When assets, heirs and testator sit in different jurisdictions whose inheritance and tax rules collide — and the treaties between them are unsigned or suspended — the estate falls into the gap: double inheritance tax, a clash of forced-heirship, frozen assets. The House maps that gap in advance and builds a structure through which the estate passes whole.
The House treats each jurisdiction neutrally — as one of the corridors through which capital passes. First it maps the conflict of rules in advance: where forced-heirship collides, where double tax arises, where assets may freeze. Then it builds a structure that carries the estate through that gap intact, rather than leaving it to the clash of national norms.
What you get: a conflict map of inheritance and tax rules across 3+ jurisdictions with collision points · a register of gaps — where there is no treaty or it is suspended · a structure (holding, foundation or trust) that carries the estate whole · a memo on protection against double taxation and asset freezes
The gap between corridors is mapped, and the estate passes through it whole. Assets do not freeze at the seam, the estate is not taxed twice, and the conflict of rules is resolved before the transfer, not after. Capital that had no single country passes to the heirs as one body — even though the countries shared no single rule.
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