THE APPOINTMENT OF A TRUSTEE
Some owners of large estates have built them up carefully and steadily over a period of years. Others, by bold risks on tho speculative principle, “nothing venture, nothing win," have quickly attained a position of wealth. Whether the possessor of an estate has, or has not, a speculative disposition, he must exercise prudence and care when it comes io settling the disposition of his estate. He knows that he has no light to risk his family's fortune by making a defective will or a will in which the vital matter of executorship and trusteeship is not settled in a manlier to safeguard his dependents. Careful thought on this question has induced many testators with lnrge estates to choose the Public Trustee to be their executor and trustee. This example is being followed by many others with the same cautious consideration for the future of their families. D—ll
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Bibliographic details
New Zealand Times, Volume LIII, Issue 12508, 26 July 1926, Page 6
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152THE APPOINTMENT OF A TRUSTEE New Zealand Times, Volume LIII, Issue 12508, 26 July 1926, Page 6
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