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Arizona Trust Property May be Conveyed by a Beneficiary Deed

Posted on : December 17, 2016, By:  Christopher Hildebrand

Arizona Trust Property May Be Conveyed by a Beneficiary Deed


The Arizona Court of Appeals recently considered for the first time in Arizona whether Arizona trust property may be conveyed by a beneficiary deed. The court answered no in the matter of In Re Augusta Ganoni, No. 1 CA-CV 14-0240 (App. 2015).

Ganoni executed a beneficiary deed to transfer her home to her attorney upon her death. The home was, at the time of execution of the deed, property of Ganoni’s Arizona Revocable Trust.

Ganoni was both settlor and trustee of the Trust. Ganoni signed the beneficiary deed in her capacity as trustee and directed that

the home transfer to her attorney upon her death. Subsequently, Ganoni changed her Trust, including the provision granting her attorney her home. Upon Ganoni’s death, a formal probate was filed and Ganoni’s attorney sought her home. The trial court refused to conclude the home was a trust asset and could not be conveyed using a beneficiary deed, under A.R.S. § 33-405.

AZ Trust v Beneficiary Deed | The Court of Appeals’ Ruling

The Court of Appeals looked to A.R.S. §33-405 to determine whether the “owner” who executes a beneficiary deed under the statute must be a natural person. It concluded that the language in A.R.S. § 33-405 “clearly indicates that only a natural person may execute a beneficiary deed.” The court refused to expand A.R.S. § 33-405 to include trustees and trust property, noting that the statute clearly directs that a beneficiary deed controls over conflicting provisions in a will.

Contact our experienced Arizona Estate Planning Attorneys at (480)947-4339.