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66.In this context a nominee is a person appointed by the trustees to hold trust property in his or her own name. Thus, a person may be registered as the owner of certain shares in a company but may in fact hold them as nominee for a trust.
The states of California, Colorado, Missouri, and Nevada have trust laws that allow trustees to hold title to property for a NAMED TRUST (note that its just a trust, not a land trust). With the guidance of a knowledgeable lawyer, you can actually form a land trust in most states, even in Louisiana.
Trust is the best way. It avoids taxes since the trust is the legal owner and the trust does not die, thus no inheritance taxes. You can pass a trust to someone without any tax liabilities, and the trust goes with everything it owns.
Nominee trusts can be used to avoid reporting the ownership of real estate on the public record. The deed, or other filed document, lists the trustee but not the undisclosed principals. Nominee trusts can be used to avoid shares being registered in the names of the beneficiaries.
The biggest problem with nominee trusts is that people often lose their schedule of beneficial interests. Its not uncommon to lose documents created decades ago - especially if there were created before cloud storage was an option.
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In a Nominee Trust the beneficiaries direct the trustee and may even serve as the trustee. Also, unlike an irrevocable trust, the beneficiaries of an NT may terminate the trust at any time and take full ownership of the trust property as tenants in common.

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