---
name: certificate-of-trust
title: Certificate of Trust
description: Drafts a Certificate of Trust (Abstract/Memorandum of Trust) that verifies trustee authority for third-party reliance without disclosing full trust terms. Use when preparing trust certificates for real estate closings, bank account openings, business transactions, or any context requiring trustee authority verification with UTC-compliant, privacy-preserving disclosure.
author: CaseMark
author_url: https://github.com/CaseMark/skills/tree/main/skills/legal/certificate-of-trust
license: Apache-2.0
version: 0.1.0
execution_mode: open
jurisdiction: us
practice: trusts-and-estates
language: en
tags: [drafting, summary, transactional]
---

# Certificate of Trust

Drafts a privacy-preserving trust summary establishing trustee authority for third-party reliance without disclosing beneficiary details or distribution provisions.

## Prerequisites

Collect before drafting:

- **Trust instrument** — executed agreement with all amendments/restatements
- **Trustee identification** — full legal names, capacities, current acting status
- **Transaction context** — purpose (real estate closing, bank account, business dealing)
- **Governing jurisdiction** — state law; recording jurisdiction if applicable
- **Recipient requirements** — demands from title company, lender, or institution

## Quick Start

Draft a seven-section certificate following this structure. Tailor the powers recital to the specific transaction (e.g., real property sale requires explicit real property authority).

## Certificate Sections

### 1. Header

| Element | Requirement |
|---------|-------------|
| Title | "CERTIFICATE OF TRUST" or "ABSTRACT OF TRUST" per jurisdiction |
| Trust name | Exact legal name from instrument |
| Governing law | State (and county if relevant) |
| Certificate date | Execution date of *this certificate* (not trust creation) |
| Reference number | If recorded or administratively tracked |

### 2. Trust Identification

- Full trust name and exact execution date
- Settlor(s)/grantor(s)/trustor(s) — full legal names
- Revocable or irrevocable status — if changed (death/incapacity), state both statuses with change date
- All amendments listed by date; note effect on revocability

### 3. Trustee Authority

Identify all current trustees by full legal name and capacity:

- [ ] Joint action required vs. independent authority
- [ ] Property powers: buy, sell, mortgage, lease (real and personal)
- [ ] Borrowing, pledging, contracting authority
- [ ] Investment management, business operations, distributions
- [ ] Limitations third parties must know
- [ ] Successor trustees — names and succession triggers

### 4. Material Provisions Summary

**Never disclose**: beneficiary identities, distribution schedules/amounts, detailed asset inventories.

**Do disclose** (general terms only):
- Trust purpose (estate planning, asset protection, charitable)
- Transaction-affecting restrictions (sale limits, consent requirements, borrowing caps)
- Spendthrift/alienation restraints (noted generally)

### 5. Governing Law and Amendment Status

- Governing jurisdiction (state + county if applicable)
- Current revocability status and who holds revocation power
- Amendment/restatement history with dates
- Confirmation certificate reflects trust as currently in effect
- Choice-of-law provisions if multi-state property

### 6. Trustee Certification

Sworn statement under penalty of perjury affirming:

1. Trust is in full force and effect
2. Named trustee(s) are duly qualified and acting
3. Trust has not been revoked/modified/amended except as disclosed
4. Powers described are accurate for the contemplated transaction
5. No undisclosed provisions limit trustee authority
6. Third parties may rely on these representations
7. Trustee accepts personal liability for material misrepresentations

### 7. Execution Block

- Signature line for each acting trustee (name, title, date)
- Notarial acknowledgment using **jurisdiction-specific form**
- Notary confirms personal appearance, identification, free act/deed
- If recorded: comply with local recording requirements (format, margins, font)
- If multi-jurisdiction: assess need for additional acknowledgments

## Pitfalls and Checks

- Every factual statement must be verifiable against the original trust instrument — no legal conclusions
- Balance disclosure sufficiency against beneficiary privacy — this is the certificate's core function
- Confirm whether governing jurisdiction follows UTC §1013 and note any state variations
- If recording in land records, verify local format requirements before execution
- Ambiguity or omission exposes trustee to personal liability and can delay closings
- Use formal legal language; avoid defined terms not established in the certificate itself
