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Glossary

Glossary of Estate Planning Terms

A-B Trusts:
The two “sub-trusts” created when a married person dies, one of which - the “A” Trust - will be maintained for the benefit of the surviving spouse - and the other of which - the “B” Trust - will contain assets of a value equal to the deceased spouse’s remaining estate tax exclusion amount. The B-Trust, sometimes referred to as the “By-Pass Trust” or the “Credit Shelter Trust”, will also be held for the benefit of the surviving spouse during his or her lifetime, but upon the death of the surviving spouse, will pass to the children (or other beneficiaries) without any additional estate tax, irrespective of the value of the B-Trust at that point.

Administrator:
The one appointed by the Probate Court to manage the probate estate where no executor has been designated, or where the designated executor is unable or unwilling to serve.

Advance Medical Directive:
The legal instrument in which a person nominates another to make medical decisions when one is unable to do so, and also expresses the person’s wishes as to the extent of “extraordinary” medical care desired in case of imminent death from an irreversible condition, or in the case of a persistent vegetative state. The Advance Medical Directive includes both a “living will” and a “durable power of attorney for health care decisions.”

Attorney-In-Fact:
The person appointed under a Power of Attorney to conduct the affairs and deal with the property of another. The attorney-in-fact need not be a lawyer; any competent adult may serve. Under many recent state statutes, the term “Attorney-In-Fact” has been replaced by the term “Agent” under the Uniform Powers of Attorney Act.

Beneficiary:
The person named in a Will or Trust to receive property from the maker of the Will or Trust. The beneficiary has “equitable title” to the Trust property.

By-Pass Trust:
The Trust created to hold assets of a value equal to the decedent’s estate tax exclusion amount on such terms that those assets will “by-pass” further estate taxes when the initial beneficiary of the Trust dies. (Same as “Credit Shelter Trust” and “B-Trust.”)

Capacity:
The legal competence to effectively perform a given act (e.g. to write a Will or Trust, to enter into a binding contract).

Conservatorship:
Probate proceeding initiated to supervise management of the property of an incapacitated or incompetent person(Also see Guardianship below)

Credit Shelter Trust:
Synonym for “By-Pass Trust.” (See above.)

Crummey Trust:
An irrevocable Trust established to qualify contributions for the annual federal gift tax exclusion (currently $15,000) for gifts of a present interest. So-called because the Trust contains “Crummey Powers,” enabling a beneficiary to withdraw assets contributed to the Trust for a limited period of time.

D.C. Estate Tax:
The District of Columbia imposes an estate tax similar in most respects to the Federal Estate tax, except that the D.C. exemption is currently $4,254,800 (2022). The D.C. law does not provide “portability” of the exemptions between spouses.

Decedent:
Person who has died.

Designated Beneficiary:
An individual beneficiary of a retirement account (IRA, 401(k), 403(b), etc.) who qualifies as a person whose life expectancy may be used for determining required minimum annual distributions. The term “designated beneficiary” is a term of art under the I.R.S. regulations, one of which requires that to qualify as such the beneficiary must be an individual with an ascertainable life expectancy. Thus, for example, a charitable organization cannot qualify as a “designated beneficiary.”

Disclaimer:
Election by donee of gift or beneficiary of bequest to decline acceptance. To be a “qualified disclaimer” for transfer tax purposes, a disclaimer must be exercised within nine months of death or gift, and must comply with other Internal Revenue Code requirements.

Disclaimer Trust:
A trust (set of instructions) established to receive, then manage and distribute, assets that would otherwise have been distributed to a prior beneficiary had that prior beneficiary not declined to accept (disclaimed) such assets.

Equitable Title:
Beneficial ownership of an asset; the right to use, spend, consume and/or enjoy an asset or its income.

Estate Planning:
The process of arranging one’s property and affairs so as to insure their current management and ultimate disposition in the most efficient, effective, economical, and private manner, taking into consideration the effect of state and federal tax and administrative laws and regulations.

Estate Tax:
Tax imposed by U.S. government and some states (including Maryland and D.C.) on the transfer of property from a decedent to his or her heirs or beneficiaries. The estate tax is levied on and measured by the size of the decedent’s estate, rather than on the amount received by any particular beneficiary. The current federal estate tax rate is 40%. (see also D.C. and Maryland Estate Tax)

Exclusion Amount:
The new term -“applicable exclusion amount”- used by the Internal Revenue Code to identify the value of assets owned by a decedent effectively exempt from the federal estate tax. For deaths occurring in 2022, the exclusion amount is $12,060,000, expected to be $12,960,000 for 2023. In subsequent years, that amount will be indexed for inflation, using 2011 as the base year.

Exemption Equivalent:
Old term for applicable exclusion amount. (See above.)

Executor (male)/Executrix (female):
The one nominated in a Will and thereafter appointed by the Probate Court to manage and distribute a decedent’s estate in accordance with the terms of the Will. May also be referred to as the Personal Representative.

Family Trust:
A Trust established to benefit one’s spouse, children and/or other family members. Often used in reference to the By-Pass Trust discussed above.

Fiduciary Responsibility:
A serious responsibility of trust imposed upon one by the law, requiring the utmost degree of integrity and prudence in dealing with the property entrusted to the fiduciary (e.g. Trustee, Administrator, Executor, Guardian, Conservator, Agent).

Fractional Interest:
The less than 100% share of ownership held by a co-owner of an asset.

Funding a Trust:
Re-registering legal title to one’s assets in the name of the Trustee of the Trust.

Generation Skipping Transfer (GST) Tax:
A federal tax imposed on certain transfers, either by gift or at death, between a donor/decedent and a person more than one generation removed (e.g., a grandchild). The current GST tax rate is 40% and each citizen and/or resident of the U.S. has an $12,060,000 exclusion from the tax in 2022.

Gift Tax:
Federal tax on completed gifts from one person to another. There is currently an annual exclusion of $16,000 applying to each gift of a present interest from a donor to each donee. Each U.S. citizen and/or resident also has an $12,060,000 (in 2022, expected to be 12,960,000 for 2023, indexed for inflation thereafter) lifetime Gift Tax Exclusion under current law. Neither Virginia, Maryland nor D.C. currently impose a Gift Tax.

Gift Trust:
An Irrevocable Trust established to act as the repository of gifts to its beneficiaries, drafted such that the gifts to the Trust will be excluded from the donor’s taxable estate at death. (See “Crummey Trust”.)

Grantor:
The person who establishes a Trust. Also referred to as the “Trustor”, and sometimes referred to as the “Settlor” or the “Trustmaker” of the Trust.

Gross Estate:
The total value, for estate tax purposes, of everything in which one has an ownership interest at the time of death.

Guardianship:
Court proceeding initiated to supervise management of the personal affairs (e.g. living accommodations, nursing home selection) of a minor or an incapacitated person. In some states the term “guardianship” also refers to the procedure used to manage property and legal affairs of such a person. (Referred to in some states, e.g. Virginia, as a “Conservatorship.”)

Heir:
The person entitled to distribution of an asset or property interest under applicable state law, in the absence of a Will or Trust. (Note that “heir” and “beneficiary” are not synonymous, though they may refer to the same individual in a particular case.) Your heirs are the ones who will inherit your property if you die with no valid Will or Trust in effect.

Inheritance Tax:
Tax imposed by some states on the amount received by a particular heir or beneficiary. Maryland has an inheritance tax; Virginia and the District of Columbia do not. The term is not synonymous with the term “Estate Tax,” although they are frequently, incorrectly, used interchangeably.

Insurance Trust:
An irrevocable Trust established to own life insurance on a person, so designed as to exclude the proceeds of the policy - the death benefit - from the insured person’s taxable estate at death.

Intestate/Intestacy:
Dying without leaving a valid Will or Trust in effect, such that the decedent’s estate is distributed in accordance with state law. (See “Heir” above.)

IRA:
Individual Retirement Account (see “Retirement Accounts).

Irrevocable Trust:
A Trust that cannot be revoked, modified or amended (except to a very limited extent) once it has been established. Irrevocable Trusts are often used in tax planning to get property “out” of a person’s taxable estate so that it will not be subject to estate tax upon his or her death.

Joint Ownership:
Any arrangement through which legal title to an asset is shared by more than one owner. (See “Joint Tenancy”, “Tenancy-by-the-Entirety”, “Tenancy-in-Common”.)

Joint Tenancy (with right of survivorship):
A form of joint ownership of property that carries an automatic right of survivorship, such that legal title to the interest of a deceased joint owner automatically vests in the surviving joint tenant(s) by operation of law upon the death of one joint tenant. (Contrast with “Tenants-in-Common”.)

Legal Title:
“Registered ownership” of an asset. Refers to the person(s) whose name is on the deed, signature card, registration certificate, etc.

Living Will:
The instrument used to express one’s wishes for treatment in the event of irreversible terminal condition or persistent vegetative state. Now often replaced by Advance Medical Directive. (See above.)

Marital Deduction:
The deduction against gross estate value accorded by the Internal Revenue Code or individual state law for transfers by gift or upon death to one’s spouse. Under current law the marital deduction is unlimited, e.g. there is no estate or gift tax on qualifying transfers of any amount to a U.S. citizen spouse. (See QDOT below with respect to non-U.S. citizen spouses.) The marital deduction is also available under Maryland and D.C. estate tax law.

Marital Trust:
Trust established to hold the surviving spouse’s share of property upon the death of first spouse to die (see “A-B Trust” above). Distributions to this Trust by a deceased spouse qualify for the marital deduction. (See above.) In the A-B Trust configuration, the A Trust will be the Marital Trust.

Maryland Estate Tax:
Maryland imposes an estate tax similar in most respects to the Federal Estate tax, except that the Maryland exemption is currently $5,000,000. The Maryland law does currently provide “portability” (see below) of the exemptions between spouses, based on the Maryland exemption.

Payable-on-Death Account (POD):
A bank account titled in the name of the original owner, but directing distribution to a named beneficiary upon the owner’s death. POD accounts avoid probate administration, but POD accounts do nothing to protect the inheritance in the hands of the beneficiary.

Personal Representative:
An executor or administrator (see above). In Maryland both executors and administrators are referred to as the Personal Representative (often abbreviated “P.R.”).

Portability:
The federal estate and federal gift tax law provides that a surviving spouse may use the unused portion of the pre-deceased spouse’s estate or gift tax exclusion, provided the surviving spouse complies with certain technical requirements of the law, including filing a federal estate tax return for the deceased spouse’s estate even though such a return is not required by law.

Pour-Over Will:
A Will used in conjunction with a Revocable Living Trust to dispose of any property owned by the decedent at time of death which was not transferred to the Trust during the Trustor’s lifetime. The Pour-Over Will also revokes all prior Wills, but unlike traditional Wills it does not contain detailed dispositive provisions; rather it directs distribution of all individually owned property of the Testator to the Trustee of his/her Trust. The Trust instrument contains detailed instructions relating to the distribution of the property. Like all Wills, a Pour-Over Will is subject to probate administration.

Power-of-Attorney:
A legal instrument whereby one appoints and empowers another person as agent to deal with one’s property and affairs. (See Attorney-in-Fact above.) A General Power of Attorney is one which gives the Attorney-in-Fact broad, plenary powers; a Special Power-of-Attorney limits the Attorney-in-Fact’s authority to a particular property or transaction. A Durable Power-of-Attorney is one which remains effective even after the maker becomes incapacitated. Most comprehensive estate plans include a General Durable Power-of-Attorney.

Present Interest:
To be eligible for the annual $15,000 exclusion from the Federal Gift Tax, the gift must be of a “present interest”. In other words, the gift must belong to the donee with “no strings attached.” (However, see “Crummey Trust” above.)

Probate:
The process, usually administered by a probate court or an official subject to the court’s authority, established in all fifty states to supervise the transfer of legal title to property from a decedent to his/her heirs or beneficiaries.

Procrastination:
“Putting off doing something until later.” [Webster definition] The most common reason people neglect to establish a basic estate plan while alive, often resulting in unnecessary expense, delay, taxes and family friction after death of procrastinator.

Qualified Domestic Trust (QDOT):
A marital Trust used for the benefit of a non-U.S. citizen spouse containing special provisions specified by the Internal Revenue Code such that transfers to the QDOT qualify for a limited federal estate tax marital deduction, until they are actually withdrawn from the Trust.

Qualified Personal Residence Trust (QPRT):
An Irrevocable Trust established to hold title to residential property. The owner transfers ownership of the house to the Trust, retaining the right to reside in the home rent-free for a period of years. Used to reduce the transfer tax cost of leaving a residence to one’s beneficiaries.

Qualified Terminable Interest Trust (Q-TIP):
A Trust established for the benefit of a surviving spouse, qualifying for the estate tax marital deduction, but distributing any remaining balance at the survivor’s death to beneficiaries chosen by the deceased spouse-Trustor. Often used in second marriage situations to assure benefits for children of prior marriages.

Reservoir Trust®:
A Trust drafted by The Collins Firm as part of your Revocable Living Trust document to provide financial support for its beneficiaries, while affording “spendthrift” protection from creditors, lawsuits, ex-spouses or other adversaries, all the while acting as a “generation skipping” arrangement to eliminate death taxes in your own children’s (or other beneficiaries’) estates.

Retirement Accounts:
Any of the various accounts, funds or plans established to provide retirement benefits for an individual, created pursuant to federal law and regulations and providing for tax-deferred accumulation during the life of the account, including IRAs, 401(k)s, TSPs, 403(b)s, Pension and Profit Sharing Plans, etc. These accounts, with the exception of “Roth IRA’s,” are subject to income tax upon withdrawal. They (including Roth IRA’s) are also includable in the gross estate of the owner for Estate Tax purposes. (See “Secure Act” below)

Revocable Living Trust:
A Trust established by an individual, or a married couple, that becomes effective immediately upon establishment while the Trustor is still alive (thus “Living”), remains revocable and amendable during the lifetime of the Trustor (thus “Revocable”), and is used to (1) avoid probate; (2) facilitate some tax planning; (3) provide for management during periods of incapacity without need for guardianship or conservatorship; (4) address family circumstances; and (5) provide for ultimate distribution of the estate. The Trust is a comprehensive set of instructions for the management and ultimate distribution of the property, accounts and other assets you own. A REVOCABLE LIVING TRUST IS NOT, HOWEVER, AN ASSET PROTECTION DEVICE THAT PROTECTS IT’S TRUSTOR(S) FROM THEIR OWN CREDITORS, LAWSUITS, ETC.

Roth IRA:
A special form of IRA for which the owner receives no income tax deduction for contributions, but the account does accumulate tax-deferred. Most significantly, withdrawals from the Roth IRA are not subject to income taxation.

Secure Act:
A federal law effective January 1, 2020 which materially alters the required distribution of funds from an IRA, 401(K) and other such accounts for many beneficiaries. The act limits the ability of many (though, not all) beneficiaries to “stretch out” required minimum distributions over such beneficiary’s remaining lifetime. Not all beneficiaries are affected, and the period within which final distribution of invested retirement accounts is affected by several factors. The full impact of this new law is too complicated to fully explicate in this brief summary. It is very important for each owner of a retirement account to discuss the Secure Act implications of its terms on the owner’s accounts when selecting beneficiaries, because the owner’s choice of options will depend on the identity of beneficiaries chosen, their personal circumstances, as well as the owner’s own goals.

Settlor:
Trustor; Grantor; Trustmaker. Alternate terms for one who establishes a Trust.

Spousal Option Trust:
A Disclaimer Trust established to receive assets distributable to a surviving spouse but disclaimed by such spouse. Often used in estate plan of married couple where need for “by-pass trust” distributions cannot be determined until death of first spouse to die.

Successor Trustee/Substitute Trustee:
The Trustee who “takes over” to manage a Trust upon the death, disability or resignation of the original Trustee or a prior Trustee.

Supplemental Needs Trust/Special Needs Trust:
A Trust established for a disabled person to provide supplemental support without disqualifying the beneficiary from eligibility for governmental assistance programs.

Tangible Personal Property:
Personal property which ordinarily has no registered ownership attached to it, e.g. furniture, clothing, jewelry, antiques, collections, etc., but not vehicles, cash or other financial assets.

Tenancy-by-the-Entirety:
A form of co-ownership of property available only to married couples, very similar to Joint Tenancy With Right of Survivorship in that legal title to the property automatically vests in the surviving spouse Tenant-by-the-Entirety. T-by-E ownership provides some creditor protection in some states.

Tenancy-in-Common:
A form of co-ownership in which a deceased tenant’s share passes to his/her heirs or beneficiaries through his/her estate under the terms of a Will, or in accordance with the laws of intestate succession in the absence of a Will. (Contrast with Joint Tenancy.)

Testamentary Trust:
A Trust established in a person’s Will. A Testamentary Trust only comes into operation after the Will has been probated and the assets have been distributed in accordance with the probate court order. In many states, Testamentary Trusts remain subject to the jurisdiction of the probate court.

Testator (male)/Testatrix (female):
Person who makes a Will.

Transfer-on-Death Account (TOD):
An account similar to a POD account (see above) holding securities, e.g., stocks, bonds, mutual funds, brokerage accounts. Like POD accounts, TOD accounts avoid probate, but like POD accounts do nothing to protect the inheritance in the hands of the beneficiary.

Transfer Tax:
A tax levied when ownership of an asset is given, bequeathed or transferred to another. Includes the Estate Tax (federal and state), Inheritance Tax, Gift Tax and Generation Skipping Transfer Tax.

Trust:
A legal arrangement in which “legal title” (registered ownership) to assets is transferred to a “Trustee”, who thereafter has a fiduciary duty to manage and distribute the Trust assets for the benefit of the beneficiaries of the Trust, all in accordance with the instructions contained in the Trust document (“Declaration of Trust”). The beneficiaries hold “equitable title” (right to use and enjoy) to those assets. Trusts of various types are frequently used in estate planning to achieve tax, financial, and personal objectives. It is helpful to remember that every Trust is simply a set of your instructions.

Trustee:
One who holds legal title to Trust assets, managing and distributing those assets in accordance with the terms and conditions specified in the Declaration of Trust. A Trustee may be an individual or a bank or trust company licensed to serve as a Trustee. A Trust may have one or more Trustees (Co-Trustees) who act together.

Trustor:
One who establishes a Trust. The terms “Grantor”, “Settlor” and “Trustmaker” are synonyms for “Trustor.”

Trust Estate (Trust Property):
The assets transferred to the Trustee by re-registering their legal titles in the name of the Trustee. The Trust Estate can include real estate, bank accounts, stocks, bonds, brokerage accounts, partnership interests, tangible personal property, and many other types of financial and legal interests.

Will:
The legal instrument traditionally used to direct disposition of one’s property after death.

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