Trust & estate authors without legalese drift

Trust and estate work is where QPSG shines for non-lawyer authors who still need precision: grantor lines, trustee powers, beneficiary gifts, and pour-over language must stay consistent across dozens of pages. One paste from an old Word trust can reintroduce “hereby grants” and future-tense dispositive clauses overnight.

Issues trust authors report

  • Dispositive future tense — “I give, devise, and bequeath” stacks instead of clear present-tense gift facts.
  • Schedule inconsistency — asset lists use different name formats than the trust body.
  • Title-line corruption — LAST-WILL and TRUST titles pick up duplicate words after auto-replace.
  • Pronoun ambiguity — “he/she” for trustees or beneficiaries when the record requires names.

How the processor helps

  • Certified templates: revocable living trust, irrevocable variants, simple and pour-over wills, living wills.
  • Category filters: TRUSTS and WILLS in the template loader.
  • Analysis flags long sentences, homophones (e.g. heir/air), and structure breaks.
  • Template status panel shows whether your loaded template matches current processor rules.

Related: Trusts · Wills

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