CESTUI QUE TRUST

cestui que trust (set-ee [orses-twee] kee [or k<<schwa>>] tr<<schwa>>st). [Law French] Archaic. One who possesses equitable rights in property, usu. receiving the rents, issues, and profits from it; BENEFICIARY. — Also termed fide-commissary; fidei-commissarius. Pl. cestuis que trust or (erroneously) cestuis que trustent.[Cases: Trusts  139. C.J.S. Trover and Conversion  § 251.] “[A]n alternative name for the beneficiary is ‘cestui que trust,’ an elliptical phrase meaning ‘he [for]= whose [benefit the] trust [was created].’ In this phrase cestui is pronounced ‘settee’ (with the accent on the first syllable), que is pronounced ‘kee,’ and trust as in English. Grammatically the plural should be cestuis que trust (pronounced like the singular); but by an understandable mistake it is sometimes written cestuis que trustent, as if trust were a verb.” Glanville Williams, Learning the Law 10 (11th ed. 1982). [Blacks Law 8th]