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Note From the Editor: April 2023.Note From the Editor: April 2023.

Editor in Chief Susan R. Lipp discusses this month's issue.

Susan R. Lipp - Moderator, Editor in Chief

March 24, 2023

1 Min Read
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Acceptance of electronic signatures on documents, including those used for estate planning, has been growing for a while. Back in July 2019, the Uniform Law Commission (ULC) approved the Uniform Electronic Wills Act, which allows a will to be written in an electronic medium, electronically signed and electronically validated. During the pandemic, when many clients didn’t want to meet in person, some jurisdictions permitted the electronic signature of estate-planning documents. This trend has continued, and now the ULC has turned its attention to trust documents. As detailed in “New Uniform Law Permits Electronic Signatures on Estate Planning Documents,” p. 17, by Jennifer Smith, Michelle Hong and Riley MacGray, the Uniform Electronic Estate Planning Documents Act, approved in July 2022, permits the electronic execution of all trust-related documents and other non-testamentary estate-planning documents.

We’re also seeing some new trends when it comes to art as an asset class. For example, as illustrated in “Fractional Interests in Artwork,” p. 44, by Anne-Laure Allehaut, it’s now possible to purchase a fractionalized interest in art, including a fractional interest in a nonfungible token. In addition, an estate’s artwork may be located in different jurisdictions, resulting in practical issues that executors and fiduciaries need to plan for when administering such an estate. Those issues are discussed in “Navigating the Estate Administration of Art Collections” by Caryn Young, Sarah Verano, Davis Turner and Olivia Taylor, p. 54.

This month’s issue also contains our Insurance Committee Report, with articles on private placement life insurance, an update on long-term care options, the use of a grantor retained annuity trust to fund life insurance and a template for trustees to use to evaluate irrevocable life insurance trusts.

Read the entire issue.

About the Author

Susan R. Lipp - Moderator

Editor in Chief, Trusts & Estates Magazine

Susan R. Lipp is editor in chief of Trusts & Estates magazine, the WealthManagement.com Journal for estate-planning professionals. She oversees both the print and online version of T & E, as well as the monthly e-newsletter articles.
Susan served in leadership positions at Vendome Group, LLC (formerly Brownstone Publishers, Inc.) with editorial responsibility for publications and newsletters. Following her tenure at Vendome Group, Susan joined Community Housing Improvement Program (CHIP) as General Counsel, where she was editor in chief of its monthly newsletter and implemented initiatives to educate members on legal requirements. Susan began her career at Rosenberg and Estis, P.C., a real estate law firm in New York City.
Susan holds a Bachelor of Arts in Sociology from Brandeis University. She received her Juris Doctor Law degree from Hofstra University School of Law, graduating with distinction and having served as Associate Editor of the Law Review. Susan is admitted to practice law in New York State and is a member of the New York State Bar Association.