The Authors

The Firm

  • Locations

    Downey Office
    10841 Paramount Blvd.
    3rd Floor
    Downey, CA 90241

    Phone: (562) 923-0971
    FAX: (562) 869-4607

    Irvine Office
    1920 Main Street
    Suite 1000
    Irvine, CA 92641

    Phone: (949) 756-0684
    FAX: (949) 756-0596

    Long Beach Office
    100 West Broadway
    Suite 6030
    Long Beach, CA 90802

    Phone: (562) 901-3050
    FAX: (562) 901-3051

    Tredway, Lumsdaine & Doyle was established in the city of Downey in 1961. The firm expanded with the opening of its Irvine office in 1989, and its Long Beach office in 2001. From our centrally located offices in Los Angeles and Orange County, the firm services clients throughout Southern California.

    Consumer Practice Group
    • Estate Planning and Probate
    • Family Law
    • Personal Injury Law
    • Civil Litigation Law
    Business Practice Group
    • Business Litigation
    • Corporate and Business Law
    • Employment Law
    • Financial Institutions
    • Intellectual Property
    • Real Estate and Land Use Law

Disclaimer

  • The information in this blog is not legal advice, and your use of it does not create an attorney-client relationship. Any liability that might arise from your use or reliance on this blog or any links from this blog is expressly disclaimed. This blog is not legal advice, is not to be acted on as such, may not be current and is subject to change without notice.

« No, No... Retirement Accounts Do Not Belong Your Living Trust. | Main | Monical Goel to Present on Estate Planning Issues in December »

November 02, 2007

Final Dispositions Cause Trust Litigation More Than The Boilerplate Language.

Trusts are not protected from litigation. Really, anyone can sue anyone for anything (just about). Sometimes you need an attorney to defend you from a lawsuit that should not have been filed. What does this mean about Living Trusts? And where am I going with this post?

Our firm handles many trust litigation matters.  We often represent the trustee of a trust that has been sued by a disgruntled heir.

People seem to think that the terms of the trust is what has caused the lawsuit. For example, the inclusion of a certain probate code language or some other boilerplate language some how makes it more prone to an attack.

Sadly, this is not the case. People attack Living Trusts because they have either been omitted or feel slighted in how you want to handle the final disposition of your assets. Think they should have gotten more.

You have more control than you think over whether a lawsuit happens after you die if you create a Living Trust to dispose of your assets.

Some things you could do to make your Living Trust more susceptible to a lawsuit (these are things not to do or if you are going to do -- think carefully and discuss with your attorney at length):

1. Disinherit a child outright
2. Draft your Living Trust shortly before you die
3. Draft your Living Trust at the insistence of a family member who gets more than the others
4. Favor one child over another
5. Name your children to act as co-trustees and if they don't agree... they go to court
6. Execute your Living Trust while incapacitated
7. Favoring a new spouse over your children from a former relationship
8. Not giving anything to your children, but all to a charitable organization or church
9. Omitting your spouse when you are not separated or divorcing (there are state specific laws on drafting estate planning documents while divorcing)
10. Giving it all to your dog instead

I think you get the idea. It's generally not the terms of the Living Trust that causes lawsuits -- it is the parts that are drafted in accordance to your wishes that are more subject to an attack than anything.

This doesn't mean don't draft a Living Trust. Rather it means consult with your attorney, cover your bases and protect yourself. Your attorney may have good ideas of preserving your wishes and protecting your estate from an attack after you die.

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/t/trackback/1103907/23005862

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Final Dispositions Cause Trust Litigation More Than The Boilerplate Language.:

Comments

Post a comment

If you have a TypeKey or TypePad account, please Sign In