of
mind or other cause, is unable, unassisted, to
properly manage his property.
inheritance
- the receiving of property from a deceased person's
estate, by right of succession rather than devise.
inheritance
tax - a tax levied on the right to receive
property from a deceased person. This tax should
be distinguished from the estate tax which is
a tax levied on the right to transmit property,
not on the right to receive it.
insurance
trust - a living Trust of which the property
is entirely or partially life insurance contracts
of proceeds.
intangible
property - that which does not have physical
substance.
in
terrorem clause - a provision incorporated
in some Wills whereby a person who contests the
Will shall forfeit his legacy.
inter
vivos - term used in law to describe
agreements implemented while living. An inter
vivos Trust indicates a transaction made by a
living person.
intestate
- death without leaving a valid Will.
invasion
of trust - a provision which permits
a beneficiary to withdraw a portion of the corpus
(principal) of a trust for the support and maintenance
of the beneficiary.
irrevocable
gifts - a transfer of property that cannot
be changed.
irrevocable
trust - a trust that is not subject to
amendment, change, modification, or revocation.
issue
- all persons who have descended from
a common ancestor. This may include adopted children,
according to intent.
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joint
and survivor - in life income gifts,
the ownership of income rights by two (or more)
people together for the period of their joint
lives and then the income owned by the survivor
during his life.
joint
tenancy - where two or more persons own
property, either real or personal, according to
a separate agreement entered into between or among
the parties, whereby the property does not pass
to heirs, cannot be disposed of by Will, but can
go only to a survivor (or survivors) of the tenancy.
joint
will - a single document which is executed
by husband and wife making it the Will of both.
It is probated after the death of each of them.
L
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legacy
(bequest) - a gift of personal property
by Will.
- demonstrative
- a gift of a definite amount to be paid from
a specific fund or source.
- general
- a definite amount paid from general assets.
- pecuniary
- a gift of money.
- specific
- a particular item.
letter
of administration - a certificate of
authority granted by a court having probated jurisdiction
to show that the authority of the office of duty
of an administrator has been given to the person
named in the letter.
life
estate - an estate or interest that someone
has in property which last only during his lifetime,
or the lifetime of some other person or persons.
The life tenant has no ownership or rights to
transfer the interests after the life estate runs
out.
life
income agreement - agreements which provide
income at regular intervals throughout the life
of the maker (see annuity trust, pooled income
fund, or unitrust).
living
trust - a Trust created and in effect
during the lifetime of the maker.
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martial
deduction - a provision under the Federal
Estate Tax law whereby a person's estate of an
unlimited amount may be left to his or her spouse,
exempt from estate tax.
minor
- an infant or person who is under that
age which is accorded full legal rights. The age
of majority varies from 18 to 21 and may vary
within a state, depending on the purpose.
mutual
wills (reciprocal) - two documents which
have exactly the same provisions but are executed
separately by husband and wife.
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nuncupative
will - one that is given orally, in the
presence of witnesses, usually during one's last
illness under circumstances which make it impossible
to prepare a written Will.
P
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per
capita distribution - distribution of
property among descendents as individuals and
not by right of representation.
per
stirpes distribution - where the children
of a deceased person receive only that share of
property which the parent would have received
if living.
personal
property - all movable property not fixed
to land. Includes money, stocks and bonds, and
other types of tangible assets of value.
personal
representative - a person or agency named
in a Will to administer the estate of a deceased
person (also known as an executor/executrix).
pooled
income fund - a transfer of property
to a charitable institution in exchange for a
contract stipulating that the donor will receive
the average earnings of the institution's investment
fund as applied to the amount of his gift each
year for the rest of his life and that the institution
will be the owner of the property with no obligations
after the donor's death.
pour-over
trust - a trust which receives property
through a Will.
power
of appointment - the right to designate
either by Will or by Deed, the persons who are
to receive certain property which came from the
estate of somebody else who has died. Usually
this power is vested in a person who receives
the income from the property for his or her lifetime.
pre-nuptial
agreement - a private agreement between
two persons contemplating marriage. It generally
settles, in advance, financial matters in the
event of death or divorce (see ante-nuptial agreement).
principal
- a capital fund from which income is derived (see corpus).
probate
- the action of proving before a competent judicial
authority that a document offered for official
recognition and registration as the Last Will
and Testament of a deceased person is genuine.
property
- anything which may be the subject of ownership,
real and personal, tangible and intangible. It
is that which belongs exclusively to a person,
with full rights to enjoy and dispose of it.
- real
property - any land or any estate
in land. It is generally construed to include
whatever is erected or growing upon the land.
It may be defined to include anything which
is immovable.
- personal
property - all property other
than real property. It generally refers to property
which is movable or personal.
prudent-man
rule - an obligation to make all investments
as a prudent man would make if it were his own
property, keeping primarily in mind the preservation
of the estate and the amount and regularity of
the income from the investments.
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qualified
terminable interest property - property
which passes to the surviving spouse who is entitled
to all the income during life but whose interest
terminates at death. This property qualifies for
the marital deduction and is taxable in the estate
of the surviving spouse. (see marital deduction).
quitclaim
- a Deed which transfers to another person whatever
interest the maker of the Deed may have in a particular
parcel of land.
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real
property - land and buildings permanently
affixed to land.
remainder
interest - an interest or estate in land
of a person other than the grantor in which the
right to possession and enjoyment of the land
is postponed until the termination of some other
interest or estate in that land.
remainderman
- the beneficiary who is to receive the property
upon the termination of the Trust.
residuum
(residuary estate) - that portion which
is left over after the payment of debts, expenses,
taxes and the distribution of all other legacies
and devises.
revocable
trust - one that may be rescinded by
the maker during his or her lifetime.
right
of elections - the right of a surviving
spouse (under applicable state laws) to elect
to take a share of the deceased person's estate
instead of what was left by Will.
rule
against perpetuities - the regulation
which prevents testators and donors from restricting
their gifts in order that the property may be
retained in the same ownership for a longer period
of time than is regarded as reasonable.
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settlor
of a trust - a person who creates a Trust
and furnishes the property subject to the trust
conditions.
statutes
- law enacted by the legislative branch of government.
successor
trustee - a trustee who follows the original
or prior trustee. Generally, the appointment of
a successor trustee is provided for in the Trust
instruments. If it isn't, and if the Trust is
still in existence when the original or prior
trustee failed to qualify or ceased to act, then
a person will be appointed by the court to act.
T
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tangible
property - that which has physical substance
which can be felt or seen.
taxable
estate - the gross estate minus allowable
exemptions and deductions. The amount on which
estate taxes are to be levied.
tax
credit - amounts which the taxpayer may
deduct from the tax itself.
tenancy
- the holding of or possession of real property.
- at
sufferance - an estate in land
whereby the tenant retains possession beyond
the duration of his rightful tenancy.
- by
the entirety - limited to property
procured by husband and wife jointly after marriage.
Upon the death of either husband or wife, the
survivor receives the property.
- in
common - an undivided estate,
owned by two more persons, the property passing
to the heirs rather than to the co-owners.
- joint
tenancy - property passes to the
co-owners, upon the death of a joint tenant,
not to the heirs as in tenancies in common.
testamentary
- created or ordered by a decedent's Will.
testate
- having created or executed a Will, effective
at one's death.
testator
- the one who makes a written Will.
trust
- a legal relationship when one party (the trustee)
holds legal title to property for the benefit
of another (the beneficiary). To create a valid
Trust, the grantor must transfer property (the
corpus or principal) to the trustee.
- charitable
- created for the benefit of a legal charitable
organization.
- corporate
-
created by a corporation for the purpose of
securing its own bonds, notes, etc.
- discretionary
- a provision which allows the trustee
to pay income and principal to a beneficiary,
as the Trust shall determine. Under this plan,
the beneficiary cannot assign his interest in
the Trust, nor can his creditors collect from
it until the beneficiary has actually received
the funds.
- inter
vivos (living) - created and in
effect during the lifetime of the creator.
- irrevocable
- not subject to amendment, change, modification
or revocation.
- pour-over
- existing separately and independently of the
Will, and designated to serve as a custodian
of the property which it receives from the Will.
- revocable
- may be changed or terminated by the maker.
- spendthrift
- a provision which protects the beneficiaries
against claims of creditors and prevents the
beneficiaries from selling, assigning or transferring
their interest in the Trust.
- sprinkling
- a provision whereby a group of persons may
be designated as beneficiaries.
- testamentary
- a Trust created by giving a definite
amount of money or other property through a
Will.
trustee
- a person holding a right or power and
propriety on behalf of another person (the beneficiary).
two-trust
will - the drafting of a Trust to give
the spouse income for life, then a "family Trust"
for the benefit of the children, thus saving estate
tax upon the spouse's death.
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undue
influence - a Will that is made under
pressure or coercion, thus making it invalid.
unitrust
- donor transfers cash or securities to a charitable
remainder Trust naming one or more charitable
organizations as the eventual beneficiary. This
qualifies for a charitable contribution deduction
and provides that income be paid to a beneficiary
at a fixed percentage of the fair market value
of the assets as determined annually.
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vested
- an immediate and fixed right to present or future
enjoyment of a property interest.
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wards
- persons for whom guardians are appointed, usually
minors or incompetent persons.
widow's
allowance - the amount allowed by court
order to be paid a deceased man's widow and family
from estate assets during administration.
will
- a legal declaration which makes provisions
for the distribution of property at death.
witness
- one who, being present, personally sees or perceives
a thing, a beholder, spectator. One who testifies
to what he or she has seen, heard or otherwise
observed or learned.
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