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The pet
owner may simply make a gift (either in a will or a
revocable living trust) of the pet and the caretaking
funds to the intended caretaker. This approach may be
entirely appropriate in situations where the caretaker
is very trustworthy, the amount of caretaking funds
involved is relatively small, or it is highly unlikely that the
pet will outlive both the pet owner and the caretaker.
If this
is the case, the pet owner should consider
imposing a condition upon the gift of the caretaking
funds – that the funds will actually be used
for the care of the pet. To be sure, it is
practically unlikely that a condition of this type may
be enforced after the estate has been distributed, but
for what it is worth, it does impose a moral
obligation.
Furthermore, the pet owner should explicitly
indicate whether the condition is a “condition
precedent” (i.e., the caretaker does not receive the
funds unless the pet outlives the pet owner) or a
“condition subsequent” (i.e., the caretaker receives
the funds regardless of whether the pet outlives the
pet owner). If the sole purpose of including an
express gift in the estate planning document is to
provide for the care of the pet, then the pet owner
would probably prefer the former.
Finally,
many of the pet trust statutes provide that a gift will
be liberally construed to impose a statute pet trust
upon the caretaker (as discussed previously). If this
result is not intended, then the drafter should
prepare a provision that to expressly remove
the conditional gift from the statutory scheme.
(See
Sample
Language for Conditional Bequest to Caretaker.) |