New Jersey Statutes 3B:19B-25. Disbursements from principal
Terms Used In New Jersey Statutes 3B:19B-25
- Beneficiary: A person who is entitled to receive the benefits or proceeds of a will, trust, insurance policy, retirement plan, annuity, or other contract. Source: OCC
- Common law: The legal system that originated in England and is now in use in the United States. It is based on judicial decisions rather than legislative action.
- Estate: means all of the property of a decedent, minor or incapacitated individual, trust or other person whose affairs are subject to this title as the property is originally constituted and as it exists from time to time during administration. See New Jersey Statutes 3B:1-1
- Mortgage: The written agreement pledging property to a creditor as collateral for a loan.
- Obligation: An order placed, contract awarded, service received, or similar transaction during a given period that will require payments during the same or a future period.
- Remainderman: One entitled to the remainder of an estate after a particular reserved right or interest, such as a life tenancy, has expired.
- Trustee: A person or institution holding and administering property in trust.
(1) commissions allowed by law to a trustee on principal receipts or distributions or on termination of the trust estate;
(2) the remaining one-half of the fees paid to banks and other financial institutions for custodial services, if properly chargeable to the trust;
(3) fees paid to banks and other financial institutions and registered investment advisors for investment advisory or investment management services, if properly chargeable to the trust;
(4) costs of investing and reinvesting principal and payments on the principal of an indebtedness, including a mortgage or security interest amortized by periodic payments of principal;
(5) extraordinary repairs or expenses incurred in making a capital improvement, including special assessments, and disbursements made to prepare property for sale;
(6) court costs, attorneys’ fees, accountants’ fees and other fees, incurred on an accounting or judicial proceeding or in maintaining or defending any action to construe a will or a trust, protect it or the trust estate, or assure the title of any property, unless properly chargeable to income under subsection c. of section 24 of this act or the court otherwise directs;
(7) premiums paid on an insurance policy not described in subsection d. of section 24 of this act of which the trust is the owner and beneficiary;
(8) estate, inheritance and other transfer taxes, including penalties apportioned to the trust;
(9) disbursements related to environmental matters, including reclamation, assessing environmental conditions, remedying and removing environmental contamination, monitoring remedial activities and the release of substances, preventing future releases of substances, collecting amounts from persons liable or potentially liable for the cost of those activities, penalties imposed under environmental laws or regulations and other payments made to comply with those laws or regulations, statutory or common law claims by third parties and defending claims based on environmental matters; and
(10) if an estate or inheritance tax is levied in respect of a trust in which both an income beneficiary and remainderman have an interest, any amount apportioned to the trust, including penalties, even though the income beneficiary also has rights in the principal.
b. If a principal asset is encumbered with an obligation that requires income from that asset to be paid directly to the creditor, the trustee shall transfer from principal to income an amount equal to the income paid to the creditor in reduction of the principal balance of the obligation.
L.2001,c.212,s.25.