Funding Your Trust

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FUNDING YOUR TRUST



NOTICE: Part I of this material covers the conventional ways of funding a
trust, particularly a Revocable Living Trust, using specifically-drafted
transfer documents signed in front of a notary public to transfer realty
interests, non-qualified equity accounts, business interests, contractual
interests and including accounts payable to a trust. Part II discusses an
alternate method of funding a trust with asset ledger schedules, in
particular, electronic asset schedules.

PART I

GENERAL FUNDING GUIDELINES
The customary method of transferring title of property to a trust
particularly a Revocable Living Trust (RLT) involves the
retitlement of property/assets from the grantor of the trust to the
trustee. The procedure generally takes the form of a written request by
the grantor to the transfer agent of the institution holding custody of the grantors
assets (on behalf of the grantor) to retitle the assets from the grantor as a natural
person to the trustee of the trust. That request is then applied by the transfer agent
on the grantors account at the institution.
Property titled to the name of the original trustee must, however, again be
(re)titled into the name of the successor trustee in order for that trustee to
eventually take legal title (as a trustee) of the assets to manage and/or
transfer those assets.

Thus, the contemporary process of retitling ones assets to himself as the trustee of his
trust does the job for trust funding purposes, but its not the end of the story. The retitling
to the successor trustee must still be done in order for the final distribution (or sale) of the
trust assets to take place after the grantors decease. (That requirement suggests that there
may be another more efficiently way to fund, and manage the funding of, a trust.)

OWNED REAL ESTATE INTERESTS

Although generic transfer documents can be used to transfer realty title, realty interests
are customarily transferred to a trust by realty deeds conveying reality title from the
grantor to the trustee of the trust.

Generally, the best way to transfer real estate (homes, condominiums, farmland, lots,
timeshares [if owned by deed] etc.) into your Trust is by a Quit Claim Deed. A Quit

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Claim Deed is not a warrant or guarantee that the transferor (you) are transferring all
interest that the legal description describes; you are ONLY transferring whatever interest
you currently own with respect to the described property in the deed to your trust.

Although it is recommended to have the deed recorded at the appropriate County
Recorder/Registrar Office upon the execution of the deed, it is not actually required until
the trustee transfers the deed out of the trust because of a sale or by direct conveyance to
the beneficiaries of the trust.

Although it varies from state to state (and sometimes from county to county), a
requirement often exists to fill out a "realty transfer" or "change of ownership" form
when a deed is recorded. These forms can be obtained from the Office of the County
Recorder where the deed is to be recorded and should be submitted with the deed.

On occasion, an existing deed will include a "due on sale/transfer" clause indicating that
the entire note will come due upon the date of the transfer/sale of the owner's interest.
Although a transfer to a living trust is neither a transfer of ownership nor a sale and
should not trigger the pay-up requirement, it is advisable (if your mortgage has such a
clause) to check with the mortgagee before transferring such property to your trust.


CARRIED REAL ESTATE INTERESTS (secured)

Real estate can be sold with a secured carry-back feature in generally two ways by either
a Contract for Deed or a Deed of Trust. A Contract for Deed is when the seller holds the
note himself and the purchaser makes installment (or other) payments directly to the
seller. A Deed of Trust/Trust Deed is where a third party (i.e., a trustee) holds the note on
behalf of the seller and the purchaser makes payments to that trustee. In either case, the
sellers interest in the note can be conveyed into a living trust by a Secured Realty
Interest (SRI) document.

The SRI document does not necessarily have to be recorded. But, the purchaser/payor
should have a copy of the SRI so that he knows to pay the trustee of your trust. If you are
carrying paper on a Contract for Deed then you should also "quit claim" your interest in
that deed by signing a Quit Claim Deed conveying that property into the trust. It will then
be held safely in the trust in the event that the payor defaults on the purchase contract and
the terms are not fulfilled. In such case, the carrier of the Contract for Deed repossess the
realty interest of that deed.


PROMISSORY NOTES & SALES CONTRACTS (unsecured)

If you are a holder/carrier of a Promissory Note and/or a Sales Contract, you may convey
your interest in the note/contract to your trust by a Conveyance document similar to the
SRI. In most cases it would not be necessary to record the conveyance document.


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The payor of the note should have a copy of the Conveyance document so that he knows
your interest in the note has been transferred to your trust and that he (the payor) now
needs make payments to the trustee of your trust.
FORMAL BUSINESS INTERESTS

Formal business interests are generally owned through state-registered entities formed as
C-Corporations (closely held or otherwise), S-Corporations, Professional Corporations,
Limited Liability Companies, and Limited Partnerships.

Business-interest transfers to a trust can be accomplished by either (i) the transfer agent
of the entity changing title of the owner's interest by way of an initial Request of
Retitlement Letter or (ii) through a signed Conveyance of Business Interest document.

The conveyance document method is usually sufficient to avoid probate (a copy of the
document needs to be sent to the transfer agent of the entity at some point) even if the
conveyance document is presented after the decease of the account owner.

At times, registered limited partnerships may have cumbersome requirements concerning
transfers of a partners interest; thus, the process can be expensive and time consuming
including the need for refiling the partnerships Certificate of Partnership at the Secretary
of States office. In such case, it may be best to not use the retitlement method and only
the conveyance document method for the sake of simplicity.


GENERAL PARTNERSHIP INTERESTS & SOLE PROPRIETORSHIPS

Informal business interests of general partnerships and sole proprietorships are similar
and can be transferred to a trust by a conveyance document which would include the
blue sky value, if any, of the business. This conveyance document should describe the
name, type and location of the business.

For a general partnership, information about the state of domicile and the date partnership
was established should be on the conveyance document. These informal-business-entity
conveyance documents rarely need to be recorded.


BANK ACCOUNTS (Checking, Savings, Money Market, CDs, & Safe Deposit Boxes)

As a rule, most banks will accept a copy of the Certificate of Trust (COT) (instead of
requiring that a copy of the trust itself be presented) along with the appropriate Request
for Retitlement (RFR) Letter to change title of your institutional equity accounts.

It is not necessary to have new checks printed reflecting the name of the trust or the
trustees unless you wish to have it that way. It is best to hand-carry the RFR's to the bank
as you will need to sign the signature cards for the title change.


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If you have someone (such as a child) as a "signer" on the existing joint account, then
request a "disclaimer form" from the bank so as to have the signer disclaim personal
interest in the account. The (signed) disclaimer form, RFR and the COT will then need to
be presented to the bank's transfer agent to take the joint name off of the account and a
new signature card should be signed by you.

If your bank does not have a disclaimer card method to get the joint signer's name off of
the account then you will have to close the account and open a new account in the name
of the Trust.


SECURITIES/BROKERAGE ACCOUNTS

Each individual security account can be retitled using the RFR letter. If you have many
different securities accounts, you may consider consolidating all of the accounts (stocks,
bonds, mutual funds etc.) into one brokerage/security street name account. This applies
also to using a corporate trustee account if you are working with an independent
Registered Investment Advisor (RIA) holding your accounts with an independent trustee,
before retitling into your trust.

By using a street name brokerage account or a corporate trust account, you need to retitle
only one account (into your trust) and it gives you the added convenience of receiving
only one (consolidated) monthly report. This procedure will also help simplify the
administration of your trust at a later date.


STOCKS & BONDS

If you are personally holding stock and/or bond certificates, you might consider
consolidating them into one brokerage account for trust funding purposes. To do that you
will need to sign a stock/bond power which also needs to be signed by a Signature
Guarantor (bank official or other person authorized under the Securities & Exchange
Commission).

It is not recommended to sign the actual certificate itself (unless required by a transfer
agent); rather, sign only the stock/bond power and attach it to the appropriate
certificate(s). Then, send to the transfer agent of the broker/dealer for retitlement. You
will likely be required to sign a "Letter of Authorization" to transfer stocks or bonds to
your trust. It will be provided, in such case, by the transfer agent where you will need to
sign, fill out and send back with the stock/bond powers and certificates.

Depending on the efficiency of the transfer agent, it may be 4-6 weeks before this whole
transaction is completed. If you do not consolidate your stock and/or bond certificates
into a brokerage account then you must either sign over the certificate itself to the trustee
of your trust or sign a stock/bond power for each certificate and attach the power to the
certificate.

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GOVERNMENT SERIES E/EE BONDS & TREASURY NOTES

The documentation and forms needed for the transfer of Series E/EE bonds and Treasury
Notes to a trust has been simplified. One way is to log on to the www.treasurydirect.gov
website and following the directives.

Trusts can also be named as the beneficiary of a government savings bond; the requests
and procedures to apply that method is similar to transferring the same into your trust.


MUTUAL FUND ACCOUNTS

You will normally need to submit a RFR form for each mutual fund that you are
transferring to your trust. However, certain mutual fund companies require the
transferor's signature to be guaranteed on the RFR.

If you need to have your signature guaranteed, you can usually get this done at your bank
or your broker's office. When mailing the RFRs and/or guaranteed signatory documents,
include a copy of the COT.


CONTRACTUAL INTERESTS

Contractual interests providing a current (or future) cash flow can and should be
transferred to your trust. Also, contracts that guarantee a period of time share use not
otherwise held by a realty deed can be transferred to your trust by a conveyance
document.

Non-deed mineral right interests and royalty and/or patent interests can also be
transferred to your trust with a conveyance document.


QUALIFIED PLAN ACCOUNTS (IRA's & Pension Plans)

Qualified plan accounts should not be transferred to a trust (otherwise incurring a taxable
event). A trust can and should be named either the contingent (or primary) beneficiary of
such accounts because they usually have a POD (Payable on Death) provision wherein
the payee (the trust) will receive the account funds outright and without probate.

Use the appropriate - Request for Contingent Beneficiary (RFCB) - form if you wish to
have another person receive such funds outright if he/she survives you. Thus if such
person (payee) does not survive you then the funds will go to your trust at your death and
avoid probate.


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Use the appropriate - Request for Primary Beneficiary (RFPB) - form if you wish to have
your trust receive such funds at your death regardless of who survives you. Check with
your financial advisor and/or tax counsel for more help, if needed.


ANNUITIES

Generally, annuities should not be transferred to your trust but only payable to your
trust at your death. Depending on the type of estate planning you are doing and the type
of annuity product you have, either a primary or contingent beneficiary designation to
your trust can be appropriate (RFPB or RFCB form) to fit your needs.

If you wish to transfer title of your annuity to your Trust (RFR), check with your advisor
to be sure that an unwanted taxable event will not result before you make such a transfer.


LIFE INSURANCE

Generally, life insurance is not to be transferred to your trust only payable to your trust
at your death. Depending on the type of estate planning you are doing and the type of
insurance product and amount of death benefit (relative to your estate size) you have,
either a primary or contingent beneficiary designation (to your trust) could be appropriate
(RFPB or RFCB form).

If, however, you wish to transfer title of your life insurance to your trust for whatever
reason, be certain that an unwanted income-taxable event will not be the result.


MOTOR VEHICLES

Although the Assignment of Tangible Personal Property form will suffice to transfer
motor vehicles into your trust, it may be more convenient (for administration of your trust
at your death) to retitle your motor vehicles into your trust. This is done by contacting
your local Department of Motor Vehicles. A nominal fee may be charged to process the
title but no taxable event will occur.

If you do retitle motor vehicle ownership documents, make sure to let your insurer know
what you are doing in transferring the motor vehicle to your trust for coverage purposes.
When you subsequently purchase a motor vehicle, you can opt to purchase it as a trustee
thus automatically conveying the vehicle into your trust.


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See Part II Following This Page

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FUNDING YOUR TRUST

PART II

NOTICE: Part II of this material covers an alternative method of trust
funding using asset ledgers, in particular, Electronic Asset Schedules,
provided by the ITS/MLCP Funding Kit.

ORIGINAL (NON-RETITLING) METHODS RESURGENCE

The previous way of trust funding using asset ledgers/schedules rather than the retitling
of assets once considered outdated by modern standards, is circling back into
mainstream use now, and may even be implemented by the application of an electronic
signature (ESIGN). Both the ESIGN and asset-identification-transfer designs are
recognized by federal & state law and can be fully utilized when done properly.

Those original trust-funding methods involved the use of schedules or asset ledgers that
were considered a legal part of the governing trust instrument. With the schedule/ledger
funding method, the grantor (creator) of the trust simply lists his assets on the trusts asset
schedule deemed to be a list of assets that the grantor transferred to the trust. Later it
became more acceptable and recognizable to retitle the asset to the trustee of the trust
rather than to just list the asset on a ledger/schedule.

RECENT CONFIRMATION BY AN APPELLATE COURT
Recently, in Kucker v. Kucker, (2011), 192 CA 4
th
, 90, a California Court of Appeals
reversed a lower probate court decision that had not recognized a transfer of stocks into a
trust based (only) on a general assignment document, signed by the settlor, concerning
all assets owned by the settlor as being transferred to the trustee of his trust.

The California Court of Appeals reversal of the lower court decision agreed with the
petitioner position that a general assignment (by only a generic document) of all or
substantially all of the settlors assets into ones trust causes the stocks to be owned by
the trustee even though the assets in question were not specifically identified.

With its decision, the Appellate Court stated that: There is no California authority
invalidating a transfer of shares of stock to a trust (simply) because a general assignment
of personal property did not identify the shares; nor should there be. An otherwise
certain probate was avoided thanks to a simple general assignment document earlier
signed by the decedent (and an Appellant Court decision).


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THE CLASSIC ASSET-LEDGER/SCHEDULE METHOD
A Declaration of Trust statement by a grantor/settlor declaring to hold certain assets
listed on a schedule (of pledged assets) attached to a trust document can be used to
accomplish the same result as a general assignment document, but in a more clear and
convincing manner.

A recommended schedule of trust assets more adequately shows the grantors intent and
a general statement of transfer. Moreover, unlike the general assignment, the schedule of
trust assets can also even include real estate interests that when defined with a legal
description can show clear and sufficient intent to effect the realty interest transfer even
if a deed to the property is not properly executed prior to the grantors death.

Notwithstanding, it is still recommended that the transfer of realty interest into a trust be
done by a realty deed of transfer. Eventually, a realty deed transfer instrument has to be
created for the ultimate transfer to the trust beneficiaries, and it is the most hassle-free
way to assure the realty interest has been properly transferred to the trust.

ELECTRONIC SIGNATURES
Our ITS/MLCP software applications provide convenient electronic signature dynamics
and are carefully designed to be as effective and safe for the end-user as possible. And,
best of all, the applications are easy to use (and easy to re-use) and help facilitate and
effectuate the trust-funding procedures.

According to the "Electronic Signatures in Global and National Commerce Act"
(ESIGN), the Act a body of law enacted by Congress specifically referred to as The
Consumer Consent Provision in CFR 101(c)(1)(C)(ii) of the "Act" the effect of an
"electronic signature" will be legally sufficient to acknowledge, authenticate, and
validate the signators intent.

The ESIGN Act (federal law) and the Uniform Electronic Transactions Act (UETA)
(state law) affirm that a document or signature cannot be denied legal effect or
enforceability solely because it is in electronic form.

The primary reason the Congress ("ESIGN" law) and the states (EUTA law) codified
the acceptance of electronic signatures was to facilitate e-commerce associated with
efficiency, transactional speed, ease of implementation, simplistic confirmation, and
electronic-record archiving. It is an emerging convenience-related application for the
masses, and the future of how most all legal documents will eventually be implemented.





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THE ITS/MLCP FUNDING KIT

Our proprietary ITS/MLCP Funding Kit has been carefully designed to provide a high
quality, fast, efficient, and effective Trust-Asset-Schedule trust funding experience. (It
can also be used to order Request for Retitlement and/or Beneficiary Change
Request letters if so desired.)

The ITS/MLCP Funding Kit is connected directly to your fingertips as the end user
creator of your trust through the ITS/MLCP password-protected Client Console and is
compatible with our ESIGN dynamics.

The Funding Kits electronic ledger can also be edited at any time by access through
the password protected Client Console to add, subtract, or edit the asset/account
information relative to what is currently deemed as assigned to the trust.

Specially designed HTML entry fields allow the user to enter electronic data in the
Funding Kit pages relative to the institution/vendors name and address as well as the
account identification by type, value and account number. This detailed information is
then posted via the electronic Funding Kit ledger as part of the Trust Asset Schedule.

The electronic dynamics of the Funding Kit also enables the user to enter the Trust
Effective Date directly on the Trust Asset Ledger/Schedule. The Trust Effective Date will
remain the same even though additions and/or subtractions may be made on the Schedule.

Not only can trust funding be implemented through our proprietary ESIGN/EUTA
compliant technology, but it can be additionally verified by the acknowledgment and
verification signature page coordinated as part of the Trust Asset Schedule that is to
be printed out and signed as a sworn document in front of witnesses and a Notary Public.


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