TRUSTEE POWERS AND DUTIES Flashcards
Issues:
Trustee powers
Trustee duties owed to the beneficiary and remedies
Trustee duties owed to third persons
Trustee Powers
[A] Trustee has all enumerated powers.
[B] Trustee has all implied powers, too.
Implied Trustee Powers
- Power to sell trust property
- The power to incur expenses
- Power to lease
- Power to borrow
Trustee Duties Owed to Beneficiaries
- Duty of Loyalty
- Duty to Invest
- Duty to Earmark
Duty of Loyalty
[1] Definition:
Requires that the trustee administer the trust for the
benefit of the beneficiaries (implicitly, trustee must be
impartial), having no other consideration in mind.
No Self-Dealing by the Trusteee
Examples of self-dealing:
[a] Trustee prefers one beneficiary, his child, over the other beneficiaries
[b] Trustee sells trust property to trustee’s spouse
[c] Trustee-lawyer hires himself
Consequences of finding breach of the duty of loyalty or selfdealing:
[a] If there is a loss, the trustee is “surcharged,” meaning that the trustee has to make good the loss.
[b] If the trustee makes a personal profit, then with respect to those ill-gotten profits, the trustee is a constructive
trustee: must turn over those profits to the intended
beneficiary.
Duty to Invest: Split of authority: There are three alternative rules of
the duty to invest. Discuss all three on the bar exam.
- State lists:
- Common law prudent person test:
- Uniform Prudent Investor Act:
State Lists
Some states have lists which trustee must follow in
the absence of directions in the trust. Good investments in these jurisdictions are:
- Federal Government Bonds
- Federally Insured Certificates of Deposit
- First Deeds of Trust in Real-estate
- Sometimes stocks of publicly traded corporations
- Never invest in a new business.
- Never invest in second deeds of trust in real estate.
Common law prudent person test:
The duty to invest requires the trustee to act as reasonably prudent person investing hisown property, trying to maximize income while preserving
corpus. If the trustee holds himself out as having greater skill, he is held to that higher standard.
[a] Key: Each individual investment is scrutinized.
Good investments under the common law test:
- Federal Government Bonds
- First Deeds of Trust in Real-estate
- Federally Insured Certificates of Deposit
- Blue Chip Stocks
- Mutual Funds
- Never invest in a new business.
- Never invest in second deeds of trust in real estate.
Uniform Prudent Investor Act:
Adopted by most states: The act simply provides that the trustee must invest as a “prudent investor.”
[a] Key: Unlike the rules above (the state lists approach and the common law prudent person test), each individual investment is not scrutinized, but, rather, performance is measured in the context of the entire trust portfolio.
Thus, any investment is not per se invalid. Consequently, even derivatives or futures contracts (investments absolutely prohibited under state lists standard or the common law reasonably prudent person standard) may be appropriate in the context of an entire portfolio.
Miscellaneous rules regarding the duty to invest:
- Under any standard, the trustee has a duty to diversify
- Under the first two rules (state lists and the common law prudent person test), no speculating allowed.
What if trustee breaches the duty to invest?
In any jurisdiction, trustee must make good the loss. If there is a profit, the beneficiaries affirm the transaction. If the trustee makes two investments that breach the duty to
invest, one makes money and the other loses money, the
trustee is surcharged for the loss while the beneficiaries
affirm the transaction that made money. No netting
allowed by the trustee.
Duty to Earmark
[1] Defined:
This requires the trustee label trust property as property