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702.205(1)(1)In this section, “adverse party” means a person with a substantial beneficial interest in appointive property that would be affected adversely by a powerholder’s exercise or nonexercise of a power of appointment in favor of the powerholder, the powerholder’s estate, a creditor of the powerholder, or a creditor of the powerholder’s estate.
702.205(2)(2)If a powerholder may exercise a power of appointment only with the consent or joinder of an adverse party, the power is a nongeneral power of appointment.
702.205(3)(3)If the permissible appointees of a power of appointment are not defined and limited, the power is an exclusionary power of appointment.
702.205 HistoryHistory: 2023 a. 127.
702.206702.206Power to revoke or amend. A donor may revoke or amend a power of appointment only to the extent that any of the following applies:
702.206(1)(1)The instrument creating the power is revocable by the donor.
702.206(2)(2)The donor reserves a power of revocation or amendment over the power of appointment in the instrument.
702.206 HistoryHistory: 2023 a. 127.
subch. III of ch. 702SUBCHAPTER III
EXERCISE OF POWER OF APPOINTMENT
702.301702.301Requisites for exercise of power of appointment.
702.301(1)(a)(a) A power of appointment is exercised only if all of the following apply:
702.301(1)(a)1.1. The instrument exercising the power is valid under applicable law.
702.301(1)(a)2.2. The terms of the instrument exercising the power do all of the following:
702.301(1)(a)2.a.a. Manifest the powerholder’s intent to exercise the power.
702.301(1)(a)2.b.b. Subject to s. 702.304, satisfy the requirements of exercise, if any, imposed by the donor.
702.301(1)(b)(b) A power of appointment is exercised under par. (a) only to the extent the appointment is a permissible exercise of the power.
702.301(2)(2)If the donor requires the consent of the donor or any other person for the exercise of a power of appointment, the consent must be expressed in the instrument exercising the power of appointment or in a separate written instrument, signed in either case by the persons whose consent is required. If any person whose consent is required dies or becomes legally incapable of consenting, the power of appointment may be exercised by the powerholder without the consent of that person unless the terms of the instrument creating the power of appointment manifest a contrary intent.
702.301(3)(a)(a) Except as provided in par. (b) and unless the terms of the instrument creating a power of appointment manifest a contrary intent, if a power of appointment is vested in 2 or more persons, the joint powerholders may only exercise the power of appointment unanimously.
702.301(3)(b)(b) If a power of appointment is vested in 2 or more persons and one or more of the joint powerholders die, become incapable of exercising the power of appointment, or renounce, release, or disclaim the power of appointment, the power of appointment may be exercised unanimously by the other powerholders.
702.301 HistoryHistory: 2023 a. 127.
702.302702.302Intent to exercise: determining intent from residuary clause.
702.302(1)(1)In this section:
702.302(1)(a)(a) “Residuary clause” does not include a residuary clause containing a blanket-exercise clause or a specific-exercise clause.
702.302(1)(b)(b) “Will” includes a codicil and a testamentary instrument that revises another will.
702.302(2)(2)A residuary clause in a powerholder’s will, or a comparable clause in the powerholder’s revocable trust, manifests the powerholder’s intent to exercise a power of appointment only if all of the following apply:
702.302(2)(a)(a) The terms of the instrument containing the residuary clause do not manifest a contrary intent.
702.302(2)(b)(b) The power of appointment is a general power of appointment exercisable in favor of the powerholder’s estate.
702.302(2)(c)(c) There is no gift-in-default clause in the instrument creating the power of appointment or the gift-in-default clause in the instrument creating the power of appointment is ineffective.
702.302(2)(d)(d) The powerholder did not release the power of appointment.
702.302 HistoryHistory: 2023 a. 127.
702.303702.303Intent to exercise: after-acquired power. Unless the terms of the instrument exercising a power of appointment manifest a contrary intent, all of the following apply:
702.303(1)(1)Except as otherwise provided in sub. (2), a blanket-exercise clause extends to a power of appointment acquired by the powerholder after executing the instrument containing the clause.
702.303(2)(2)If the powerholder is also the donor of the power of appointment, a blanket-exercise clause does not extend to the power of appointment unless there is not a gift-in-default clause or the gift-in-default clause is ineffective.
702.303 HistoryHistory: 2023 a. 127.
702.304702.304Substantial compliance with donor-imposed formal requirement. A powerholder’s substantial compliance with a formal requirement of appointment imposed by the donor, including a requirement that the instrument exercising the power of appointment make reference or specific reference to the power, is sufficient if all of the following apply:
702.304(1)(1)The powerholder knows of and intends to exercise the power of appointment.
702.304(2)(2)The powerholder’s manner of attempted exercise of the power of appointment does not impair a material purpose of the donor in imposing the requirement.
702.304 HistoryHistory: 2023 a. 127.
702.305702.305Permissible appointment.
702.305(1)(1)A powerholder of a general power of appointment that permits appointment to the powerholder or the powerholder’s estate may make any appointment, including an appointment in trust or creating a new power of appointment, that the powerholder could make in disposing of the powerholder’s own property.
702.305(2)(2)A powerholder of a general power of appointment that permits appointment only to the creditors of the powerholder or the creditors of the powerholder’s estate may appoint only to those creditors.
702.305(3)(3)Unless the terms of the instrument creating a power of appointment manifest a contrary intent, the powerholder of a nongeneral power of appointment may do any of the following:
702.305(3)(a)(a) Make an appointment in any form, including an appointment in trust, in favor of a permissible appointee.
702.305(3)(b)(b) Create a general or nongeneral power of appointment in a permissible appointee that may be exercisable in favor of persons other than permissible appointees of the original nongeneral power of appointment.
702.305(3)(c)(c) Create a nongeneral power of appointment in any person to appoint to one or more of the permissible appointees of the original nongeneral power of appointment.
702.305 HistoryHistory: 2023 a. 127.
702.306702.306Appointment to a deceased appointee. Subject to s. 854.06, an exercise of a power of appointment is ineffective to the extent it is in favor of a deceased appointee.
702.306 HistoryHistory: 2023 a. 127.
702.307702.307Impermissible appointment.
702.307(1)(1)Except as otherwise provided in s. 702.306, an exercise of a power of appointment is ineffective to the extent it is in favor of an impermissible appointee.
702.307 HistoryHistory: 2023 a. 127.
702.307(2)(2)An exercise of a power of appointment in favor of a permissible appointee is ineffective to the extent the appointment is a fraud on the power.
702.307 HistoryHistory: 2023 a. 127.
702.308702.308Selective allocation doctrine. If a powerholder exercises a power of appointment in a disposition that also disposes of property the powerholder owns, the owned property and the appointive property must be allocated in the permissible manner that best carries out the powerholder’s intent.
702.308 HistoryHistory: 2023 a. 127.
702.309702.309Capture doctrine: disposition of ineffectively appointed property under general power. To the extent a powerholder of a general power of appointment, other than a power to withdraw property from, revoke, or amend a trust, makes an ineffective appointment, all of the following apply:
702.309(1)(1)The gift-in-default clause controls the disposition of the ineffectively appointed property.
702.309(2)(a)(a) If there is no gift-in-default clause or to the extent the gift-in-default clause is ineffective, the ineffectively appointed property passes to one of the following:
702.309(2)(a)1.1. If the powerholder is a permissible appointee and living, the powerholder.
702.309(2)(a)2.2. If the powerholder is an impermissible appointee or deceased, the powerholder’s estate if the estate is a permissible appointee.
702.309(2)(b)(b) If there is no taker under par. (a), the ineffectively appointed property passes under a reversionary interest to the donor or the donor’s transferee or successor in interest.
702.309 HistoryHistory: 2023 a. 127.
702.310702.310Disposition of unappointed property under released or unexercised general power. To the extent a powerholder releases or fails to exercise a general power of appointment other than a power to withdraw property from, revoke, or amend a trust, all of the following apply:
702.310(1)(1)The gift-in-default clause controls the disposition of the unappointed property.
702.310(2)(a)(a) If there is no gift-in-default clause or to the extent the gift-in-default clause is ineffective, except as otherwise provided in par. (b), the unappointed property passes to any of the following:
702.310(2)(a)1.1. If the powerholder is a permissible appointee and living, the powerholder.
702.310(2)(a)2.2. If the powerholder is an impermissible appointee or deceased, the powerholder’s estate if the estate is a permissible appointee.
702.310(2)(b)(b) To the extent the powerholder released the power, or if there is no taker under par. (a), the unappointed property passes under a reversionary interest to the donor or the donor’s transferee or successor in interest.
702.310 HistoryHistory: 2023 a. 127.
702.311702.311Disposition of unappointed property under released or unexercised nongeneral power of appointment. To the extent a powerholder releases, ineffectively exercises, or fails to exercise a nongeneral power of appointment, all of the following apply:
702.311(1)(1)The gift-in-default clause controls the disposition of the unappointed property.
702.311(2)(a)(a) If there is no gift-in-default clause or to the extent the gift-in-default clause is ineffective, the unappointed property passes to the permissible appointees if all of the following apply:
702.311(2)(a)1.1. The permissible appointees are defined and limited.
702.311(2)(a)2.2. The terms of the instrument creating the power do not manifest a contrary intent.
702.311(2)(b)(b) If there is no taker under par. (a), the unappointed property passes under a reversionary interest to the donor or the donor’s transferee or successor in interest.
702.311 HistoryHistory: 2023 a. 127.
702.312702.312Disposition of unappointed property if partial appointment to taker in default. Unless the terms of an instrument creating or exercising a power of appointment manifest a contrary intent, if the powerholder makes a valid partial appointment to a taker in default of appointment, the taker in default of appointment may share fully in unappointed property.
702.312 HistoryHistory: 2023 a. 127.
702.313702.313Appointment to taker in default. If a powerholder makes an appointment to a taker in default of appointment and the appointee would have taken the property under a gift-in-default clause had the property not been appointed, the power of appointment is considered not to have been exercised and the appointee takes under the gift-in-default clause.
702.313 HistoryHistory: 2023 a. 127.
702.314702.314Powerholder’s authority to revoke or amend exercise. A powerholder may revoke or amend an exercise of a power of appointment only to the extent that any of the following applies:
702.314(1)(1)The powerholder reserves a power of revocation or amendment in the instrument exercising the power of appointment and, if the power is a nongeneral power of appointment, the terms of the instrument creating the power of appointment do not prohibit the reservation.
702.314(2)(2)The terms of the instrument creating the power of appointment provide that the exercise of the power of appointment is revocable or amendable.
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2023-24 Wisconsin Statutes updated through all Supreme Court and Controlled Substances Board Orders filed before and in effect on January 1, 2025. Published and certified under s. 35.18. Changes effective after January 1, 2025, are designated by NOTES. (Published 1-1-25)