Trusts & Estates - Spring 2013 (88871) | William S. Richardson School of Law
552
LAW
Trusts & Estates

Law School Description

This course revolves around the gratuitous transfer of wealth, beginning with underlying philosophical tensions and broad societal concerns, and then focusing on “who gets it when you go,” including the legal requirements for wills, revocable trusts and other will substitutes, and what happens in the absence of such a document.  Also considered are statutory protections for a decedent’s surviving family members and an array of other related topics, such as powers of appointment, incapacity planning, charitable giving, asset-protection planning, tax planning, and fiduciary responsibility.  Local stories are used to illustrate the impact of trust and estate laws on the lives of real people. 
 

UH Mānoa Catalog Description

Deals primarily with the disposition of family wealth including: the making of wills; the creation, enforcement, administration, and termination of trusts; and intestate succession, including probate.

Credit(s) for this CRN

4

Instructor Approval

No

Competition

No

Bar Course

Full

Clinical Requirement

No

Category

Family Law
Taxation

Textbooks

WILLS, TRUSTS, AND ESTATES
Author: Dukeminier, Sitkoff and Lindgren
Edition: 8th
ISBN: 978-0735579965
This book is required.
Publisher: Aspen

Exam Information

Open Book Final Exam on Saturday, May 4, 2013 at 8:00am - 11:00am in Classroom 2 Email Professor

Instructor(s)

Office Hours

Open door policy

Class Schedule

Sa
9:00am - 12:20pm

Dates

January 7, 2013 to May 10, 2013

Classroom

Classroom 1

Course Reference Number

88871
Account
Pages