Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you have the actual trust document? If so, have you read it? It may answer many of your questions. As her successor trustee, I administered my aunt’s trust ($300,000) when she became unwell and I used it to pay her expenses while she was alive and the trust had explicit instructions for how to distribute assets when she died. I don’t see why you need a lawyer unless you can’t understand what the document says.
So, what does it say? There is a reason the bank sent it to you, and I don’t know what that reason is. They have no obligation to notify beneficiaries until the assets are going to be transferred. Then there is a requirement in most states to notify beneficiaries within 60 days that they are a names party to a trust.
Step 1: read the documents
Actually this is in Maryland and the bank told me according to Maryland law, the beneficiaries do now legally have to get annual statements of the trust. I do not have the actual trust document though. Just a bank statement of the various investments. I will ask the bank if they can send me the actual trust document then. I’m not sure if it will be permitted if in his name but I can try.
Anonymous wrote:Do you have the actual trust document? If so, have you read it? It may answer many of your questions. As her successor trustee, I administered my aunt’s trust ($300,000) when she became unwell and I used it to pay her expenses while she was alive and the trust had explicit instructions for how to distribute assets when she died. I don’t see why you need a lawyer unless you can’t understand what the document says.
So, what does it say? There is a reason the bank sent it to you, and I don’t know what that reason is. They have no obligation to notify beneficiaries until the assets are going to be transferred. Then there is a requirement in most states to notify beneficiaries within 60 days that they are a names party to a trust.
Step 1: read the documents
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would call him and say thank you and just check on him to see if he is ok or needs anything. Hopefully he didn’t do this because he is sick or something. Not sure what other people think
No, do t do this. It has nothing to do with him. Likely was set up by your grandparents. I have a trust like this. I not counting on the money, but I know that my aunt uses it and the women in my family live to be almost 100.
If you are in Va, make an appointment with Debby Cochran in Tyson’s. She’s great.
https://cochran.law/
Anonymous wrote:I would call him and say thank you and just check on him to see if he is ok or needs anything. Hopefully he didn’t do this because he is sick or something. Not sure what other people think
Anonymous wrote:I would call him and say thank you and just check on him to see if he is ok or needs anything. Hopefully he didn’t do this because he is sick or something. Not sure what other people think
Anonymous wrote:OK thank you ... I thought maybe I couldn't go to a lawyer if technically the trust isn't mine - it is his name and I am just the remainder beneficiary, correct?