Trusts

Taylor Emma
1 Min Read
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A trust appears to be a complicated concept, not easily understood as a close corporation or a company. A trust does not have a separate legal identity. The law usually looks through the entity to what is behind it.

●      The rate of income tax imposed on a trust is similar to the rate of income tax imposed on a natural person and not a flat rate as imposed in the case of a closed corporation or a company.

●      A person does not own a trust.

●      A trust can neither have shareholders nor members.

●      A trust comes into existence when the founder of the trust hands over the ownership of an asset to a trustee who administers and manages the asset for the benefit of a beneficiary third person.

●      Usually, trusts are created for charitable purposes.

●      A trustee acts in his official capacity rather than his private capacity.

●      The ownership of a trust does not belong to any individual.

●      The ownership is divided between the trustees of the trust who work for the profit of a beneficiary.

●      The beneficiary does not have any control over the assets of the trust.

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A senior editor for The Mars that left the company to join the team of SenseCentral as a news editor and content creator. An artist by nature who enjoys video games, guitars, action figures, cooking, painting, drawing and good music.
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