The notion that a trust may fail because it serves no useful purpose, or reflects merely the whim or fancy of the testator, seems to fly in the face of testamentary freedom and, in particular, the testator’s right to dispose of his estate in whatever manner he chooses subject only to the court’s control over illegal or immoral conditions and the making of reasonable financial provision for his family and dependants. So how have the courts grappled with these two competing aspects of public policy? The tension between these two competing aspects of public policy forms the subject matter of this article
The organizing principle of American succession law—testamentary freedom—gives decedents a nearly un...
The surviving trustee of a testamentary trust petitioned the probate court for authority to terminat...
Testator left his estate in trust until twenty-one years after the death of two nieces, the trust in...
The notion that a trust may fail because it serves no useful purpose or reflects merely the whim or ...
Discusses, with reference to case law, the arguments for eroding the concept of pure testamentary fr...
It is the purpose of this article to examine the current problems surrounding the issue of freedom o...
Freedom of Testation: Other than the statutory forced share of a spouse\u27 testators have almost un...
The New Zealand Family Protection Act 1955 asks the courts to decide whether a will-maker has made “...
Over the past two years, a significant number of appellate courts in jurisdictions throughout the co...
In 1875, Supreme Court Justice Samuel Miller delivered the opinion of the court in a case pertaining...
The article critically re-examines the parliamentary proceedings between 1928 and 1938 that led to t...
The article reviews cases illustrating the operation of the beneficiary principle, that a trust for ...
In recent years legal challenges to charitable bequests by testators' family members have become mor...
This article sets forth a clear, principled analysis by which many of the problems in will construct...
The organizing principle of American succession law — testamentary freedom — gives decedents a nearl...
The organizing principle of American succession law—testamentary freedom—gives decedents a nearly un...
The surviving trustee of a testamentary trust petitioned the probate court for authority to terminat...
Testator left his estate in trust until twenty-one years after the death of two nieces, the trust in...
The notion that a trust may fail because it serves no useful purpose or reflects merely the whim or ...
Discusses, with reference to case law, the arguments for eroding the concept of pure testamentary fr...
It is the purpose of this article to examine the current problems surrounding the issue of freedom o...
Freedom of Testation: Other than the statutory forced share of a spouse\u27 testators have almost un...
The New Zealand Family Protection Act 1955 asks the courts to decide whether a will-maker has made “...
Over the past two years, a significant number of appellate courts in jurisdictions throughout the co...
In 1875, Supreme Court Justice Samuel Miller delivered the opinion of the court in a case pertaining...
The article critically re-examines the parliamentary proceedings between 1928 and 1938 that led to t...
The article reviews cases illustrating the operation of the beneficiary principle, that a trust for ...
In recent years legal challenges to charitable bequests by testators' family members have become mor...
This article sets forth a clear, principled analysis by which many of the problems in will construct...
The organizing principle of American succession law — testamentary freedom — gives decedents a nearl...
The organizing principle of American succession law—testamentary freedom—gives decedents a nearly un...
The surviving trustee of a testamentary trust petitioned the probate court for authority to terminat...
Testator left his estate in trust until twenty-one years after the death of two nieces, the trust in...