1) Why do SSL certificates expire?
When a certificate expires, you're basically saying that this public/private keypair has been abandoned. Technically, you can still use this certificate to encrypt data, but the expiration date is there to mitigate revocations among other things. Additionally, however, in the X.509 spec there are specific reasons outlined for expiration:
4.1.2.5 Validity
The certificate validity period is the time interval during which the
CA warrants that it will maintain information about the status of the
certificate.
CAs publish revocation status information about a certificate and that means they need to keep track of them. When a certificate expires, the CA has done their part for the term of the certificate and stops tracking information for that certificate. You are essentially paying the CA to say with authority that this certificate is valid.
There are other reasons for expiration too. If I was still using a certificate signed in 2002 (which would be possible), the level of encryption probably wouldn't be up to standards used today. By setting an endpoint for the certificate, you are also setting a date on which you need to upgrade.
Now, of course, I don't think you can deny one of the biggest motivators behind the expiration is money [citation needed], but there are at least some technical and reasonable ideas behind it.
2) How many SSL certificates does an organization need / what driving factors help them decide?
It does depend on your organization. A traditional SSL certificate is matched to a domain name. However, anything can be signed with a key pair (developer certificates, etc.). So, for SSL, it'll depend on the number of domains you want to protect. For a traditional cert, www.domain.com and example.domain.com are completely different entities. There are other types of certs that can purchased, like wildcard certs, etc. that will depend on the needs of your business. Seriously, you can get incredibly complex or incredibly simple. Here's a rundown on some of the basic and different types for protecting a website: SSL Certificate Types
3) What benefits does [having a] "Certificate Tree" provide, as opposed to just getting separate certs?
You are basically saying that you trust this CA to generate certificates. That's why browsers have to have the root CA installed to accept a certificate. They are saying, "I trust this authority has only signed certificates for valid and trusted sources."
In practice, it ends up not being the case as a lot of CAs don't rigorously check who they are giving certificates to before issuance. Not always, but it does mitigate some of the danger. The problem is when the CA root certificate private key is compromised because then anyone can fake a legitimate certificate.
Hopefully this answers some of your questions.