término |
definición |
empezar lección
|
|
A detailed statement of the debits and credits between parties arising out of a contract or a fiduciary relation.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
The written, detailed or summary, record of a person's management or administration of an estate or of a particular matter.
|
|
|
Actio Personalis Moritur Cum Persona empezar lección
|
|
Latin: any right of action dies with the person.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Latin: for the collection of the goods of the deceased.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
When property identified in a will cannot be given to the beneficiary because it no longer belonged to the deceased at the time of death.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A person who manages (administers) the assets of another, such as an estate administrator or the administrator of an insurance plan.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
The body of law as related to the investigation into the ability of an adult to manage his or her person or affairs, and the resultant guardianship.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Latin: members of a group having a common male ancestor.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Something which is mobile or not cast in stone; which can be changed.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A rule of interpretation that a judge, called upon to interpret an otherwise unclear legal document, shall take into account the circumstances in which the document was created.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A transaction or relationship where there is an absence of control the one over the other.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Civil law: a contract or other legal document which has been properly prepared or authenticated by a court officer, such as a notary, and thereafter given enhanced evidentiary status of its authenticity.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Latin: a mother's brother.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
An illegitimate child, born in a relationship between two persons that are not married (ie. not in wedlock) or who are not married at the time of the child’s birth.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
The person for whom a trust has been created.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A right of legal or testamentary beneficiaries to an estate to demand of the administrator an inventory of the estate.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A trust in which a settlor reserves the right to terminate the trust but to assert no other power over the trust, which is administered without any other measure of control over the trust's administration.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A written guarantee in regards to the fulfillment of a legal obligation.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Any act or omission on the part of the trustee which is inconsistent with the terms of the trust agreement or the law of trusts.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Latin: let him beware. A formal warning.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A grant of probate that is made after a limited grant has served its purpose.
|
|
|
Cestui Que Trust or Cestui Que Use empezar lección
|
|
Latin: the beneficiary of a trust.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A person who has never voluntarily had sexual intercourse outside of marriage such as unmarried virgins.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
An order of a court to either do a certain thing or to appear before it to answer charges.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A body of law derived and evolved directly from Roman Law, the primary feature of which is that laws are struck in writing; codified, and not determined, as in the common law, by the opinions of judges based on historic customs.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A maxim of the law to the effect that any person, individual or corporate, that wishes to ask or petition a court for judicial action, must be in a position free of fraud or other unfair conduct.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
An amendment to an existing will.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Relations through the mother.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A descendant that is not direct, such as a niece or a cousin.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A term of parliamentary law which refers to a body of one or more persons appointed by a larger assembly or society, to consider, investigate and/or take action on certain specific matters.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Two or more persons dying at about the same time, usually in the same event, but in circumstances in which it is impossible to determine the order of death.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
An individual's ability to understand the nature and object of legal proceedings being presented, and to consult with counsel.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A personal interest that conflicts with a public or fidiciary interest.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Common blood, descendants of a same common ancestor.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A trust which a court declares or imposes onto participants in very specific circumstances such as those giving rise to an action for unjust enrichment, and notwithstanding the lack of any willing settlor to declare the trust.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
The reduction of the body of a deceased human to its essential elements by incineration.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Widower's right to an interest in his deceased wife's real property.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Tax payments due to the state, incurred and payable as a result of the death of the tax-payer.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Latin: assets not yet administered.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
An individual who has died.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A firm yet irrational belief and which may affect an individual's capacity to contract.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
The transfer or conveyance of property by will, usually in reference to real property.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A trust in which the settlor has given the trustee full discretion to decide which (and when) members of a defined group of beneficiaries is to receive either the income or the capital of the trust.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A death-bed gift, made by a dying person, with the intent that the person receiving the gift shall keep the thing if death ensues.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
The recipient of a trust; either the trustee or the beneficiary.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
The person who donates property to the benefit of another, usually through the legal mechanism of a trust.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
French: an ancient right to keep the property of any deceased foreign subject.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Latin: for so long as she remains chaste.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Latin: for so long as she remains unmarried.
|
|
|
Dum Sola et Casta Vixerit empezar lección
|
|
Latin: for so long as she remains single (unmarried) and chaste.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Latin: for so long as she remains a widow.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Where a person is prevented from acting (or not acting) according to their free will, by threats or force of another, it is said to be 'under duress'.
|
|
|
Ejusdem or Eiusdem Generis empezar lección
|
|
Of the same kind or nature.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
The devotion of property to a specific and particular trust.
|
|
|
Enduring or Continuing Power of Attorney empezar lección
|
|
A power of attorney that continues even if and after a donor becomes incapacitated.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
French: A fetus recognized as a child then alive for the purposes of wills and estates.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Conduct which, having regard to some special relationship between the two parties concerned, is an unconscionable thing for the one to do towards the other.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A branch of English law which developed hundreds of years ago when litigants would go to the King and complain of harsh or inflexible rules of common law which prevented "justice" from prevailing.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A person's property; often used to refer to the net worth of a deceased individual.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
That part of the law which regulates wills, trusts, probate and other subjects related to the management of another's property.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A person specifically appointed by a testator to administer the will ensuring that final wishes are respected (i.e. that the will is properly "executed").
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A person who meddles with the estate of a deceased person.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
The year from date of death generally granted to the executor to collect and disburse the testator's assets.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A trust which is clearly created by the settlor, usually in the form of a document (eg. a will), although they can be oral.
|
|
|
Falsa Demonstratio Non Nacet empezar lección
|
|
A wrong description of an item in a legal document (such as a will) will not necessarily void the gift if it can be determined from other facts.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A legal duty of loyalty and faithfulness towards another.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A trust in which a beneficiary has an entitlement to a fixed income.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Deceitful or deceptive conduct designed to manipulate another person to give something of value.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Formal observances held for a deceased person, usually before burial or cremation.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A transfer of property with nothing given in return.
|
|
|
Global Deterioration Scale empezar lección
|
|
A psychiatric tool charting stages of dementia.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A guardian appointed to direct litigation on behalf and in the interests of a person otherwise incapable of managing their affairs.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A person who is appointed to manage the property and financial affairs of an incapable individual.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A person appointed to manage the health and well-being of another.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A secret trust in which the donor announces the trust but not the objects or the beneficiaries.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A beneficiary of a will or an intestacy.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Latin: the estate of a deceased person.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Latin: an inheritance that is more of a burden than a benefit.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Latin: an unclaimed estate.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A legal obligation or right which is not extinguished by the death of the person who held those rights, or was liable for the obligation, but are transferred to the estate.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A will written entirely in the testator’s handwriting and not witnessed.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
The mixing of property for the purposing of effecting a proportionate division.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
The body of a deceased person, in whole or in parts, regardless of its stage of decomposition.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
An individual who lacks the ability to meet essential requirements for physical health, safety, or self-care.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
An individual who has a significant risk of personal harm based upon an inability to adequately provide for nutrition, health, housing, or physical safety.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
An addition of something to a document after it has been signed.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A will which which is valid if meeting the requirements of an international wills statute and notwithstanding deficiencies in form as regards to domestic wills.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Latin: from one living person to another living person.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
To take effect, to result; to come into operation.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A clause in a clegal document, such as a contract or will, that purports to extend the benefits of the document beyond the signatories.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
An explanation based upon law for the enrichment of one at the detriment of another.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Latin: the right to deduct; an ancient right to a king upon the property of a foreigner who died within the king's territory, to a portion of the decedent's estate.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
The person to whom personal property is gifted pursuant to a will.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A right to use and to enjoy land and/or structures on land only for the life of the life tenant.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
The beneficiary of a life estate.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A person who is a direct descendant such as a child to his or her natural parent.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
The converting of the the assets of a person into cash.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A trust from persons to take effect during their living years, to benefit others.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A will that has been lost and which may, under certain circumstances, be reconstructed for probate.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
The law as it relates to the assessment and committal of persons incapable of managing themselves or their affairs.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
An individual who, though once of sound mind, can no longer manage his person or his affairs.
|
|
|
Mobilia Sequuntur Personam, Immobilia Situa empezar lección
|
|
Latin: movables follow the person, immovables their locality.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Latin: Death puts an end to everything.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A sealed and secret will requiring strict formalities and available only in limited civil law jurisdictions.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A legal officer with specific judicial authority to attest to legal documents usually with an official seal.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
The employment and function assessment and treatment of post-injury, illness or disability.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A person who has lost one or both of his or her natural parents.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Latin: during litigation.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Latin: by the head. The proposed distribution of an estate of property to surviving specified beneficiaries only and not, in the event of pre-death of the beneficiary, to the heirs of the pre-deceased beneficiary.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
The failure of a possessor of a thing to exercise the care of a reasonable person to preserve and protect the estate for future interests.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
The person who administers the estate of a deceased person as executor or Court-appointed administrator.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Latin: an entitlement to participate in the distribution of property, such as an estate, that flows down to the named beneficiary's next heir if he or she is otherwise unable to take his or her share.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Latin: charitable purposes.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Latin for administration (is) complete.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A document which gives a person the right to make binding decisions for another, as an agent.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Words that express a wish or a desire rather than a clear command.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
The formal certificate given by a court that certifies that a will has been proven, validated and registered and which, from that point on, gives the executor the legal authority to execute the will.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A summary approval of an uncontested will by the court, subject to subsequent contest.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
The pronouncement by a court that a will is formally approved and not subject to later contest barring fraud or the discovery of a later will.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Nearness in place; close-by.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Certain acts or contracts are said to be against public policy if they tend to promote breach of the law, of the policy behind a law or tend to harm the state or its citizens.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A presumed but not DNA-confirmed father of a child.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A trust which arises to the benefit of the donor when property is advanced for a specific purpose and that purpose fails.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A trust that is presumed by the court from certain situations.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A future interest left in a transferor or his (or her) heirs. A reservation in a real property conveyance that the property reverts back to the original owner upon the occurrence of a certain event.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A trust which can be revoked at the discretion of the settlor.
|
|
|
Rule Against Perpetuities empezar lección
|
|
A common law rule that prevents suspending the transfer of property for more than 21 years or a lifetime plus 21 years.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A mostly abolished rule in estate law to the effect that if a life estate was created but the remainderman was the heir of that person, the life estate collapsed and the entire estate vested in that person.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Latin: a spark of legal right.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A trust where, to a stated beneficiary, the donor secretly communicates that he/she holds title in trust for another.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
An agreement, or the document which articulates the agreement, which sets or resolves rights.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
The person who actually creates a trust by donating property to be managed and administered by a trustee but from which all profits would go to a beneficiary.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
US law: a trust which in design prevents a beneficiary from depleting the trust funds, or from his creditors demanding payment therefrom.
|
|
|
Springing Power of Attorney empezar lección
|
|
A power of attorney which becomes legally effective on the occurrence of an event (such as incapacity).
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Discretion given to a trustee to distribute income from a trust fund disproportionately between beneficiaries.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A trust created by the effect of a statute.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A person who takes over the rights of another.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Circumstances in the preparation or signing of a document that give rise to suspicion as to mental capacity of, or fraud or duress upon the signatory.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A document to take effect upon the death of the author and in which his or her chattels are transferred to a new owner.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
The legal ability to sign a will.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A trust created by a will and which takes effect upon the death of the testator.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
The signatory of a valid will.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Money placed in a bank account with the instruction that upon the settler's death, whatever is in that bank account will pass to a named beneficiary.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
To deny an allegation or the validity of an office or of some other official act.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A legal obligation with respect to property given by a person (donor) to another (trustee) to the advantage of a beneficiary
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A person who holds property rights for the benefit of another.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A trust which in the distribution of benefits from time to time to the beneficiary, pools capital and income, and does not otherwise distinguish between the capital of the trust and the income of the trust for the purposes of establishing interim payments to a beneficiary.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Benefiting from the action or property of another without legal justification.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A will which differs from what might of been otherwise expected of a testator such as a large gift to a stranger, or the exclusion of his children from his estate.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Related to the uterus or, in estate law, siblings issue of a common mother.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Latin: to wit or that is to say.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Latin: to wit, that is to say.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
The possessor's direct acts or activity of harming property which he or she holds for another, as in a trustee for a trust beneficiary.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Muslim law: property dedicated to charitable purposes.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
The abuse, destruction or permanent change to property by one who is merely in possession of it as in the case of a tenant or a life tenant.
|
|
|
Weapon of Mass Destruction empezar lección
|
|
Device designed to kill humans through the use of atomic or nuclear energy or the release of chemicals, poisons, biological agents or radioactivity.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
A written statement, usually signed, made by an individual, which directs the distribution of their property when they die.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Words in a conveyance or in a will which set the duration of an estate.
|
|
|
empezar lección
|
|
Also known as words of substitution; words which describe what should happen to a gift if the person first named is no longer alive when it takes effect.
|
|
|