Practice Areas
Business
- Get free trial for practice areas as below
- Business
- Consumer
- Corporations
- Criminal
- Employment
- Family
- General Counsel
- Governance
- Immigration
- Intellectual Property
- Personal Injury NSW
- Personal Injury Qld
- Personal Injury Vic
- Personal Property Security
- Property
- Succession
- Work Health & Safety
- Tax
- Mergers & Acquisitions
- Banking & Finance
- Social Justice
- Cybersecurity, Data Protection & Privacy
- Insolvency
- Competition
LexisNexis Practical Guidance®
Straightforward guidance across a range of topics
- Trusts
- The trust deed
Parties to a discretionary trust deed
Settlor
The settlor:
- • provides the initial settled sum to establish the trust;
- • has no other role;
- • must not be a beneficiary; and
- • must not gift or transfer any other property to the trust.
Trustee
The trustee:
- • is the legal owner of the trust assets;
- • is bound by the trust deed;
- • is subject to the relevant state or territory trustee legislation;
- • holds the assets for the beneficiaries; and
- • can be an individual or a corporation.
A corporate trustee has the following advantages:
- • it continues to exist despite the death of any person;
- • it has limited liability (subject to certain exceptions such as s 197 of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth)); and
- • it removes individuals from direct control of the trust property.
Appointor
The appointor:
- • can generally remove the trustee and appoint a new trustee;
- • generally must be consulted before major decisions are made by the trustee; and
- • is sometimes called “the guardian”, or the “the protector”, or may have division of powers with such persons; and
- • exercises at least some degree of indirect control over the trust.
Beneficiaries
Beneficiaries of a discretionary trust:
- • are for a family discretionary trust generally defined as widely as possible within a family group;
- • generally include corporations and other trusts connected to individual beneficiaries; and
- • have no proprietary interest in the assets of the trust generally or in any individual trust asset.
See Parties to a discretionary trust deed.