Is a Gun Trust Necessary?
What is a Gun Trust?
A Gun Trust is a type of Trust similar to a Living Trust that takes ownership of your firearms and ensures an orderly and legal transfer of the guns at your death.
Name one or multiple Trustees responsible for transferring your firearms when you die. You can name Successor Trustees if a single Trustee is unavailable or not qualified to serve as Trustee. You also name the beneficiaries who will receive the firearms at your death.
The Gun Trust is revocable, meaning you can change it anytime if you wish to change the Trustee or the beneficiary.
Title I and Title II
The National Firearms Act (NFA) defines Title II firearms as:
- Machine guns (including machine pistols such as a Glock pistol with a conversion switch),
- Short-barreled shotguns ( less than 18 inches in length),
- Short-barreled rifles ( a barrel less than 16 inches),
- Destructive devices ( any explosive such as grenades and missiles),
- Silencers
- AOWs ( such as wallet and pen guns).
The NFA excludes antique firearms manufactured before 1898 from regulations unless ammunition becomes readily available.
Title I is the classification of all other firearms, such as ordinary rifles, pistols, revolvers & shotguns, and they are only subject to individual state licensing requirements. However, the ATF requires registration of all Title II Firearms.
Do You Need a Gun Trust?
If you own any Title II firearms, you need a Gun Trust.
Any violation of a federal firearm law, intentionally or unintentionally, can result in the loss of the firearms, fines of up to $10,000, and sentences of up to 10 years.
A Gun Trust allows any trustee of the trust to possess a Title II firearm legally. While all Trustees must comply with the same background and identification checks, the Trust can avoid potentially disastrous consequences.
A felony charge is at risk if someone borrows your vehicle with a Title II firearm. Suppose you let a friend fire off a few rounds with your Title II firearm. Your friend is subject to the same felony charge, as only the registered Title II gun owner can use the firearm.
When a Gun Trust owns a Title II firearm, you can solve many issues by having multiple Trustees.
Without a Gun Trust that names qualified beneficiaries, the issue becomes compounded at your death, with your legal representative and family members at risk of felony charges.
In addition to these serious risks, the years-long Probate process will control your firearms ownership.
How is a Gun Trust different than a Living Trust?
Your Gun Trust controls your firearms, and your Living Trust controls all your other assets. Both are private and avoid Probate. Remember, if you only have a couple of Title I firearms, your legal representatives and beneficiaries are at risk depending on state laws.
A few Title I firearms can be transferred efficiently by your Living Trust. However, you should also consider the protections of a Gun Trust if you own multiple Title I firearms.
You can contact me at any time for more information on Gun Trusts.
Living Trusts
At the end of your life or incapacitation, they risk Probate if you have property, investments, or bank accounts in your name.
- A Will = Probate. The rule is no one can legally sign your name. Therefore, at your death or incapacity, all assets in your name are subject to the complete Probate process, which averages 18 months and is costly.
- A fully funded Living Trust completely avoids Probate.
- A Living Trust estate plan includes Health Care and Financial Power of Attorney documents and a Last Will and Testament for guardianship of minor children and to “pour over” any assets still in your name at your death out of Probate.
- Your life insurance policies and deferred compensation accounts can name your Living Trust as beneficiary, subject to essential tax considerations.
Contact us today for further information or visit Tuohy Law Offices now.
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Oakbrook Terrace, Illinois, 60181
This blog entry is for information and planning purposes. Therefore, it is not legal advice. Please do not use this blog as legal advice, which turns on specific facts and laws in specific jurisdictions. No reader of this blog should act or refrain from acting based on any information included in, or accessible through, this blog without seeking the appropriate legal or other professional advice on the particular facts and circumstances at issue from a lawyer licensed in the reader’s state, country or other appropriate licensing jurisdiction.
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