Minnesota Statutes 502.87 – Revocation and Release of a Power of Appointment
Subdivision 1.Revocability of a power of appointment.
(a) A power of appointment is irrevocable unless the donor reserves the right to revoke it.
Terms Used In Minnesota Statutes 502.87
- Appointive property: means property which is the subject of a power of appointment. See Minnesota Statutes 502.81
- Deed: The legal instrument used to transfer title in real property from one person to another.
- Donee: The recipient of a gift.
- Donee: means the person to whom a power is given or in whose favor a power is reserved. See Minnesota Statutes 502.81
- Donor: The person who makes a gift.
- Donor: means the person who creates or reserves a power. See Minnesota Statutes 502.81
- Fraud: Intentional deception resulting in injury to another.
- Jurisdiction: (1) The legal authority of a court to hear and decide a case. Concurrent jurisdiction exists when two courts have simultaneous responsibility for the same case. (2) The geographic area over which the court has authority to decide cases.
- Person: may extend and be applied to bodies politic and corporate, and to partnerships and other unincorporated associations. See Minnesota Statutes 645.44
- Power: means an authority to do any act in relation to property, including the creation or revocation of an estate therein or a charge thereon, that the donor of the power might do, except that the term, as used in this chapter, does not apply to a power of attorney to convey property in the name of the owner. See Minnesota Statutes 502.81
- Probate: Proving a will
- Trustee: A person or institution holding and administering property in trust.
(b) An exercise of power of appointment is irrevocable whenever:
(1) the donor of a special power manifests an intent that the exercise of the special power be irrevocable; or
(2) the donee does not manifest in the instrument exercising the power an intent to reserve a power of revocation.
(c) If the donee in exercising a power reserves a power to revoke the appointment, but does not expressly reserve a power to reappoint, upon the exercise of the power of revocation, the donee may reappoint.
(d) An instrument exercising a power of appointment is affected by fraud in the same manner as a deed or will executed by an owner or by a trustee of property.
Subd. 2.Release of a power of appointment.
(a) Any power of appointment, whether exercisable only by deed, only by will, or by either deed or will, and whether general or special, exclusive or nonexclusive, is releasable, either with or without consideration, by written instrument signed by the donee of the power and delivered as provided in paragraph (c).
(b) A releasable power of appointment may be released with respect to all or any part of the appointive property and may also be released in a manner as to reduce or limit the appointees, or classes of appointees, in whose favor the power is exercisable.
(c) A release may be delivered to any of the following persons in the order provided:
(1) any person specified for this purpose in the instrument creating the power;
(2) if no person is specified as provided in clause (1), any trustee of the property subject to the power; or
(3) if no person is specified as provided in clause (1) or serving as trustee as provided in clause (2), any person, other than the donee, who might be adversely affected by an exercise of the power.
(d) In addition to the provisions of paragraph (c), a release may be delivered to the county clerk of the county in which the donee resides or has a place of business or in which the instrument creating the power is filed, to be duly filed by the clerk upon the payment of the fees due for the filing or, if the power was created by will, to the clerk of the probate court having jurisdiction over the estate of the donor.
(e) This section applies to releases delivered on or after January 1, 2016.