| Important Terms
A Glossary of Terms Pertaining to Wills, Estates and Trusts
ADEMPTION – The extinction of a
devise or bequest made in a will because the asset involved was not found in the estate.
ADJUSTED GROSS INCOME – A taxpayer's gross
income minus certain statutorily prescribed "adjustments"to income.
ADMINISTRATION – The management of a decedent's estate.
ADMINISTRATION EXPENSES – Those
necessarily incurred in the administration of the estate, or
in the collection of assets, the payment of debts and the distribution
of property. Examples include commissions, attorney's fees, costs
of funeral and miscellaneous expenses.
ADMINISTRATOR – The person or bank
appointed by the Court as personal representative to manage and
distribute the personal property of one who dies without a will,
who may also handle real property which must be sold in order
to pay debts.
ADJUSTED GROSS ESTATE – A decedent's gross
estate, as determined for Federal estate tax purposes, minus
the total allowable debts, expenses and losses.
ADJUSTED TAXABLE GIFTS – The
sum of total post-1976 lifetime gifts made by a decedent in excess
of allowable annual exclusions, marital deductions and charitable deductions.
AFTER-BORN CHILDREN – Children born after
execution of the will. They generally take an intestate share
of the estate if not provided for or mentioned in the will.
ANNUAL EXCLUSION – The continuing right
of a donor to make a tax free gift up to $11,000 to each of any
number of donees in any year; applies only to gifts of present interest.
ANNUITY – A
promise, obligation or arrangement to pay certain amounts at
regular specified times. If a trust is involved, the payments
may be made from principal if income is insufficient.
ATTESTING WITNESS – One who witnesses a will.
BARGAIN SALE – Sale of property to
charity at less than its market value. Also called donative sale.
BENEFICIARY – One named in a will
to receive a devise or a legacy or the use of estate assets.
BEQUEST – A
direction in a will to pay over or distribute personal property.
It is also called a legacy.
COMMON DISASTER – The death of two or
more persons at the same time and from the same cause, as in
the case of an auto accident.
COMMUNITY PROPERTY – A system prevailing
in some states whereby whatever is acquired by the efforts of
either the husband or wife constitutes common property in which
each have an equal interest.
CORPUS – The
principal fund, or capital, upon which income is earned. It is
also called principal.
DESCENT AND DISTRIBUTION – The
distribution of property to heirs and next of kin as directed
by state laws in the absence of a valid disposition by will.
DEVISE – A
disposition of real property by will.
DOMICILE – The
place where a person has his home, or principal residence, as
distinguished from places where he may have living quarters.
ESTATE TAX CREDIT – Credit allowable against
tentative tax due on estates of decedents sheltering $1.5 million in 2004-05.
EXECUTOR – The
trust company or individual appointed to carry out the terms of the will; also referred to as personal representative.
FEDERAL ESTATE TAX – A tax on the net value
of property subject to tax (the taxable estate plus the sum of
adjusted table gifts) at the death of a decedent. It is based essentially on the right to transfer or transmit.
FEDERAL GIFT TAX – A tax on the donor
of inter vivos gifts (those made during life), based on the right
to transfer or transmit, and payable primarily by the donor.
GIFT IN KIND – Gift of property other
than cash; i.e, livestock, crops.
GIFT TAX CREDIT – Credit allowable against
taxable gifts that exempts up to $1 million from gift tax.
GROSS ESTATE – Includes everything
in which the decedent owned an interest at his death. It embraces
such terms as life insurance, full or partial interests in joint
property and some transfers made within three (3) years of death.
GUARDIAN – One
named to manage the person or the property, or both, of a child during minority.
HEIRS AND NEXT OF KIN – Those entitled under
the laws of descent and distribution to the estate of a person dying with a valid will.
INHERITANCE TAX – A state tax on the
value of the share passing to the particular heir, devisee or
legatee and based essentially on the right to receive. There
is no such tax in Florida and most other states.
INSURANCE TRUST – A trust consisting of life insurance policies or proceeds.
FUNDED INSURANCE TRUST – A trust
to which other property is also transferred, with the income to be used for the payment of premiums.
UNFUNDED INSURANCE TRUST – A trust
which contains no fund for payment of premiums.
IN TERROREM CLAUSE – A testamentary provision
for forfeiture of a bequest or devise if the will is contested.
INTANGIBLE PROPERTY – That which cannot be
touched, seen, heard, tasted or felt, such as the right to sue
on a note or bond.
INTESTATE – Death without a valid will.
ISSUE – Children,
grandchildren and others directly descending from a common ancestor.
An adopted child is not issue, technically speaking.
LEGACY – A disposition in a will of personal property.
DEMONSTRATIVE – A legacy payable primarily
of a specific fund, but chargeable against the general estate
if the primary source or payment is inadequate.
GENERAL – A
pecuniary legacy payable out of the general estate.
SPECIFIC – A
legacy of a particular article or specified part of the estate.
LETTERS OF ADMINISTRATION – Documents
issued as proof of authority of trust company or individual to act as administrator.
LETTERS TESTAMENTARY – Documents issued as
proof of authority of trust company or individual to act as executor
or personal representative.
LIFE ESTATE – An interest in property for life.
LIFE INCOME AGREEMENT – A gift of a principal
sum or property or securities with a stipulated life income paid
to the donor, through a gift annuity program or pooled income
fund of the issuing institution.
LIFE INCOME TRUST – A plan whereby gift
property is placed in trust for the lifetime benefit of an income
beneficiary with remainder to another beneficiary.
MARITAL DEDUCTION, ESTATE TAX – A deduction
for Federal estate tax purposes from the gross estate of property
passing to a surviving spouse in a manner conforming to the law.
MARITAL DEDUCTION, GIFT
TAX – Unlimited deduction allowed for the lifetime gift to the spouse.
PERPETUITIES, RULE AGAINST – A rule
against the tying up of property, as by prohibiting its alienation
(or in trust) for longer than a given time, usually lives in
being plus 21 years. This rule generally does not apply to gifts
in trust for the sole benefit of charities.
PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE – The
executor or administrator of an estate.
POWER OF APPOINTMENT – The right to direct
the disposition of property one does not own, such as the right
of a trust income beneficiary to designate the person to receive
the trust principal upon his death.
GENERAL POWER – A power exercisable
in favor of the holder of the power, of his estate or of his
creditors or the creditors of his estate.
LIMITED OR NON-GENERAL
POWER – A power
not exercisable in favor of the holder of the power or his estate,
or his creditors, or the creditors of his estate.
PRECATORY PROVISION – A desire or request,
stated in the will, that something be done by a legatee with
his legacy. Such a provision is not legally binding.
REMAINDER – What remains in a trust
after life interests have ended.
REMAINDERMAN – The one entitled to
receive the principal upon termination of the trust. A remainder
is vested when payable to a designated beneficiary or class of
beneficiaries whether or not living at the termination of the
trust. It is contingent when dependent on some occurrence or
event to take place in the future.
RESIDUARY CLAUSE – A testamentary provision
disposing of property remaining in the estate after all other
legacies and devises.
RESIDUARY ESTATE – What remains after
all devises and bequests have been distributed or paid, and debts
and expenses have been paid.
TAXABLE ESTATE – The gross estate less allowable deductions.
TENANCY – An interest in lands.
TENANCY BY ENTIRETIES – The owning of lands
by husband and wife, with the survivior taking all, and with
interest generally non-separable during life of both.
TENANCY IN COMMON – The owning of lands
by several persons, with the share of the one dying passing under
his will or under the intestacy laws to his heirs, and not to the survivors.
TENTATIVE TAX (ESTATE) – The
Federal estate tax tentatively due on the sum of a decedent's
"taxable estate" and "adjusted taxable gifts"
and calculated under the estate tax rate table. Such tax is before
gift tax credit and credit for estate tax on prior transfers,
and credit for foreign death taxes.
TENTATIVE TAX (GIFT) – The Federal gift tax
tentatively due on lifetime-gifts made by a donor in any calendar
year, as calculated under the gift tax rate table. Such tax is
before allowance of available unified credit.
TESTAMENTARY CAPACITY – The legal and mental
ability to make a will.
TESTATE – Dying
with a valid will.
TESTATOR – The person who makes a will.
TRANSFERS DURING LIFE – This general term refers
to a variety of lifetime transfers of property or property interests
which are ineffective for Federal estate tax purposes though
valid in other respects. Examples include a transfer with income
or possession retained, and certain transfers made within three
years of death. In such cases the transferred property is included
in the gross estate of the transferor.
TRUST – An
arrangement whereby property is held by a trust company or individual
for the benefit of others.
IRREVOCABLE – A trust which cannot be ended by the person creating it.
INTER VIVOS, OR LIVING
TRUST – A trust
set up and becoming effective during the lifetime of the person creating it.
REVOCABLE TRUST – A trust which may be
ended by the person creating it.
SPENDTHRIFT TRUST – A trust protecting
the beneficiary from creditors or his own improvidence.
TESTAMENTARY TRUST – A trust created by will.
TRUSTEE – The
one holding trust property for the benefits of others.
WILL – An
instrument disposing of property at death. |