The Uniform Trust Code, the first national-level codification of the American law of trusts, was promulgated in 2000. The Code was the product of a five-year Uniform Law Commission drafting process that entailed extensive consultation with the trust and estates bar and the trust banking industry. The Code is being widely enacted. Eighteen states and the District of Columbia have thus far adopted it, and many others are likely to follow. Alabama\u27s enactment comes into effect in 2007. For the future, trust law in Alabama and the other Code states will be prevailingly statute law, although the principles developed in prior case law will continue to inform the interpretation and application of the Code. In one sense, the Code marks a great d...
In this paper we develop two theses. First, we argue that uniform law proposals that ask courts and ...
Senate Bill 297, which was enacted by the Kansas legislature in 2002 and which became effective on J...
Directed trusts are an extremely important development in trust law, indeed truly transformative, be...
The Uniform Trust Code, the first national-level codification of the American law of trusts, was pro...
Uniform Acts have played a significant role in the development of the law on trusts and estates. Whi...
The National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws (NCCUSL) is close to completing the f...
The promulgation of the Uniform Trust Code (“UTC”) by the National Conference of Commissioners on Un...
The Uniform Trust Code (200) (“UTC”) is the first effort by the National Conference of Commissioners...
In 2001, the Uniform Law Commission adopted the Uniform Trust Code, which regulates certain aspects ...
In the year 2000, the Uniform Law Commissioners approved the Uniform Trust Code (UTC). This was the ...
This article provides an overview of the U.T.C., focusing on how its enactment would change existing...
This Article provides an overview of the UTC, describes how it responds to recent developments in Am...
This Article examines the rise of state asset protection trust (\u27APT) statutes. It juxtaposes two...
Spendthrift trusts which shield assets from creditors have been an ongoing problem for the law since...
The concept of using legal structures to protect property from those who might otherwise have some c...
In this paper we develop two theses. First, we argue that uniform law proposals that ask courts and ...
Senate Bill 297, which was enacted by the Kansas legislature in 2002 and which became effective on J...
Directed trusts are an extremely important development in trust law, indeed truly transformative, be...
The Uniform Trust Code, the first national-level codification of the American law of trusts, was pro...
Uniform Acts have played a significant role in the development of the law on trusts and estates. Whi...
The National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws (NCCUSL) is close to completing the f...
The promulgation of the Uniform Trust Code (“UTC”) by the National Conference of Commissioners on Un...
The Uniform Trust Code (200) (“UTC”) is the first effort by the National Conference of Commissioners...
In 2001, the Uniform Law Commission adopted the Uniform Trust Code, which regulates certain aspects ...
In the year 2000, the Uniform Law Commissioners approved the Uniform Trust Code (UTC). This was the ...
This article provides an overview of the U.T.C., focusing on how its enactment would change existing...
This Article provides an overview of the UTC, describes how it responds to recent developments in Am...
This Article examines the rise of state asset protection trust (\u27APT) statutes. It juxtaposes two...
Spendthrift trusts which shield assets from creditors have been an ongoing problem for the law since...
The concept of using legal structures to protect property from those who might otherwise have some c...
In this paper we develop two theses. First, we argue that uniform law proposals that ask courts and ...
Senate Bill 297, which was enacted by the Kansas legislature in 2002 and which became effective on J...
Directed trusts are an extremely important development in trust law, indeed truly transformative, be...