Unless of course the beneficiary is a special needs adult who has a guardian. If that guardian is the parent then again, the parent can act.Sure. If the beneficiary is a minor the parent can file on behalf of the minor if the parent can figure out how. If the parent can't figure out how, then the parent needs a lawyer. If the parent can't figure out how and can't afford a lawyer, nothing changes.
If the beneficiary is over 18, then the beneficiary has to act for himself and the parent won't be allowed to.
You can read maryQ’s other thread:What do you mean when you say the beneficiary is abused?
What type of trust is this--is it a special needs trust?
What is the reason that the trustee says he won't distribute?
Is the beneficiary giving a reason to the trustee as to why the beneficiary wants the payment or does the beneficiary explain how the money is going to be used?
Has this beneficiary received payments from the trust in the past from this trustee?
I have asked Mary to keep all question regarding this matter to her 1st thread...and yet she started this one.One of maryQ’s threads should be locked to future postings. Dandy Don took his questions and replied to first thread. I reported this thread for moderator review.