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  2. What are contingent beneficiaries? - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/contingent-beneficiaries...

    A contingent beneficiary, often called a secondary beneficiary, is a backup to your primary beneficiary in your life insurance policy. The contingent beneficiary comes into play only when the ...

  3. Contingent beneficiary - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contingent_beneficiary

    A contingent beneficiary is someone who benefits from a contingent contract; they profit from a promise, which may or may be fulfilled, to do or abstain from doing a certain thing. This matter itself is realized only on the happening of some future uncertain event.

  4. What happens if your life insurance beneficiary dies ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/happens-life-insurance...

    Contingent beneficiaries: These are the backup beneficiaries. If the primary beneficiary is no longer alive or unable to receive the money, the contingent beneficiary steps in to receive the payout.

  5. Remainder (law) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Remainder_(law)

    In property law of the United Kingdom and the United States and other common law countries, a remainder is a future interest given to a person (who is referred to as the transferee or remainderman) that is capable of becoming possessory upon the natural end of a prior estate created by the same instrument. [1]

  6. Future interest - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Future_interest

    A contingent remainder is created when a remainder cannot fully vest at the time of granting. This normally occurs in two situations: This normally occurs in two situations: when the property can't vest because the beneficiary is unknown (for example, if the beneficiary is a class subject to open), or

  7. What You Need to Know About Secondary or Contingent Beneficiaries

    www.aol.com/finance/know-secondary-contingent...

    A secondary beneficiary, also called a contingent beneficiary, is a person or entity entitled to get a distribution of assets from an estate or trust after the estate owner's death if the primary ...

  8. Life estate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Life_estate

    The ownership of a life estate is of limited duration because it ends at the death of a person. Its owner is the life tenant (typically also the 'measuring life') and it carries with it right to enjoy certain benefits of ownership of the property, chiefly income derived from rent or other uses of the property and the right of occupation, during his or her possession.

  9. Remainderman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Remainderman

    In common law countries a remainderman is a person who inherits or is entitled to inherit property upon the termination of the estate of the former owner. [1] Usually, this occurs due to the death or termination of the former owner's life estate, but this can also occur due to a specific notation in a trust passing ownership from one person to another.