1. The beneficiary’s spouse.
2. A grandparent or descendant of a grandparent of the beneficiary.
3. A grandparent or descendant of a grandparent of the beneficiary’s spouse.
127,65Section 65. 701.0307 (title) of the statutes is created to read: 701.0307 (title) Role of a representative or guardian ad litem.
127,66Section 66. 701.0308 of the statutes is created to read: 701.0308 Liability of representative. No representative or guardian ad litem is liable to the beneficiary whose interests are represented, or to anyone claiming through that beneficiary, for any actions or omissions to act made in good faith.
127,67Section 67. 701.0401 (5m) of the statutes is created to read: 701.0401 (5m) A declaration of an intent to create a trust with the intention that the trust will later be funded by assets of the person who created the trust or by another person with legal authority to fund the trust. The person making the declaration is considered to have created the trust, regardless of whether the person funds the trust with the person’s own assets.
127,68Section 68. 701.0402 (1) (e) of the statutes is amended to read: 701.0402 (1) (e) The same person is not the sole trustee and sole beneficiary, and there are no remainder beneficiaries other than the person’s estate.
127,69Section 69. 701.0405 (1) of the statutes is repealed. 127,70Section 70. 701.0408 of the statutes is amended to read: 701.0408 Trust for care of animal. (1) A An animal trust may be created to provide for the care of an animal alive during the settlor’s lifetime. The animal trust terminates upon the death of the animal or, if the animal trust was created to provide for the care of more than one animal alive during the settlor’s lifetime, upon the death of the last surviving animal.
(2) A An animal trust authorized by this section may be enforced by a person appointed in the terms of the trust or, if no person is so appointed, by a person appointed by the court an animal protector. A person having an interest in the welfare of the animal may request the court to appoint a person to enforce the trust or to remove a person appointed under this subsection an animal protector.
(3) Property of a an animal trust authorized by this section may be applied only to its intended use, except to the extent the court determines that the value of the animal trust property exceeds the amount required for the intended use. Property not required for the intended use must be distributed to the settlor, if then living, otherwise to the settlor’s successors in interest.
127,71Section 71. 701.0410 (2) of the statutes is amended to read: 701.0410 (2) A proceeding to approve or disapprove a proposed modification or termination under ss. 701.0411 to 701.0416, or a proposed trust combination or division under s. 701.0417, may be commenced by a trustee or beneficiary, and a proceeding to approve or disapprove a proposed modification or termination under s. 701.0411 may be commenced by the settlor. The settlor of a charitable trust may maintain a proceeding to modify the trust under s. 701.0413. A Except as provided in s. 701.0411 (1m), a trustee does not have standing to oppose a proposed modification or termination commenced under s. 701.0411 (1).
127,72Section 72. 701.0410 (3) of the statutes is amended to read: 701.0410 (3) A trustee may not be compelled by a modification or termination under this section or under ss. 701.0411 to 701.0416 to make distributions to or for any beneficiary of a trust for an individual with a disability or to terminate the trust, during the lifetime of the individual with a disability. A court may modify the terms of a trust for that has an individual with a disability as a beneficiary with retroactive effect or reform the terms of such trust to achieve the settlor’s objective or, if because of circumstances not anticipated by the settlor, to otherwise further the purposes of the trust so that it does not result in trust property being countable as resources or income of the individual with a disability for purposes of public assistance.
127,73Section 73. 701.0411 (1) of the statutes is amended to read: 701.0411 (1) A Except as provided in sub. (1m), a noncharitable irrevocable trust may be modified or terminated, with or without court approval, upon consent of the settlor and all beneficiaries, even if the modification or termination is inconsistent with a material purpose of the trust. A settlor’s power to consent to a trust’s modification or termination may be exercised by a representative under s. 701.0303 only if the representative is specifically authorized to consent to a trust’s modification or termination under a power of attorney, the terms of the trust, or by a court under a guardianship or conservatorship.
127,74Section 74. 701.0411 (1m) of the statutes is created to read: 701.0411 (1m) A trust described in 42 USC 1396p (d) (4) may be terminated or modified under sub. (1) only with consent of the trustee, and is not considered revocable because it lacks ascertainable remainder beneficiaries.
127,75Section 75. 701.0411 (2) (intro.) of the statutes is created to read: 701.0411 (2) (intro.) With the approval of the court, any of the following may occur:
127,76Section 76. 701.0411 (2) (a) of the statutes is amended to read: 701.0411 (2) (a) A noncharitable irrevocable trust may be terminated upon consent of all of the beneficiaries if the court concludes that continuance of the trust is not necessary to achieve any material purpose of the trust.
127,77Section 77. 701.0411 (2) (b) of the statutes is amended to read: 701.0411 (2) (b) A noncharitable irrevocable trust may be modified upon consent of all of the beneficiaries if the court concludes that modification is not inconsistent with a material purpose of the trust.
127,78Section 78. 701.0411 (7) of the statutes is amended to read: 701.0411 (7) A party proposing to modify or terminate a trust under sub. (1) or, (2), or (6) shall give notice of the proposed modification or termination to the settlor, if living, the trustee, each trust protector, each directing party, and each beneficiary at least 30 days before the proposed effective date of the modification or termination.
127,79Section 79. 701.0414 (4) of the statutes is amended to read: 701.0414 (4) The court may modify or terminate a trust or remove the trustee and appoint a different trustee if it determines that the value of the trust property is insufficient to justify the cost of administration even if the trust property has a total value in excess of the amount described in sub. (2).
127,80Section 80. 701.0415 of the statutes is amended to read: 701.0415 Reformation to correct mistakes. The court may reform the terms of a trust, even if unambiguous, to conform the terms to the settlor’s intent intention if it is proved by clear and convincing evidence that both what the settlor’s intent intention was and that the terms of the trust were affected by a mistake of fact or law, whether in expression or inducement. A party petitioning the court for action under this section shall give notice of the proceeding to the settlor, if living, the trustee, each trust protector, each directing party, and the qualified beneficiaries.
127,81Section 81. 701.0416 of the statutes is amended to read: 701.0416 Modification or termination to achieve settlor’s tax objectives. To achieve the settlor’s tax objectives, the court may modify the terms of a trust or terminate a trust in a manner that is not contrary to the settlor’s probable intent. The court may provide that the modification or termination has retroactive effect. A party petitioning the court for action under this section shall give notice of the proceeding to the settlor, if living, the trustee, each trust protector, each directing party, and the qualified beneficiaries.
127,82Section 82. 701.0418 of the statutes is repealed. 127,83Section 83. 701.0505 (1) (a) 2. of the statutes is amended to read: 701.0505 (1) (a) 2. With respect to an irrevocable trust that is not a trust for an individual with a disability, upon application of a judgment creditor of the settlor, the court may, if the trust instrument requires or authorizes the trustee to make payments of income or principal to or for the settlor, order the trustee to satisfy part or all of the judgment out of part or all of the payments of income or principal as they are due, presently or in the future, or which are payable in the trustee’s discretion. A settlor’s right to receive reimbursement for income taxation arising from grantor trust treatment of the trust pursuant to sections 671 to 679 of the Internal Revenue Code is not considered a right to income or principal for purposes of this section. If a trust has more than one settlor, the amount the judgment creditor of a particular settlor may reach may not exceed the settlor’s interest in the trust.
127,84Section 84. 701.0505 (2) (e) 3. of the statutes is amended to read: 701.0505 (2) (e) 3. For purposes of this paragraph, notwithstanding s. 701.0103 (3), “beneficiary” means a person who satisfies s. 701.0103 (3) (a) or (b) and who is designated in a trust instrument or through the exercise of a special nongeneral or general power of appointment.
127,85Section 85. 701.0508 of the statutes is repealed and recreated to read: 701.0508 Debts of deceased settlor. (1) Deadline on claims. A claimant must assert a claim for payment of a debt of a deceased settlor within the time for such claims under applicable law. For purposes of this section, a debt incurred by a trustee of a revocable trust before the death of a settlor of the revocable trust shall be treated in the same manner as a debt of the settlor. A trustee of a trust that was revocable at the settlor’s death may shorten the time period and set a deadline for filing claims with the trustee by doing any of the following:
(a) Publishing a legal notice as a class 3 notice under ch. 985 in the county in which the deceased settlor resided. The legal notice shall identify the name, address, and any other contact information of the trustee or other person with whom claims must be filed. The deadline for a claim by any claimant who is not known by the trustee shall be the earlier of the date that is 4 months after the date of the first insertion of the legal notice or, if sub. (6) is applicable, the deadline prescribed under s. 859.01.
(b) Giving notice to a potential claimant. The notice shall include a copy of the legal notice, if published, and shall identify the name, address, and any other contact information of the trustee or other person with whom claims must be filed and shall state that any claim by the potential claimant must be filed not later than the date that is 30 days from the date notice is given to the potential claimant or the deadline specified in the legal notice. If a legal notice has not been published, the deadline shall be 4 months from the date the trustee provides notice to the potential claimant.
(c) Publishing a legal notice and not giving a separate notice to a potential claimant who is known to the trustee. The deadline for a claim when a legal notice has been published but notice is not given to a known potential claimant is the later of the date that is one year from the date of the settlor’s death or the deadline specified in the legal notice.
(2) Exceptions to deadlines on claims. A claim that is not filed on or before an applicable deadline specified under sub. (1) is not barred if the claim is a claim based on tort, a marital property agreement that is subject to the time limitations under s. 766.58 (13) (b) or (c), Wisconsin income, franchise, sales, withholding, gift, or death taxes, unemployment compensation contributions due or benefits overpaid, funeral or administrative expenses, a claim of this state under s. 46.27 (7g), 2017 stats., or s. 49.496, 49.682, or 49.849, or a claim of the United States.
(3) Filing of claims. (a) A claim is considered filed if the claimant provides notice of the claim to the trustee or other person with whom claims must be filed as prescribed under sub. (1) (a) or (b).
(b) A claim is considered filed if the deceased settlor is subject to a probate proceeding in this state and a claim is filed with the court under ch. 859.
(c) If an action is pending against a deceased settlor at the time of the settlor’s death and the action survives, the plaintiff in that action may serve a notice of substitution of party defendant on the trustee and file proof of service of notice in the court. Filing of proof of service on or before the deadline for filing a claim under sub. (1) gives the plaintiff the same rights against the trust as the filing of a claim.
(4) Effect of statute of limitations. (a) A claim that was barred by a statute of limitations at the time of the deceased settlor’s death is barred and the claimant may not pursue a claim against the trustee, the trust property, or recipients with respect to trust property.
(b) A claim not barred by a statute of limitations at the time of the settlor’s death shall not be barred thereafter by a statute of limitations if the claim is filed on or before the deadline for filing a claim under sub. (1).
(c) A claim that is not filed or is filed after the deadline for filing a claim under sub. (1) is barred and the claimant may not pursue a claim against the trustee, the trust property, or recipients with respect to trust property.
(d) The deadlines established under sub. (1) do not extend the time for commencement of a claim beyond the time provided by any statute of limitations applicable to that claim.
(5) Satisfaction of claim from other property. Failure of a claimant timely to file a claim as provided in this section does not bar the claimant from satisfying the claim, if not otherwise barred, from property other than trust property.
(6) Coordination with probate. If a legal notice has been published with respect to the estate of a deceased settlor who died domiciled in this state, property of a trust that was revocable at the settlor’s death shall be treated as property of the estate solely for purposes of administering claims under ch. 859. The trustee shall be subject to the jurisdiction of the court in which the estate administration is pending. A personal representative, as defined in s. 851.23, shall provide notice to the trustee regarding claims filed against the estate. A claim barred under ch. 859 may not be satisfied from property of a trust that was revocable at the settlor’s death. The trustee and qualified beneficiaries shall have standing to file an objection, offset, or counterclaim with respect to claims filed against the estate. Nothing in this subsection causes property of the trust that otherwise would be exempt from claims to be subject to claims filed against the settlor’s estate. If the trust is not referenced in a deceased settlor’s will, the trustee of a trust that was revocable at the settlor’s death shall provide notice to a personal representative of the settlor’s estate, if any, of the existence of such trust.
127,86Section 86. 701.0509 of the statutes is created to read: 701.0509 Procedures for claims for debts of a deceased settlor; revocable trusts. (1) Scope of applicability. The procedures under this section apply only to claims against a trust that was revocable by the settlor until the settlor’s death.
(2) Form and verification of claims; trustee response to claims. (a) General requirements. A claim shall be in writing, shall describe the nature and amount of the claim, if ascertainable, shall identify the name, address, and any other contact information of the claimant, and shall be sworn to by the claimant or a person on the claimant’s behalf that the amount is justly due, or if not yet due, when it will or may become due, that no payments have been made on the claim that are not credited, and that there are no offsets to the knowledge of the affiant, except as stated in the claim.
(b) Requirements when claim founded on written instrument. If a claim is founded on a written instrument that is available, the original instrument or a copy of the original instrument shall be attached to the claim.
(c) Trustee response to a claim. A trustee does not need to respond to a claim until after the expiration of the deadline for filing a claim against the trust under s. 701.0508. Within 30 days after the later of the receipt of the claim or 30 days after the expiration of the deadline, the trustee shall make a good faith determination of whether the claim is valid, absolute, contingent, or invalid, or whether the trustee will object to the claim, and the trustee shall inform the claimant of the determination. If the trustee decides to object to the claim, the claim may be compromised as provided in sub. (10) or contested as provided under sub. (11). If the trustee determines the claim is invalid, the claimant may object to that determination under sub. (11). If the trustee fails to respond within the applicable period, the claim shall be presumed valid and the claimant may seek enforcement under sub. (11).
(3) Claims not due. If a claim will become due at some future time, the trustee may, or the court with respect to a contested claim may order the trustee to, do any of the following:
(a) Pay the claim in full.
(b) Pay the claim at the present value and in the same manner as in the case of an absolute claim that has been allowed.
(c) Retain sufficient funds to satisfy the claim upon maturity.
(d) Obtain a bond to be given by the distributees for payment in satisfaction of the claim and order the trust to be administered as if the claim had not been filed.
(4) Secured claims. (a) When a claimant holds any security for a claim, the security shall be described in the written claim given to the trustee. The security is sufficiently described if the security document is described by date and by the recording or filing data.
(b) Payment of the claim shall be made on the basis of one of the following:
1. If the creditor surrenders the security, the full amount of the claim.
2. If the creditor realizes on the security before receiving payment, upon the full amount of the claim allowed less the fair value of the security.
(5) Contingent claims. If the amount or validity of a claim cannot be determined until some time in the future, the claim is a contingent claim regardless of whether the claim is based on an event that occurred in the past or on an event that may occur in the future. Except for claims of the type not required to be filed under s. 701.0508 (2), contingent claims must be filed with the trustee as provided under sub. (2). If the trustee determines the claim to be valid subject to the contingency, the determination shall state the nature of the contingency. If the trustee determines the claim to be valid and absolute before distribution of the trust, the claim shall be paid in the same manner as absolute claims of the same class. In all other cases the trustee, or the court in the case of a contested claim, may provide for the payment of contingent claims in any of the following methods:
(a) The claimant and trustee may determine, by agreement, arbitration, or compromise, the value of the claim, according to its probable present worth, and it shall be paid in the same manner as a valid and absolute claim.
(b) The trustee may, or the court may order the trustee to, in the case of a contested claim, make distribution of the trust but retain sufficient funds to pay the claim if and when the same becomes absolute. For this purpose, the trust may not be required to remain intact longer than 2 years after distribution of the remainder of the trust has been made, and if the claim has not become absolute within that time, distribution shall be made to the distributees of the retained funds, after paying any costs and expenses accruing during such period, but the distributees shall be liable to the claimant to the extent provided in sub. (6), if the contingent claim thereafter becomes absolute. When distribution is so made to distributees, the trustee or the court may require the distributees to give bond for the satisfaction of their liability to the contingent claimant.
(c) The trustee may require, or the court, in the case of a contested claim, may order, distribution of the trust as though the contingent claim did not exist, but the distributees shall be liable to the claimant as limited by sub. (7), if the contingent claim thereafter becomes absolute. The trustee or the court may require the distributees to give bond for the satisfaction of their liability to the contingent claimant.
(d) Any other method the trustee determines or the court, in the case of a contested claim, orders.
(6) Payment of contingent claims by distributees. If a contingent claim is filed and the trustee determines the claim to be valid subject to the contingency and all of the assets of the trust, including the fund set apart for the payment of the claim, have been distributed, the claimant may recover on the claim against those distributees, or the persons who furnish bond for the distributees, whose distributive shares have been increased by reason of the fact that the amount of the claim as finally determined was not paid prior to final distribution, if a proceeding for the claim is commenced in court within 6 months after the claim becomes absolute. A distributee or the person who furnishes bond for the distributee shall not be liable for an amount exceeding that person’s proportionate share of the trust subject to the claim, nor for an amount greater than the value of the property that that person received from the trust, the value to be determined as of the time of distribution to the distributee.
(7) Priority of payment of claims and allowances. (a) Classes and priority. At the time a claim is determined to be valid, the claim shall be classified in one of the categories under subds. 1. to 8. The trustee shall pay an absolute claim if the trustee reasonably believes the assets of the trust are sufficient to pay the claim. If the applicable assets of the trust are insufficient to pay the claim in full, the trustee shall make payment in the following order:
1. Costs and expenses of administration.
2. Reasonable funeral and burial expenses.
3. Provisions for the family of the deceased settlor under ss. 861.31, 861.33, and 861.35, which sections are incorporated by reference and applied as if the trust is an estate.
4. Reasonable and necessary expenses of the last illness of the deceased settlor, including compensation of persons attending the deceased settlor.
5. All debts, charges, or taxes owing to the United States, this state, or a governmental subdivision or municipality of this state.
6. Wages, including pension, welfare, and vacation benefits, due to employees that have been earned within 3 months before the date of the death of the deceased settlor, not to exceed $300 in value to each employee.
7. Property assigned to the surviving spouse or surviving domestic partner under s. 861.41, which section is incorporated by reference and applied as if the trust is an estate.
8. All other claims allowed.
(b) No preference within classes. Preference shall not be given in the payment of any claim over any other claim of the same class, nor shall a claim due and payable be entitled to a preference over a claim not due.
(8) Execution and levies prohibited. Garnishment, attachment, or execution shall not issue against, nor shall any levy be made against, any property of the trust under any judgment or cause of action against a deceased settlor or the trustee, but this subsection shall not be construed to prevent the enforcement of mortgages, pledges, liens, or other security agreements upon real or personal property in an appropriate proceeding.