Misplaced Pages

Pour-over will

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Pour over will) Will that creates a trust and orders the estate distributed to the trustee
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Pour-over will" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (October 2021) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Wills, trusts
and estates
Part of the common law series
Wills

Sections


Contest


Property disposition

Trusts

Common types


Other types

  • Life interest
  • Reversionary interest

Governing doctrines

Estate administration
Related topics
Other common law areas

A pour-over will is a testamentary device wherein the writer of a will creates a trust, and decrees in the will that the property in his or her estate at the time of his or her death shall be distributed to the Trustee of the trust. Such device was always void at English common law, because it was not deemed a binding trust, in that the testator can change the disposition of the trust at any time and therefore essentially execute changes to the will without meeting the formalities required for the change.

More recently, a number of jurisdictions have recognized the validity of a pour-over will. In the jurisdictions in the U.S. which allow a pour-over will, testators do not usually put all of their assets into trusts for the reasons of liquidity, convenience, or simply because they did not get around to doing so before they died.

A pour-over clause in a will gives probate property to a trustee of the testator's separate trust and must be validated either under incorporation by reference by identifying the previously existing trust which the property will be poured into, or under the doctrine of acts of independent significance by referring to some act that has significance apart from disposing of probate assets, namely, the revocable living trust (inter vivos trust). The testator's property is subject to probate until such time as the pour-over clause is applied, and the estate assets "pour" into the trust. The trust instrument must be either in existence at the time when the will with the pour-over clause is executed, or executed concurrently with the will to be a valid pour-over gift. However, the trust need not be funded inter vivos. The pour-over clause protects property not previously placed in a trust by pouring it into the previously established trust through the vehicle of the will.

References

  1. Larson, Aaron (2021). Wills & Trusts Kit for Dummies (2 ed.). Hoboken, New Jersey: John Wiliey & Sons. pp. 115–116. ISBN 978111983218-8.
  2. Stacey, A; Hastings, N (May 2016). "Pour-Over Wills in Canada". Estates, Trusts & Pensions Journal. 35 (3).
  3. Marcus, Robert S. (1965). "Pour-over Provisions and Estate Planning". Dickinson Law Review. 70: 158.
Category: