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Charitable Trust

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The main aim of charitable trusts is for benefit purposes and it is not for individual beneficiaries or objects. Also, charitable trusts must considere to be of such value and importance to the community that they receive favourable treatment. Lord Macnagthen summarized these purposes into four categories. These are the relief of poverty, the promotion of education, the advancement of religion, and all other purposes beneficial to the community1. In order to be charitable, each disposition must contain a public benefit as seen in IRC v Baddeley2, and the purpose must be wholly and exclusively charitable in Williams' Trustees v IRC3. The issue in Caesar's first will might falls under charitable trust for advancement of education and trusts for other purposes for the community. In the Charities Bill 2005, it states that any amateur sporting activities which fall within an educational context may in principle be promoted as...

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