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Pro And Con (Law): Considering The Irrevocable Nongrantor Trust Technique, Alyssa A. Dirusso Nov 2014

Pro And Con (Law): Considering The Irrevocable Nongrantor Trust Technique, Alyssa A. Dirusso

Vanderbilt Law Review

Commentary on Jeffrey Schoenblum, Strange Bedfellows: The Federal Constitution, Out-of-State Nongrantor Accumulation Trusts, and the Complete Avoidance of State Income Taxation'


Strange Bedfellows: The Federal Constitution, Out-Of-State Nongrantor Accumulation Trusts, And The Complete Avoidance Of State Income Taxation, Jeffrey Schoenblum Nov 2014

Strange Bedfellows: The Federal Constitution, Out-Of-State Nongrantor Accumulation Trusts, And The Complete Avoidance Of State Income Taxation, Jeffrey Schoenblum

Vanderbilt Law Review

With the maximum rate of federal income tax at 39.6 percent, the Medicare surtax on investment income of 3.8 percent, and some state income tax rates exceeding 9 percent, taxpayers in the highest brackets have been seeking to develop strategies to lessen the tax burden. One strategy that has been receiving increased attention is the use of a highly specialized trust known as the NING, a Nevada incomplete gift nongrantor trust, which eliminates state income taxation of investment income altogether without generating additional federal income or transfer taxes. A major obstacle standing in the way of accomplishing this objective, however, …


Strange Bedfellows, Jeffrey Schoenblum Jan 2014

Strange Bedfellows, Jeffrey Schoenblum

Vanderbilt Law School Faculty Publications

With the maximum rate of federal income tax at 39.6 percent, the Medicare surtax on investment income of 3.8 percent, and some state income tax rates exceeding 9 percent, taxpayers in the highest brackets have been seeking to develop strategies to lessen the tax burden. One strategy that has been receiving increased attention is the use of a highly specialized trust known as the NING, a Nevada incomplete gift nongrantor trust, which eliminates state income taxation of investment income altogether without generating additional federal income or transfer taxes. A major obstacle standing in the way of accomplishing this objective, however, …


Public Independent Fact-Finding: A Trust-Generating Institution For An Age Of Corporate Illegitimacy And Public Mistrust, R. William Ide Iii, Douglas H. Yarn May 2003

Public Independent Fact-Finding: A Trust-Generating Institution For An Age Of Corporate Illegitimacy And Public Mistrust, R. William Ide Iii, Douglas H. Yarn

Vanderbilt Law Review

Public distrust in the wake of corporate scandals caused corporate legitimacy crises for the companies involved and for the marketplace as a whole. The loss of trust has contributed to an environment in which traditional responses to allegations of wrongdoing and incompetence are less effective. Alternatively, organizations engage in "Public independent fact-finding" ("PIFF") by hiring public figures with reputations for integrity to conduct internal investigations and to report their findings to the public. This Article describes the role played by trust, reputation, and social legitimacy in the health of organizations and examines corporate legitimacy crises and traditional responses. Identifying factors …


The Trust Offshore, Antony G.D. Duckworth Oct 1999

The Trust Offshore, Antony G.D. Duckworth

Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law

I was not present at the birth of the offshore financial centers or of their trust business, but I am told that the mother was taxation. Perhaps that is an oversimplification, but I do not doubt that taxation was the major influence. The typical settlor was a taxpayer from one of the major common law countries, and his primary motive for going offshore was tax avoidance. But there were also a few settlors from other places, some motivated by estate planning considerations (the trust allowing them to make property arrangements which could not be made at home), some by fear …


Law For Sale: Alaska And Delaware Compete For The Asset Protection Trust Market And The Wealth That Follows, Amy L. Wagenfeld May 1999

Law For Sale: Alaska And Delaware Compete For The Asset Protection Trust Market And The Wealth That Follows, Amy L. Wagenfeld

Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law

For years, U.S. citizens have looked to offshore jurisdictions to create trusts that protect a settlor's assets from the claims of creditors, yet allow the settlor to be named as a beneficiary. United States law and public policy have long been against the idea of allowing a person to enjoy benefits from assets that are simultaneously shielded from creditors' claims. However, despite this existing public policy, Alaska and Delaware have enacted statutes that attempt to do just that. Essentially, these statutes claim to make what used to be possible only offshore, now possible in the United States.

This Note seeks …


International Recognition And Adaptation Of Trusts: The Influence Of The Hague Convention, Adair Dyere Jan 1999

International Recognition And Adaptation Of Trusts: The Influence Of The Hague Convention, Adair Dyere

Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law

The process of bringing English-style trusts into systems that do not have a similar device is fraught with difficulties. This is especially true with respect to efforts directed towards the creation of a domestic trust law within such a system, but it is also true about the adaptation of legal institutions that is necessary in order to recognize trusts created under foreign law, in accordance with Article 11 of the Hague Trusts Convention. Thus far, it can be said that no country that did not have trusts before the Hague Trusts Convention has reacted to the Convention by adopting a …


The Civil Law Trust, Maurizio Lupoi Jan 1999

The Civil Law Trust, Maurizio Lupoi

Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law

It is generally held that trusts are incompatible with the basic assumptions of civil law systems. In order to discuss this statement one would have to inquire, first, what is meant by the term "trusts"; second, what assumed common characteristics of the civil law systems are being envisaged and declared to bein compatible with trusts; and third, why those characteristics should be incompatible with trusts. It is also commonly held that the Hague Convention of 1984 on the law applicable to and the recognition of trusts concerns only those trusts that are foreign to the jurisdiction in which the rules …


Multiple Trusts And Income Tax Avoidance, James H. Oeser Oct 1969

Multiple Trusts And Income Tax Avoidance, James H. Oeser

Vanderbilt Law Review

Since the Revenue Act of 1916, the trust has been deemed a separate entity for income taxation purposes. Congress has thus sanctioned the use of the trust as a tax savings device. Under present law, a grantor may place cash or other income producing property in trust, thereby excluding the resulting income from his own tax liability. If the income is currently distributed to the beneficiary, the trust is treated as a conduit, and the beneficiary is taxed in the year of distribution. But where the income is accumulated, the tax is payable by the trust? When this "accumulation trust" …


Book Reviews, Herman L. Trautman, W. Harold Bigham May 1967

Book Reviews, Herman L. Trautman, W. Harold Bigham

Vanderbilt Law Review

THE BEST OF TRUSTS AND ESTATES-ESTATE PLANNING

There are one hundred and four articles arranged in eight chapters entitled, "Estate Planning-A Panoramic View," "Using the Marital Deduction, "Income Tax Planning, " "Making the Most of Gifts,""Minimizing Administration Problems," "How to Handle Business Interests," "Arranging Life Insurance," and "Drafting Wills and Trusts." The citation and date of the original publication of each article is stated, and in many instances there is an addendum by the author which brings the article up to the date of the book. In addition there are excellent introductory commentaries by the editors at the beginning of …


Income Splitting As A Means Of Avoiding Taxes, Allen T. Malone Oct 1966

Income Splitting As A Means Of Avoiding Taxes, Allen T. Malone

Vanderbilt Law Review

The purpose of this note is to examine the present tax treatment of the three most popular income splitting devices used to avoid taxes: the family partnership, multiple trusts, and multiple corporations. In Part II, the various congressional and judicial limits and sanctions imposed upon these devices will be discussed along with recently proposed regulatory legislation. Part III will consist of an evaluation of the suggested limitations upon the use of income splitting devices. The ultimate concern of this note is to arrive at some conclusions as to the general approach and the specific methods best suited (1) to regulate …


Decedents' Estates, Trusts And Future Interest -- 1964 Tennessee Survey, Herman L. Trautman Jun 1965

Decedents' Estates, Trusts And Future Interest -- 1964 Tennessee Survey, Herman L. Trautman

Vanderbilt Law Review

Validity of Instrument Which Only Appoints Fiduciary--Is an instrument which makes no testamentary gift, but only designates or appoints the personal representative to administer the estate and provides certain special powers of fiduciary administration entitled to probate as a valid will? While it has been said that there need be no dispositive gift of property to entitle a testamentary writing to probate as a will,' there seems to have been no definite court decision in Tennessee so holding until the recent case of Delaney v. First Peoples Bank of Johnson City. In that case a writing properly executed with the …


Decedents' Estates, Trusts And Future Interests -- 1963 Tennessee Survey, Herman L. Trautman Jun 1964

Decedents' Estates, Trusts And Future Interests -- 1963 Tennessee Survey, Herman L. Trautman

Vanderbilt Law Review

Three interesting cases represent significant developments in the laws concerning the distribution of amounts received by the administrator in wrongful death actions, two' of which arose under the Tennessee wrongful death statute and the other arising under the Federal Employers' Liability Act. The two cases arising under the Tennessee statute were problems of somewhat first impression,reasoned upon analogy, and the case arising under the federal statute resulted in the Tennessee Supreme Court overruling its prior decision.


Decedents' Estates, Trusts And Future Interests -- 1962 Tennessee Survey, Herman L. Trautman Jun 1963

Decedents' Estates, Trusts And Future Interests -- 1962 Tennessee Survey, Herman L. Trautman

Vanderbilt Law Review

I. DECEDENTS" ESTATES

A. Intestate Succession-Release of an Expectancy B. Wills C. Fiduciary Administration and Estate Planning

II. TRUSTS

A. Self-dealing-Purchase by Trustees of One Beneficiary's Interest

III. FUTURE INTERESTS

A. Alternative Gifts B. Class Gifts As in the past, the subject matter will be discussed under the headings indicated above. The developments of the year consist of court decisions only, as the Tennessee legislature was not in general session.


Decedents' Estates, Trusts And Future Interests -- 1961 Tennessee Survey, Herman L. Trautman Oct 1961

Decedents' Estates, Trusts And Future Interests -- 1961 Tennessee Survey, Herman L. Trautman

Vanderbilt Law Review

The subject matter will be discussed under the three headings indicated above. The developments of the year' include court decisions and relevant new legislation enacted by the Eighty-second General Assembly of the State of Tennessee. Perhaps the most significant development of probate law in Tennessee during the period was the enactment of the Uniform Testamentary Additions to Trusts Act, referred to generally as the "pour-over" statute. Very likely this statute will have a substantial and dramatic impact upon (1) the arrangements of decedents' estates, and (2). the future role that the executor and the lawyer will have in the settlement …


Decedents' Estates, Trusts And Future Interests, Herman L. Trautman Oct 1959

Decedents' Estates, Trusts And Future Interests, Herman L. Trautman

Vanderbilt Law Review

The subject matter will be discussed under three headings: "Dece- dents' Estates," "Trusts," and "Future Interests." The section on Decedents' Estates will include developments concerning intestate succession, wills and those problems of fiduciary administration involved in the settlement of decedents' estates; the fiduciary administration problems involving trusts will also be discussed in that section. The developments of the year include court decisions, new legislation, and the work of the Section on Real Property, Probate and Trust Law of the Tennessee Bar Association on proposed legislation.


Wills, Trusts And Estates -- 1957 Tennessee Survey, Herman L. Trautman Aug 1957

Wills, Trusts And Estates -- 1957 Tennessee Survey, Herman L. Trautman

Vanderbilt Law Review

The subject matter of this article will be presented in four parts entitled Wills, Trusts, Future Interests and Fiduciary Administration. The latter will include the developments of the year concerning both the administration of decedents' estates and the administration of trust estates because to an increasing extent the statutes and decisions are relevant to both kinds of fiduciary administration. Legislative developments concerning probate law are also included under each heading as well as the court decisional developments.


Wills, Trusts And Estates--1956 Tennessee Survey, W. J. Bowe Aug 1956

Wills, Trusts And Estates--1956 Tennessee Survey, W. J. Bowe

Vanderbilt Law Review

The Tennessee statute creates a rebuttable presumption that any transfer or conveyance of property to a child shall be treated as an advancement. The above evidence would seem adequate to rebut the presumption but the court went further and stated that, without regard to this evidence, the transfer was not to be so treated since an advancement must be irrevocable and in presentae. Query, if this language may not be misleading and cause confusion in later cases. American case law does not require that an advancement be irrevocable. Thus the proceeds of a life insurance policy, though the decedent retained …


Wills, Estates And Trusts -- 1954 Tennessee Survey, William J. Bowe Aug 1954

Wills, Estates And Trusts -- 1954 Tennessee Survey, William J. Bowe

Vanderbilt Law Review

Freedom of Testation: Other than the statutory forced share of a spouse' testators have almost unlimited freedom in the disposition of their property. A devise or bequest will be held invalid only when it runs counter to some well established rule of public policy. Thus gifts in violation of the rule against perpetuities, against accumulations or against restraints on alienations are void. Further, the courts will strike down capricious or whimsical bequests, as well as those which are conditioned upon the performance of illegal or tortious acts. But in absence of any violation of public policy a testator is free …


Recent Cases, Law Review Staff Feb 1953

Recent Cases, Law Review Staff

Vanderbilt Law Review

Constitutional Law--Constitutionality of Group Libel Statute

Federal Employers Liability Act--Liability for Employment of Man with Violent Tendencies

Federal Jurisdiction--Diversity Jurisdiction and the Multi-State Corporation

Federal Jurisdiction--Erie Railroad Doctrine Extended to State-Created Rights Arising under Special Federal Question Jurisdiction

Labor Law--Picketing--Injunction against Breach of Bargaining Agreement

Landlord and Tenant--Exculpatory Agreement--Effect on Right of Subrogation of Landlord's Insurer

Military Law--Failure to Instruct as Prejudicial Error

Military Law--Infiltration of Command Influence as General Prejudice

Trusts--Distribution of Stock Dividends between Life Tenant and Remainderman


Book Notes And Books Received, Law Review Staff Feb 1950

Book Notes And Books Received, Law Review Staff

Vanderbilt Law Review

Book Notes

Labor Relations and Federal Law

By Donald H. Wollett

Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1949. Pp. xxv, 148, 30. $3.00

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Tennessee Personal Injury Fact Digest

Compiled by Eugene McSweeney

Nashville: The Fact Digest Co., 1949. Pp. 124. $5.50

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BOOKS RECEIVED

Cases on Federal Taxation

By Roswell Magill

Brooklyn: The Foundation Press, Inc., 1950. Pp. i, 546. $7.00

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Cases on Trusts

By George Gleason Bogert

Brooklyn: The Foundation Press, Inc., 1950. Pp. i, 1041. $7.50

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Differences in Income for Accounting and Federal Income Tax

By Clarence F. Reimer

Chicago: Commerce Clearing House, 1949. Pp. iii,184. …


Book Notes, Law Review Staff Dec 1949

Book Notes, Law Review Staff

Vanderbilt Law Review

BOOK NOTES

The Law of Trusts

By Ralph A. Newman

Brooklyn: The Foundation Press, Inc., 1949. Pp. xi, 452. $4.50

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Estate Planning

By Joseph Trachtman

New York: Practicing Law Institute. 1949 Edition. Paper bound. Pp. i, 170. $2.00

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BOOKS RECEIVED

The Case of General Yamashita

By A. Frank Reel

Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1949. Pp. v, 324. $4.00

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Cases and Materials on Commercial Law

By Hugh W. Babb and Carl B. Everberg

Brooklyn: The Foundation Press, Inc., 1949. Pp. iii, 963. $6.00

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Cases and Materials on Law and Accounting

By Donald Schapiro and Ralph Wienshienk …