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New York Living Trust Can Provide Private Management Of Your Assets

What Can a Living Trust Do for Me?
A living trust can provide for the private management of your assets if you choose not to act as trustee, or when you are unable to do so, by the person or persons whom you appoint as trustee. When you are incapacitated, your trustee can assume responsibility for your assets in an accountable fashion, and manage them for your benefit without direct court intervention or supervision. At your death, the trustee acts much as an executor would, gathering your assets, paying valid debts and claims and taxes, and distributing your assets as you have directed in your living trust.

If you are acting as trustee of your own living trust and become incapacitated, whoever you have named as your successor trustee will assume the responsibility for managing your assets on your behalf. If your assets are not in your living trust, someone else must manage them. How this is accomplished may depend on whether the assets are your separate or community property. On the other hand, a married individual may own separate property as a result of assets owned prior to marriage or received by gift or inheritance during marriage.

Assets held in your living trust at your death can be managed by the trustee of your living trust and distributed in accordance with your directions in the trust. The trustee is also accountable to your beneficiaries for the trust assets held for their benefit after your death. The trust is not under the direct management of the probate court at and after your death and, therefore, the value and the nature of your assets and the identity of your beneficiaries do not become a public record. At your death, however notice must be given to all of your heirs and to all beneficiaries of your living trust, advising them, among other things, of their right to obtain a copy of the living trust.

 


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    DID YOU KNOW ?

    If I Give My Child A Durable Power Of Attorney, Do I Still Need A Will

    A durable power of attorney is a powerful and useful document for allowing someone, known as the attorney-in-fact, to handle your estate during your lifetime.

    The authority of the attorney-in-fact terminates upon your death, however. Therefore, your child would not be able to use the durable power of attorney as authority to distribute your estate.

    Will Other States Honor A Will Drafted In New York

    Generally speaking, a will that is validly executed in the state in which it was drafted will be considered valid by other states.

    Talk to our New York Wills Lawyers for these above topic details.

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