Head 19: Breach of Trust Flashcards
What can breach of trust be divided into?
Breach of trust can be subdivided into:
- ultra vires acts,
- breach of fiduciary duty, and
- careless intra vires acts.
Who is responsible for a breach of trust?
The trustees are always responsible, jointly and severally personally liable, also must disgorge personal gains.
Who may raise an action for breach of trust?
⁃ Beneficiaries
⁃ Co-trustees who disagree with what the majority have done
⁃ The Lord Advocate - in public trusts
⁃ For charity trusts the overseeing body OSCAR[ Not sure about spelling.]?
What happens when there is more than one trustee?
⁃ The Trusts (Scotland) Act 1921, s 3(d) states that “each trustee shall be liable only for his own acts and intromissions and shall not be liable for the acts and intromissions of co-trustees and shall not be liable for omissions.”
⁃ BUT this part about omissions is very misleading because trustees are liable for omissions if they fail to carry out their duties.
⁃ In addition a trustee is jointly and severely liable for any breaches that the trustee is party to or that they’ve acquiesced in later - if you are to avoid liability as a co-trustee you really must have your dissent minuted.
⁃ A trustee is also liable if they fail to monitor the co-trustees - thus appropriate action must be taken if the co-trustees are breaching the trust.
What are the principal remedies for a breach of trust?
The principal remedies for breach of trust are
Court: The trustee can then be removed by the court on the petition of the beneficiaries or co-trustees. If there are no trustees then the court can appoint new ones. Former trustees can be sued for the losses of new trustees.
⁃ (a) An action of count, reckoning and payment.
⁃ This is where you suspect either a course of conduct or there is something not quite right but you can’t quite put your finger on it. The court orders production of the accounts which are gone over by forensic accountants and then the courts will make a decision as to whether the trustees owe the beneficiaries or everything is in order.
⁃ (b) Enforcement of trust purposes.
⁃ You can obtain direct orders for the trustees to do various things (e.g. pay the beneficiaries, recover money, pay the creditors etc)
⁃ (c) Damages
⁃ ie payment from the trustee’s private patrimony in respect of loss to the trust patrimony.
⁃ (d) Recovery of trust property from trustee as an individual or third party done.
⁃ E.g. if the trust property has been distributed in error it can be recovered from the person it was distributed to.
⁃ Profits can also be recovered from the trustees that they have made by self-dealing.
Why must the trustees make clear who they are distributing trust property to?
It is dangerous for the trustees to distribute trust property unless it is clear who the beneficiaries are and what they are entitled to do so
⁃ So the trustees should read the trust deed very carefully.
What can the trustees do if matters are still not clear?
If matters are still not clear then the trustees can apply to the Court of Session before acting for:
⁃ (a) Directions under Court of Session Act 1988, s 6 (mainly administrative matters).
⁃ This procedure is quick and does not require a proof etc.
⁃ Taylor Petr, 2000
⁃ (b) A decision on the effect of the trust deed - Special Case (facts must be agreed)
⁃ This is for more important matters e.g. finding out if rights are vested or valid or not or whether the conditions apply or not.
⁃ In these circumstances the facts must be agreed - on the agreed facts the court will give a decision on the legal issue.
⁃ (c) Having the Accountant of Court supervise investments, the payment of creditors or distribution to beneficiaries, 1921 Act s 17.
⁃ This is pretty uncommon these days but what happens is that the trustees remain in control but they are monitored and supervised by a public official.
Taylor Petr, 2000
Trustee was appointed and the documents were so unclear as to whether he’d been properly appointed so an application was made to the Court which then sorted it out.
When are the trustees protected by actions by the beneficiary?
The trustees are protected against any action by the beneficiaries if they follow the directions of the court (but it does take quite a lot of time to do so).
What distinction should be made between breaches of trust?
Again with breaches of trust it is helpful to draw a distinction between ultra vires breaches, breaches of fiduciary duty and intra vires breaches. Breach of trust can be divided into:
(A) Ultra vires breaches
(B) Intra vires breach
(C) Breach of fiduciary duty
What are ultra vires breaches?
⁃ These are actions beyond the trustees powers as set out in the trust deed or the law (there is a list of default powers set out in s 3 and 4 of the Trusts (S) Act 1921[ I think this is the correct Act.]. The trust deed usually adds to the default powers with far wider powers but occasionally they will restrict the powers.This is when they do something outwith their powers such as making unauthorised investment etc.
⁃ As has been covered earlier, ultra vires breaches are legally effective and s 2 of the 1961 Act prevents most of them being challenged by the beneficiaries.
⁃ However the breach of trust action remains against the trustees personally.
⁃ Generally the liability only arises where there has been a loss to the trust patrimony (e.g. if the trust deed says you cannot invest in tobacco shares and the trustees do so regardless and they produce a profit, the beneficiaries will obvious happy rather than annoyed, however in theory the beneficiaries could have the court ordered to such shares sold/such investments disinvested.)
What are the defences to a claim of an ultra vires breach?
- There are very few defences to a claim for damages for an ultra vires act because you ought to know what your powers are and if you don’t you ought to take legal advice or go to court.
⁃ *Lamond’s Trs v Croom 1871 - There is also some statutory protection:
⁃ Under s 24 of the Succession (S) Act 1964 the trustees are liable if they didn’t know that a person had become a beneficiary by adoption.[ Look this up - not sure.]
⁃ Under s 7 of the Law Reform (MP)(S) Act 1968 the trustees and executors are not liable if they are unaware of beneficiaries who were born outwith marriage.
⁃ Under s 31 of the Trusts (S) Act 1921, if a trustee has committed a breach of trust at the instigation or the request of a beneficiary, where the beneficiary was aware that this was outwith the power of the trustees then the trustee is not liable.[ Again look this up because I’m not too clear.]
*Lamond’s Trs v Croom 1871
⁃ There was a deceased Scots merchant in China and the trustees didn’t pay the Chinese creditors properly - they misunderstood the nature of some of the securities over the property. They paid the beneficiaries leaving some of the Chinese creditors unpaid. The court held that the trustees were bound to pay the creditors out of their own pockets because they’d paid beneficiaries when they weren’t entitled to do so (a breach of trust).
⁃ However the court did state that trustees are not insurers - that if the true facts are beyond your knowledge or fairly possible discovery but you’ve made all reasonable efforts to discover the truth but got it wrong then the trustees can be excused.
What is a breach of fiduciary duty?
⁃ 2) Breach of fiduciary duty (auctor in rem suam)
⁃ This concerns the fiduciary relationship between the trustees and the beneficiaries. This really concerns self dealing and the avoidance of conflicts of interest. The law is very heavy on this type of thing.
⁃ A transaction in breach of fiduciary duty is voidable by the beneficiaries[ This is not protected by s 2 since one of the parties is a co-trustee (see earlier)].
⁃ A trustee in breach of fiduciary duties is liable to any loss to the trust patrimony. And any gain made by the trustee can also be recovered (disgorgement of profits)
⁃ Cherry’s Trs v Patrick 1911
Cherry’s Trs v Patrick 1911
⁃ Cherry was a pub owner in Glasgow and Patrick was a wine merchant. He was made one of the trustees and he carried on supplying the pub business which was carried on by the trustees on the best terms he could give. The trustees could not have got the wine at a lower price - they were paying the lowest price they could. Patrick still made a profit, but not very much.
⁃ Patrick and Cherry’s Trustees fell out and the trustees sued Patrick for the profit he had made and they won, because this was a breach of fiduciary duty, even though the trust hadn’t lost money. So Patrick had to disgorge the profits.