What is a Land Trust?
Wednesday, August 20th, 2008This article was re-printed from the Denver Post, dated July 13, 2008 by Tom LaRoque.
Landlords incur risks from all sides. They are often seen as wealthy, particularly by the people who write them monthly checks. Their tenants have ample opportunity to develop grievances, real or invented.
The risks call for self-protection, said lawyer William Bronchick. Among all professions, landlords face the greatest threat of being sued, he said.
An active real estate investor and president of the Colorado Association of Real Estate Investors, Bronchick sells do-it-yourself software to help savvy property owners protect themselves with the right legal structure. It is one of several products sold for that purpose.
The right legal structure, he said, often includes a land trust. Such an agreement allows one party, called the trustee, to hold ownership of property for the benefit of another, called the beneficiary.
Land trusts offer several advantages to property owners under the broad headings of privacy, protection from liability, and tax minimization, according to Bronchick.
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