Part II makes the conceptual case for viewing the trust as an elective cost-externalization device. Part III offers the spendthrift trust as the archetypal model for purposes of our analysis, briefly describes the spendthrift trust, and explores its consequences to outsiders to the trust deal. Part IV offers some reasons why the elective externalities of trusts persist. Part V first examines and rejects a couple of approaches to minimizing the externalized costs of trusts that rely on the “bundle of sticks” approach to property interests. It then moves beyond the bundle of sticks approach, settling on a solution based on priority rules borrowed from legal accidents theory. The conclusion follows in Part VI
In the year 2000, the Uniform Law Commissioners approved the Uniform Trust Code (UTC). This was the ...
For the vast majority of the twentieth century, trusts served two pivotal roles. The first was as a ...
For more than two centuries, the Rule against Perpetuities has served as the chief means of limiting...
In Part I, I shall explore restraints against voluntary alienation: that is, restrictions on a benef...
Usually the benefits and burdens of property ownership belong to the same person. In a trust, howeve...
Should the donor\u27s specific interests or potentially conflicting theoretical economic principles ...
This Article develops an agency costs theory of the law of private trusts, focusing chiefly on donat...
Trusts were first created in England many centuries ago by settling property upon protective Trusts ...
Over the last thirty years, most jurisdictions in the United States have repealed or abrogated the R...
We are accustomed to think of the trust as a branch of property law. The Restatement (Second) of Tru...
The beneficiary of a spendthrift trust, created in 1921, sought to renounce and terminate her life i...
With considerable acuity, Carlyn S. McCaffrey and Elyse G.Kirschner explore the maze created by the ...
Recent revelations on the use of fiduciary services raise concerns regarding their use for tax and c...
This article will briefly review the history of the throwback rules and will then show that the smal...
Spendthrift trusts which shield assets from creditors have been an ongoing problem for the law since...
In the year 2000, the Uniform Law Commissioners approved the Uniform Trust Code (UTC). This was the ...
For the vast majority of the twentieth century, trusts served two pivotal roles. The first was as a ...
For more than two centuries, the Rule against Perpetuities has served as the chief means of limiting...
In Part I, I shall explore restraints against voluntary alienation: that is, restrictions on a benef...
Usually the benefits and burdens of property ownership belong to the same person. In a trust, howeve...
Should the donor\u27s specific interests or potentially conflicting theoretical economic principles ...
This Article develops an agency costs theory of the law of private trusts, focusing chiefly on donat...
Trusts were first created in England many centuries ago by settling property upon protective Trusts ...
Over the last thirty years, most jurisdictions in the United States have repealed or abrogated the R...
We are accustomed to think of the trust as a branch of property law. The Restatement (Second) of Tru...
The beneficiary of a spendthrift trust, created in 1921, sought to renounce and terminate her life i...
With considerable acuity, Carlyn S. McCaffrey and Elyse G.Kirschner explore the maze created by the ...
Recent revelations on the use of fiduciary services raise concerns regarding their use for tax and c...
This article will briefly review the history of the throwback rules and will then show that the smal...
Spendthrift trusts which shield assets from creditors have been an ongoing problem for the law since...
In the year 2000, the Uniform Law Commissioners approved the Uniform Trust Code (UTC). This was the ...
For the vast majority of the twentieth century, trusts served two pivotal roles. The first was as a ...
For more than two centuries, the Rule against Perpetuities has served as the chief means of limiting...