Some wills do set up a trust. If it does so, it will create a trustee, usually for minor children.
If the person is deceased, you can contact the trustee if you know who the trustee is.
No. The bank will not accept any transactions on a dead persons account. The only thing the bank would allow is: Withdrawal of the funds from the dead persons account by his legal heir. Apart from this no other activity would be allowed on a dead persons account by the bank.
One can purchase trustee sale, such as foreclosure property. One important thing to note about buying the trustee sale, it is a cash only type of purchase.
whatn is the meaning of a dead persons phot falling and making a loud noise
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The beneficiaries of the dead person.
There is no such thing as "Canada's school trustee." A school trustee is a politician, someone who has been elected to a school board. Not all provinces have school boards. In those that do, school boards are municipal or regional bodies, not provincial or federal ones.
Yes, an executor of a will in Queensland is also considered a trustee. The executor's role includes managing the deceased's estate and distributing assets to the beneficiaries in accordance with the terms of the will, which involves acting in a fiduciary capacity similar to that of a trustee.
No, a trustee is not the same as a beneficiary. A trustee is an individual or entity appointed to manage and administer trust assets according to the terms of the trust document, while a beneficiary is a person or entity that benefits from the trust, receiving assets or income from it. Essentially, the trustee has a fiduciary duty to act in the best interests of the beneficiaries.
The possessive form of "trustee" is "trustee's." For example, "The trustee's decision was final."
That's how it's done. Its deposited by the court actually, who not have arms and legs, that type of thing, has the trustee actually do it.
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