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Where property is passed to a person but no gift is made, it is held for the owner, this is the Resulting trust; where property should for some reason of public policy or fairness or rule of Equity be held for someone other than the legal owner, this is either the Statutory trust or the Constructive trust; but where legal title to property is held by someone on trust, this is the Express trust.
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The terms of an Express trust can be simple and in certain jurisdictions may be established simply by expressing the relevant instructions orally. However where land is to be held on trust or significant amounts of property are involved, it would be more normal for the arrangements to be recorded in writing. Where legal title to property is being passed to trustees, a "Deed of Settlement" or "Trust Instrument" (for jurisdictions that do not recognise Deeds) may be used; where property is to continue to be held by the person making the trust a "Declaration of Trust" will be appropriate.
It would be normal practice to appoint a minimum of two trustees or a trust corporation to act as trustee so as to allow for the continuation of the normal running of the trust in the event of a trustee\'s resignation, death, bankruptcy or incapacity. Additionally a Protector may be appointed who may for example have the power to appoint new trustees and to review the trustees\' annual accounts.
For a trust to be effectively established under the common law, there must normally be certainty with regard to the nature and extent of the trust property, the persons to be included in the class of beneficiaries and the intention to create a trust. These certainties are watered down in modern American Pour-over wills (see below) but where they still apply, a written trust deed will provide the best evidence that a trust is intended and not another form of transaction such as a gift or grant of a power.
Variation of Trusts in English Law
The Variation of Trusts Act 1958 gave the courts the power to vary trusts in the following circumstances
· s1(1)(a) Any person having, directly or indirectly, an interest, whether vested or contingent, under the trusts who by reason of infancy or other incapacity is incapable of assenting; or
· s1(1)(b) Any person (whether ascertained or not) who may become entitled, directly or indirectly, to an interest under the trusts as being at a future date or on the happening of a future event a person of any specified description or a member of any specified class of persons, so however that this paragraph shall not include any person who would be of that description, or a member of that class, as the case may be, if the said date had fallen or the said event had happened at the date of the application to the court; or
· s1(1)(c) Any person unborn; or
· s1(1)(d) Any person in respect of any discretionary interest of his under protective trusts where the interest of the principal beneficiary has not failed or determined.
The court does not have the power to consent to the variation of a trust on behalf of an ascertained individual who is sui juris.(Someone above the age of consent and of sound mind)
Certain US jurisdictions and other jurisdictions have developed a radically different interpretation of the trust. Valid trusts can be established by persons who then continue to deal with property as if it were their own during their lifetime, the trust crystallising on death. Trust funds can be taxed as legal entitles by election ("checking the box").
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