If you mean a person outside the US then the answer is, yes.
the beneficiary in a trust is the person whom benefits from that which is held in trust.
No. If your child is a beneficiary under another person's Will you cannot reject that inheritance on their behalf. The court will see the inheritance is placed in trust for the child.No. If your child is a beneficiary under another person's Will you cannot reject that inheritance on their behalf. The court will see the inheritance is placed in trust for the child.No. If your child is a beneficiary under another person's Will you cannot reject that inheritance on their behalf. The court will see the inheritance is placed in trust for the child.No. If your child is a beneficiary under another person's Will you cannot reject that inheritance on their behalf. The court will see the inheritance is placed in trust for the child.
A trustee and a beneficiary are essential to a trust. Without a trustee and a beneficiary there is no valid trust. They should not be the same person.
No. You can have anyone you want be the beneficiary. A trust, church, or any person you choose can be your beneficiary.
No. That would invalidate the trust.
You can find out if you are a beneficiary of a trust by requesting a copy of the trust document from the trustee or the attorney who created it. The trust document will outline the beneficiaries and their entitlements. You can also communicate directly with the trustee to inquire about your potential beneficial interest in the trust.
Not necessarily, another trustee will be appointed.
Answer: Minors may be beneficiaries of a trust.
If there is (1) more than one trustee; and, (2) the trustee-beneficiary cannot act as trustee unilaterally; and (3) the other trustee is not a beneficiary of the trust, yes. If the the trustee is also designated the beneficiary, the trust fails as illusory.
Yes.
Yes, as long as the trust was not modified to exclude them also.
You cannot have the same person as grantor, trustee and beneficiary in any trust. There is no trust created in such a set up. The grantor in an irrevocable trust cannot be the trustee. The property in an irrevocable trust must be permanently separated from the grantor's control.