D R A F T
FOR DISCUSSION ONLY
UNIFORM STATUTORY TRUST ENTITY ACT
NATIONAL CONFERENCE OF COMMISSIONERS
ON UNIFORM STATE LAWS
For April 20-22, 2007 Drafting Committee Meeting
With Prefatory Notes and Comments
Copyright 82007
By
NATIONAL CONFERENCE OF COMMISSIONERS
ON UNIFORM STATE LAWS
____________________________________________________________________________________________
The ideas and conclusions
set forth in this draft, including the proposed statutory language and any comments
or reporter=s notes, have not been passed upon by the National
Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws or the Drafting
Committee. They do not necessarily
reflect the views of the Conference and its Commissioners and the Drafting
Committee and its Members and Reporter.
Proposed statutory language may not be used to ascertain the intent or
meaning of any promulgated final statutory proposal.
DRAFTING COMMITTEE ON UNIFORM STATUTORY TRUST ENTITY ACT
The Committee appointed by and
representing the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws in
preparing this Act consists of the following individuals:
JUSTIN L. VIGDOR, 2400 Chase Square, Rochester, NY 14604, Chair
THOMAS J. BUITEWEG, 200 Renaissance Ct., Mail Code 482-B09-B11, P.O. Box 200, Detroit, MI 48265-2000
ANN E. CONAWAY, Widener University School of Law, 4601 Concord Pike, Wilmington, DE 19803
THOMAS L. JONES, University of Alabama School of Law, P.O. Box 865557, Tuscaloosa, AL 35486‑0050
DIMITRI G. KARCAZES, 55 E. Monroe St., Suite 3300, Chicago, IL 60603
JOHN H. LANGBEIN, Yale Law School, P.O. Box 208215, New Haven, CT 06520-8215
L. GENE LEMON, 1136 W. Butler Dr., Phoenix, AZ 85021‑4428
HARRY M. WALSH, 456 Summit Ave. #206, St. Paul, MN 55102
ROBERT H. SITKOFF, New York University School of Law, 40 Washington Square South, New York, NY 10012, Reporter
EX OFFICIO
HOWARD J. SWIBEL,
120 S. Riverside Plaza, Suite 1200, Chicago, IL 60606, President
LANI LIU EWART, 1099 Alakea St., Suite 1800, Honolulu, HI 96813, Division Chair
AMERICAN BAR ASSOCIATION ADVISOR
ELLISA OPSTBAUM HABBART, 300 Martin Luther King Blvd., Suite 200, Wilmington, DE 19801, ABA Advisor
WILLIAM H. CLARK, JR., One Logan Square, 18th and Cherry Streets, Philadelphia, PA 19103-6996, ABA Section Advisor
THOMAS E. RUTLEDGE, 2000 PNC Plaza, 500 W. Jefferson St., Louisville, KY 40202-2874, ABA Section Advisor
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
JOHN A. SEBERT, 211 E. Ontario St., Suite 1300, Chicago, IL 60611, Executive Director
Copies of this Act may be obtained from:
NATIONAL CONFERENCE OF COMMISSIONERS ON UNIFORM STATE LAWS
211 E. Ontario Street, Suite 1300
Chicago, Illinois 60611
312/915‑0195
www.nccusl.org
UNIFORM STATUTORY
TRUST ENTITY ACT
TABLE OF CONTENTS
SECTION 103.
DEFAULT AND MANDATORY RULES.
SECTION 104. SCOPE
OF GOVERNING INSTRUMENT
SECTION 105.
APPLICABILITY OF TRUST LAW
SECTION 106. RULES
OF CONSTRUCTION
FORMATION;
CERTIFICATE OF TRUST AND OTHER FILINGS; PROCESS
SECTION 201.
CERTIFICATE OF TRUST
SECTION 202.
AMENDMENT OR RESTATEMENT OF CERTIFICATE OF TRUST
SECTION 203.
STATEMENT OF CANCELLATION
SECTION 204.
SIGNING OF RECORDS
SECTION 205.
DELIVERY TO AND FILING OF RECORDS BY [SECRETARY OF STATE]; EFFECTIVE
TIME AND DATE
SECTION 206.
CORRECTING FILED RECORD
SECTION 207.
CERTIFICATE OF EXISTENCE OR REGISTRATION
SECTION 208. ADMINISTRATIVE DISSOLUTION
SECTION 209. NAME
OF STATUTORY TRUST
SECTION 210.
RESERVATION OF NAME
SECTION 211. AGENT
FOR SERVICE OF PROCESS
SECTION 212.
CHANGE OF DESIGNATED OFFICE OR AGENT FOR SERVICE OF PROCESS
SECTION 213.
RESIGNATION OF AGENT FOR SERVICE OF PROCESS
SECTION 214.
SERVICE OF PROCESS
[SECTION 215.
ANNUAL REPORT FOR [SECRETARY OF STATE]
AUTHORIZATION;
GOVERNING LAW; DURATION; POWERS
SECTION 301.
STATUTORY TRUST AUTHORIZED
SECTION 302.
PERMISSIBLE PURPOSES
SECTION 305. POWER
TO SUE AND BE SUED; TITLE TO TRUST PROPERTY
SECTION 306.
SERIES OF STATUTORY TRUST
SECTION 307. POWER
TO HOLD PROPERTY
SECTION 401.
MANAGEMENT OF STATUTORY TRUST
SECTION 403.
PROTECTION OF PERSON DEALING WITH TRUSTEE
SECTION 404.
STANDARDS OF CONDUCT FOR TRUSTEES.
SECTION 405.
DIRECTION OF TRUSTEES
SECTION 406.
INDEPENDENT TRUSTEE IN REGISTERED INVESTMENT COMPANY
SECTION 407.
TRUSTEE’S RIGHT TO INFORMATION..
SECTION 408.
INTERESTED TRANSACTIONS
SECTION 409.
GOOD-FAITH RELIANCE ON GOVERNING INSTRUMENT
SECTION 410.
INDEMNIFICATION, ADVANCEMENT, AND EXONERATION
SECTION 411.
DELEGATION BY TRUSTEE
SECTION 412.
ACTION BY TRUSTEES.
SECTION 413. NO
RIGHTS OF TRUSTEE’S CREDITORS IN TRUST PROPERTY
SECTION 414.
TRUSTEE NOT LIABLE FOR ACTS, OMISSIONS, OR OBLIGATIONS
OF STATUTORY TRUST
BENEFICIARIES
AND BENEFICIAL RIGHTS
SECTION 501.
CONTRIBUTIONS BY BENEFICIAL OWNERS
SECTION 502.
REDEMPTION OF BENEFICIAL INTERESTS
SECTION 503.
BENEFICIAL OWNER’S RIGHT TO INFORMATION
SECTION 504.
RIGHTS OF BENEFICIAL OWNER IN TRUST PROPERTY
SECTION 505.
TRANSACTION WITH BENEFICIAL OWNER
SECTION 506.
LIMITED LIABILITY OF BENEFICIAL OWNERS
SECTION 507.
VOTING OR CONSENT BY BENEFICIAL OWNERS
SECTION 508.
DERIVATIVE ACTION
CONVERSION,
MERGER, AND DISSOLUTION
SECTION 603.
ACTION ON PLAN OF CONVERSION BY CONVERTING
STATUTORY TRUST
SECTION 604.
FILINGS REQUIRED FOR CONVERSION; EFFECTIVE DATE.
SECTION 605.
EFFECT OF CONVERSION.
SECTION 607.
ACTION ON PLAN OF MERGER BY CONSTITUENT STATUTORY TRUST
SECTION 608.
FILINGS REQUIRED FOR MERGER; EFFECTIVE DATE.
SECTION 609.
EFFECT OF MERGER.
SECTION 610.
[ARTICLE] NOT EXCLUSIVE.
SECTION 611.
DISSOLUTION OF STATUTORY TRUST.
SECTION 612.
DISSOLUTION OF SERIES.
SECTION 702.
APPLICATION FOR CERTIFICATE OF AUTHORITY
SECTION 703.
AMENDMENT OR RESTATEMENT OF CERTIFICATE.
SECTION 704.
ACTIVITIES NOT CONSTITUTING TRANSACTING BUSINESS.
SECTION 705.
FILING OF CERTIFICATE OF AUTHORITY.
SECTION 706.
NONCOMPLYING NAME OF FOREIGN STATUTORY TRUST.
SECTION 707.
REVOCATION OF CERTIFICATE OF AUTHORITY.
SECTION 708.
CANCELLATION OF CERTIFICATE OF AUTHORITY; EFFECT OF FAILURE TO HAVE
CERTIFICATE.
SECTION 709.
ACTION BY [ATTORNEY GENERAL].
SECTION 801.
UNIFORMITY OF APPLICATION AND CONSTRUCTION
SECTION 802.
RELATION TO ELECTRONIC SIGNATURES IN GLOBAL AND NATIONAL COMMERCE ACT
SECTION 804. APPLICATION
TO EXISTING RELATIONSHIPS.
UNIFORM
STATUTORY TRUST ENTITY ACT
Introduction. In
large part because of uncertainty over the legal status of the business trust
at common law, use of the common law trust as a mode of business organization
declined over the course of the twentieth century. Today, most commercial enterprises that are not
organized as a sole proprietorship make use of the partnership, limited
liability company, or corporate form of organization.
To address the legal uncertainty over
the common law business trust, at least thirty states have enacted legislation that
validates the trust as a permissible form of business organization. See Robert H. Sitkoff, The Rise of the
Statutory Business Trust [citation] (collecting state statutes). But the
entity that arises under the more recent of these statutes is better understood
as a “statutory business trust,” “statutory trust entity,” or “statutory trust”
than as a common law business trust with statutory validation. See the Comment to Section 101.
Since
the 1980s, statutory trust entities have thrived in a variety of niches,
particularly in the organization of mutual funds and the practice of asset
securitization. See Sitkoff, supra; Steven
L. Schwarcz, Commercial Trusts as Business Organizations: Unraveling the
Mystery, 58 Bus. Law. 559 (2003); John H. Langbein, The Secret Life of the
Trust: The Trust as an Instrument of Commerce, 107 Yale L.J. 165 (1997); Sheldon
A. Jones, Laura M. Moret, & James M. Storey, The Massachusetts Business Trust and Registered Investment Companies,
13 Del. J. Corp. L. 421 (1988). Moreover, under a recent IRS revenue ruling,
in certain configurations a statutory trust may be used in tax-advantaged real
estate transactions. See Rev.
Rul. 2004-86, 2004-33 IRB 191.
A
statutory trust differs from a common law trust in several important respects. A common law trust, whether its purpose is
donative or commercial, arises from private action without the involvement of a
public official. See Uniform Trust Code
§401 (2000); Restatement (Third) of Trusts §10 (2003). Because a common law trust is not a juridical
entity, it must sue, be sued, and transact over property in the name of the
trustee in the trustee’s capacity as such.
By contrast, a statutory trust is created by making a filing with a public
official, typically the Secretary of State. See Section 201. Moreover, a statutory trust is a juridical
entity, separate from its trustees and beneficial owners, that has capacity to
sue, be sued, and transact over property in its own name. See Sections 301, 305.
Most
existing state business trust statutes do not prohibit use of the common law
trust for a commercial purpose. Instead,
the modern statutes offer transactional planners an additional option, a statutory
trust, which is governed by the state’s statutory trust act. Common law trusts, whether donative or
commercial, remain subject to the principles of law and equity applicable to
private and charitable trusts.
The
primary stimulus for the drafting of the Uniform Statutory Trust Entity Act is
the increasing popularity of statutory trust entities, chiefly in the
structured finance and mutual fund industries.
Increasing use of statutory trusts as a mode of business organization
has led to a recognition that in many states the status of such trusts is
unclear and that much of the existing legislation is out of date or incomplete. Practitioners, entrepreneurs, and scholars
struggle to understand the law governing statutory trusts. The case law on statutory trusts is surprisingly
sparse.
The
Uniform Statutory Trust Entity Act validates the statutory trust as a
permissible form of business organization and brings the disparate and often
inadequate existing approaches into uniformity.
Models for Drafting. Although
the Uniform Statutory Trust Entity Act is the first Uniform Act on the subject
of statutory business trusts, comprehensive statutory trust regimes exist in
several states. Notable examples include
Connecticut, Delaware, Maryland, New Hampshire, Nevada, South Dakota, Wyoming,
and Virginia, all of which were referred to in the drafting process. However, in drafting the substantive
provisions of the Uniform Statutory Trust Entity Act, the drafting committee
was influenced primarily by the Delaware Statutory Trust Act.
In
choosing to follow Delaware, the drafting committee relied on a recent study that
presents data on the number of statutory trusts formed in each state. See Sitkoff, supra, at __. According to this study, the number of
statutory trusts formed under the Delaware Act vastly exceeds the number formed
in all other states, surpassing second-place Connecticut by a factor of almost ten
to one. Id. at __. The study also presents data on new trust
formations. The new formation data show
that the Delaware statutory trust has come also to dominate the Massachusetts
business trust for the organization of business trusts more generally. Id. at __.
For a discussion of the Delaware Statutory Trust Act, see Wendell
Fenton & Eric A. Mazie, Delaware
Statutory Trusts, in 2 R. Franklin Balotti & Jesse A. Finkelstein, The Delaware Law of Corporations &
Business Organizations ch. 19 (3d ed. 2005 Supp.).
Although
under Section 105 ordinary trust law supplements this Act, numerous substantive
provisions of this Act were drawn from corporate law, not from trust law. See, e.g., 305(b) (attachment of statutory
trust property); 401 (management by or under the authority of the trustees); 404
(standards of conduct of trustees); 408 (interested transactions); 506 (limited
liability of “a domestic business corporation”). Looking to the corporate law model on these
issues is consistent with the hybrid approach of the Delaware Act and reflects
the nature of a statutory trust as a juridical entity. The Uniform Statutory Trust Entity Act is an
unincorporated entity statute.
In
drafting the public filing and other provisions not unique to the statutory trust
form, the drafting committee took the Uniform Limited Partnership Act (2001) as
its starting point. For guidance on the
common law of trusts, the drafting committee took the Uniform Trust Code (2000)
as its starting point.
Innovative Provisions.
Although much of the Uniform Statutory Trust Entity Act reflects a reorganization
and refinement of provisions found in the Delaware Statutory Trust Act, the
Uniform Act contains several innovations including: (1) specification of rules that are not
subject to override in the statutory trust’s governing instrument (§103(b));
(2) exclusion of trusts with a prevailingly donative purpose (§302); (3) clearer
guidance on the relationship of ordinary trust law to statutory trust entities
(§105); (4) clearer guidance on the relationship between the common law trust and
statutory trust entities (§804); and (5) systematic treatment of conversion,
merger, and dissolution (Article 6).
Default Rules. Most
of the Uniform Statutory Trust Entity Act consists of default rules that apply
only if the governing instrument fails to address or insufficiently covers a
particular issue. Pursuant to Section 103(a),
the governing instrument may override a substantial majority of the Act’s
provisions. The exceptions are scheduled
in Section 103(b). Section 104 collects
various permissive rules regarding the scope of the governing instrument.
Relationship to Common Law Trusts
and the Uniform Trust Code. In the culture of American law the common law
trust is usually regarded as a vehicle for effecting donative transfers. Indeed, leading compilations of the common
law of trusts tend to exclude business trusts from their coverage. See e.g., Restatement (Third) of Trusts §1
cmt. b (2003); Austin Wakeman Scott, William F. Fratcher, & Mark L. Ascher,
1 Scott and Ascher on Trusts §2.1.2 (5th ed. 2006); Restatement (Second) of
Trusts §1 cmt. b (1959). The
justification stated in the Restatement (Third) of Trusts is representative: “[T]he business trust is a business
arrangement that is best dealt with in connection with business associations.”
There
is, however, no separate body of general business law that rivals ordinary
trust law for application to a common law trust that has a business purpose. The common law of trusts applies to all
trusts created under the common law, even those that have a business purpose, to
the extent that the common law is not displaced by the trust instrument or
specialized legislation. For this
reason, although the Uniform Trust Code “is directed primarily at trusts that
arise in an estate planning or other donative context,” the Code applies to
trusts with a business or commercial purpose to the extent that the Code’s
provisions are not displaced by the trust instrument or other legislation. UTC §102 cmt.
Accordingly,
the Uniform Statutory Trust Entity Act is not a codification of general
business law principles applicable to common law business trusts. Nothing in this Act displaces the common law
of trusts, or the Uniform Trust Code, with respect to such trusts. On the contrary, Section 804(a) expressly
confirms the continued applicability of the state’s laws pertaining to trusts
to a common law business trust.
The
Uniform Statutory Trust Entity Act is more like a generic corporate code or
unincorporated entity law than the Uniform Trust Code. Like a corporation, limited liability
company, and limited partnership, but unlike a common law trust, a statutory
trust is a juridical entity that may conduct transactions in its own name
separate from that of its fiduciary and its beneficial owners. See Sections 301, 305. Like those entities, but unlike a common law
trust, a statutory trust is formed by making a filing with a public official. Compare Section 201 with Uniform Trust Code
§401 (2000) and Restatement (Third) of Trusts §10 (2003). Further, Section 105 provides that ordinary
trust law supplements this Act in governing statutory trusts, but only to the
extent not modified or displaced by this Act or the governing instrument—and
this Act modifies or displaces a host of ordinary trust law principles
including those concerning fiduciary standards of conduct (Section 404) and
termination of trusts (Section 304). Section
804(b) allows an existing common law trust that does not have a prevailingly
donative purpose to convert into a statutory trust by filing a certificate of
trust under Section 201.
Although the drafting committee contemplated that a statutory trust under this Act will be used primarily as a mode of business organization, Section 501(a) confirms that a person may become a beneficial owner of a statutory trust without an exchange of consideration. It is therefore possible that a statutory trust could be used as a substitute for the common law trust in a variety of commercial and noncommercial contexts. However, to ensure that a statutory trust is not used to evade mandatory rules applicable to common law trusts that enforce public policy limitations on donative transfers, Section 302 provides that a statutory trust may not have a prevailingly donative purpose.
UNIFORM
STATUTORY TRUST ENTITY ACT
SECTION 101. SHORT TITLE. This [act] may be cited as the Uniform Statutory Trust Entity Act.
Comment
Because this Act provides for the creation and use of a statutory trust
as a form of business organization, it might seem that “Uniform Business Trust Act,”
“Uniform Statutory Business Trust Act,” or “Uniform Statutory Trust Act” would be
a better title. However, after
deliberation informed by consultation with experts in the structured finance,
bankruptcy, mutual fund, and estate planning industries, the drafting committee
rejected those and other such titles in favor of “Uniform Statutory Trust Entity
Act.”
The
drafting committee included the word “entity” in the title for two
reasons. First, the creature of this act
is indeed a trust entity. It has the
power to sue, be sued, and transact over property in its own name. A common law trust, by contrast, is not a
juridical entity. Second, use of the
word “entity” in the title differentiates this act from the Uniform Trust Code,
which is a codification of the common law of trusts. However, to conform with prevailing trade
usage under the Delaware Statutory Trust Act, the entity that arises under this
Act is called a “statutory trust,” not a “statutory trust entity.” See Section 102(14). Moreover, because the entity features of a
statutory trust under this Act closely resemble those of a Delaware statutory
trust, the drafting committee assumed the applicability of Rev. Rul.
2004-86, 2004-33 IRB 191, to a statutory trust under this Act. [Three
questions for discussion: (1) Are we
comfortable saying this? (2) Should we
ask the IRS for confirmation? (3) Should
this statement be located instead or in addition as a comment to 102(14)? Regarding question 2, the Conference has done
so before, for example in connection with the intersection of the generation
skipping transfer tax and the Uniform Statutory Rule Against Perpetuities.]
The
drafting committee had three reasons for eschewing the phrase “business
trust.” First, under this act a
statutory trust need not have a business or commercial purpose. On the contrary, Section 302 confirms that a
statutory trust may have any lawful purpose other than a prevailingly donative
purpose.
Second,
the drafting committee endeavored to avoid any implication that a statutory
trust would necessarily qualify as a “business trust” under the bankruptcy
code. [For discussion: Rutledge’s
suggestion to Sitkoff that the rest of this paragraph should be deleted.]Under
the bankruptcy code, the definition of a “debtor” eligible for bankruptcy
includes a “person,” 11 U.S.C. §101(13), the definition of “person” includes a “corporation,” id. §101(41), and the definition of “corporation” includes
a “business trust.” Id. §101(9). Hence,
a “business trust” might qualify as an eligible “debtor.” Bankruptcy eligibility is a significant issue
for trusts used as special purpose entities in structured finance transactions,
a principal use of the modern statutory trust in practice. Such trusts are often designed to be “bankruptcy
remote.” Thus, as in the leading case of
In re Secured Equipment
Trust of Eastern Airlines, Inc., 38 F.3d 86 (2d Cir. 1994), in certain
configurations trusts used in
securitization transactions have indeed been held not to be “business trusts”
under the bankruptcy code. The ultimate
form of “bankruptcy remoteness” is the use of an entity that is not an eligible
debtor under the bankruptcy code.
Third,
the drafting committee was influenced by the revealed preference for “statutory trust”
over “business trust” among existing users of statutory business trusts as
evidenced by the dominant position of the Delaware Statutory Trust Act relative
to the statutory or business trust acts of the other states. See Robert H. Sitkoff, The Rise of the
Statutory Business Trust [in progress]. In 2002 Delaware recast the “Delaware
Business Trust Act” as the “Delaware Statutory Trust Act,” replacing nearly
every reference to “business trust” with “statutory trust.” See
73 Del. Laws 329. The Connecticut
statute, which is the second most popular, is likewise cast as a Statutory
Trust Act.
(1) “Beneficial owner” means the owner of a beneficial interest in a statutory trust or foreign statutory trust.
(2) “Certificate of trust” means the record that is delivered to the [Secretary of State] for filing under Section 201.
(3) “Common law trust” means a fiduciary relationship with
respect to property arising from a manifestation of intention to create that
relationship and subjecting the person that holds title to the property to
duties to deal with the property for the benefit of charity or for one or more
persons, at least one of which is not the sole trustee, whether or not the
purpose of the trust is donative or commercial.
The term includes the type of trust known at common law as a “business
trust,” “Massachusetts trust,” or “Massachusetts business trust”.
(4) “Designated office” means:
(A) with respect to a statutory trust, the mailing address that it is required to designate under Section 201(a)(2); or
(B) with respect to a foreign statutory trust, its principal office.
(5) “Foreign statutory trust” means a
trust entity that is formed under the laws of a jurisdiction other than this
state and is required by those laws to file a record with a public official in
that jurisdiction.
(6) “Governing instrument” means the trust instrument and the certificate of trust.
(7) “Person” means an individual,
corporation, statutory trust, foreign statutory trust, common law trust, estate,
partnership, limited partnership, limited liability company, association, joint
venture, government or governmental subdivision, agency, or instrumentality, or
any other legal or commercial entity. [For discussion: Style objects to our not using the boilerplate
definition of “person.” Here is a
tracked-changes version of this section edited to match the boilerplate: “Person” means an individual, corporation,
estate, trust, partnership, limited partnership, limited liability company,
association, joint venture, public corporation, government or governmental
subdivision, agency, or instrumentality, or any other legal or commercial
entity.]
(8) “Qualified foreign statutory
trust” means a foreign statutory trust that is authorized to transact business
in this state.
(9) “Record” means information that is inscribed on a tangible medium or that is stored in an electronic or other medium and is retrievable in perceivable form.
(10) “Recorded transmission” means
any form of communication that creates a record.
(11) “Related person”, with respect to a trustee, officer, employee, manager, or beneficial owner, means:
(A) the spouse of the
person;
(B) a child, parent, sibling, grandchild, or grandparent of the person, or the spouse of one of them;
(C) an individual having the same home as the person;
(D) a trust or estate of which a related person described in subparagraph (A), (B), or (C) is a substantial beneficiary;
(E) a trust, estate, incompetent, conservatee, or minor for which the person is a fiduciary.
[For discussion: There has been continuing discontentment with
this paragraph (11). At the last meeting
it was suggested that we examine several other potential models, and it was
also decided tentatively that an entity owned by one of the covered individuals
should be covered. Hence, here are some
alternative models:
·
SEC Rule
16a-1(e) –
o
“The term immediate family
shall mean any child, stepchild, grandchild, parent, stepparent, grandparent,
spouse, sibling, mother-in-law, father-in-law, son-in-law, daughter-in-law,
brother-in-law, or sister-in-law, and shall include adoptive
relationships.”
·
SEC
Rule 144(a) –
o
(1) An affiliate of an issuer is a person
that directly, or indirectly through one or more intermediaries, controls, or
is controlled by, or is under common control with, such issuer.
o
(2) The term person when used with
reference to a person for whose account securities are to be sold in reliance
upon this section includes, in addition to such person, all of the following
persons:
§
(i) Any relative or spouse of such person,
or any relative of such spouse, any one of whom has the same home as such
person;
§
(ii) Any trust or estate in which such
person or any of the persons specified in paragraph (a)(2)(i) of this section
collectively own 10 percent or more of the total beneficial interest or of
which any of such persons serve as trustee, executor or in any similar
capacity; and
§
(iii) Any corporation or other
organization (other than the issuer) in which such person or any of the persons
specified in paragraph (a)(2)(i) of this section are the beneficial owners
collectively of 10 percent or more of any class of equity securities or 10
percent or more of the equity interest.
·
RMBCA 8.60 –
o
(5) “Related person” means:
§
(i) the director’s spouse;
§
(ii) a child, stepchild, grandchild,
parent, step parent, grandparent, sibling, step sibling, half sibling, aunt,
uncle, niece or nephew (or spouse of any thereof) of the director or of the
director’s spouse;
§
(iii) an individual living in the same
home as the director;
§
(iv) an entity (other than the corporation
of an entity controlled by the corporation) controlled by the director or any
person specified above in this subdivision (5);
§
(v) a domestic or foreign (A) business or
nonprofit corporation (other than the corporation or an entity controlled by
the corporation) of which the director is a director, (B) unincorporated entity
of which the director is a general partner or a member of the governing body,
or (C) individual, trust, or estate for whom or of which the director is a
trustee, guardian, personal representative or like fiduciary; or
§
(vi) a person that is, or an entity that
is controlled by, an employer of the director.
o
Official Comment 5 to RMBCA 8.60:
Six categories of “related person”
of the director are set out in subdivision (5).
These categories are specific, exclusive and preemptive.
The first three categories involved
closely related family, or near-family, individuals as specified in clauses (i)
through (iii). The causes are exclusive
insofar as family relationships are concerned and include adoptive
relationships. The references to a
“spouse” include a common-law spouse.
Clause (iii) covers personal, as opposed to business, relationships; for
example, clause (iii) does not cover a lessee.
Regarding the subcategories of
persons described in clause (v) from the perspective of X Co., certain of D’s
relationships with other entities and D’s
fiduciary relationships are always a sensitive concern, separate and apart from
whether D has a financial interest in
the transaction. Clause (v) reflects the
policy judgment that D cannot escape D’s legal obligation to act in the best
interests of another person for whom D
has such a relationship and, accordingly, that such a relationship (without regard
to any financial interest on D’s
parks) should cause the relevant entity to have “related person” status.
The term “employer” as used in
subdivision (5)(vi) is not separately defined that should be interpreted
sensibly in light of the purpose of the subdivision. The relevant inquiry is whether D, because of employment relationship
with an employer who had significant stake in the outcome of the transaction,
is likely to be influenced to act in the interest of that employer rather than
in the interest of X Co.
(12) “Sign” means, with the present intent to authenticate or adopt a record:
(A) to execute or adopt a tangible symbol; or
(B) to attach to or logically associate with the record an electronic symbol, sound, or process.
(13) “State” means a State of the United States, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the United States Virgin Islands, or any territory or insular possession subject to the jurisdiction of the United States.
(14) “Statutory trust” means an
unincorporated entity formed under this [act].[For discussion: Style would
like us to delete “unincorporated.” But
the term is used in the RMBCA and elsewhere.]
(15) “Trust instrument” means an instrument other than the certificate of trust, whether referred to as a trust agreement, trust instrument, declaration of trust, bylaws, or otherwise, that provides for the governance of the affairs of the statutory trust and the conduct of its business.
(16) “Trustee” means a person designated,
appointed, or elected as a trustee of a statutory trust or foreign statutory
trust in accordance with the governing instrument or applicable law.
Comment
Principal
Sources – Delaware Statutory
Trust Act §3801; Connecticut Statutory Trust Act §34-501; Uniform Limited
Partnership Act §102 (2001).
Paragraph
(2) defines “common law trust” consistently with Restatement (Third) of Trusts
§2 (2003), except that as defined herein the term expressly includes a common
law business trust. See also Uniform
Trust Code §102 cmt. (2000).
Paragraphs (2), (6), and (15) define “certificate of trust,” “governing instrument,” and “trust instrument” respectively. The certificate of trust is the record that must be filed with a public official under Section 201 to form a statutory trust. The trust instrument is the transaction document that provides for the governance of the affairs of the statutory trust and that need not be made part of the public record. Together, the certificate of trust and the trust instrument compose the governing instrument. The term “governing instrument” is in the singular to conform with standard commercial usage. Conflicts between the certificate of trust and the governing instrument are resolved pursuant to Section 201(d). Although Paragraph (15) is phrased in the singular, consistent with current commercial practice the drafting committee contemplated that there would often be more than one “trust instrument.” Section 104(c) makes the authorization of multiple instruments explicit.
In using but not defining the term “substantial” in Paragraph (11)(D), the drafting committee contemplated that a totality of the circumstances test would apply.
[Depending on how we resolve the discussion
question in the comment to Section 101, commentary on 102(14) and the 2004
revenue ruling might go here.]
Paragraph (16) defines trustee as a person designated as such in accordance with the governing instrument or applicable law. For discussion of trustee appointment, see the Comment to Section 401.
(a) Except as otherwise provided in the governing instrument, this [act] governs the management and affairs of the statutory trust and the rights, interests, duties, obligations, powers, and relations between and among the trustees, beneficial owners, and other persons..
(b) The terms of the governing instrument prevail over any provision of this [act] except:
(1) the provisions of [Articles] 2, 7, and 8;
(2) the exclusion of a prevailingly donative purpose under Section 302;
(3) the choice of governing law as provided in Section 303;
(4) the standards of conduct for trustees under Section 404, but the governing instrument may prescribe the standards by which good faith, best interests of the statutory trust, and care that a person in a like position would reasonably believe appropriate under similar circumstances are determined, if the standards are not manifestly unreasonable;
(5) the limitations on
direction of trustees provided in Section 405(b);
(6) the right of a trustee to information under Section 407, but the governing instrument may prescribe the standards for assessing whether information is reasonably related to the trustee’s discharge of the trustee’s duties as trustee if the standards are not manifestly unreasonable;
(7) the prohibition
under Section 410 of indemnification, advancement, or exoneration for conduct
involving bad faith, willful misconduct, or reckless indifference;
(8) the right of a beneficial owner to information under Section 503, but the governing instrument may prescribe the standards for assessing whether information is reasonably related to the beneficial owner’s ability to enforce its rights as a beneficial owner if the standards are not manifestly unreasonable;
(9) the right of a
beneficial owner to bring a derivative action under Section 508, but the
governing instrument may modify the terms of Section 508 to subject the right
to additional standards and restrictions including the requirement that
beneficial owners owning a specified amount or type of beneficial interest join
in bringing the derivative action, provided that the additional standards and
restrictions are not manifestly unreasonable;
(10) Sections 601, 604,
605, 608, and 609; and
(11) the rules under
Section 611 for dissolution of a statutory trust.
Comment
Principal Sources – Uniform Trust Code §105 (2000); Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act §110 (2006); Uniform Limited Partnership Act §110 (2001); Uniform Limited Liability Company Act §103 (1996); Revised Uniform Partnership Act §103 (1997); Uniform Commercial Code §§1-302, 9-603 (2000); Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3806.
Paragraph (a) emphasizes that the Uniform Statutory Trust Entity Act is primarily a default statute. Most of the Act’s provisions may be overridden by the terms of the governing instrument.
Paragraph (b) lists the provisions of this act that are not subject to override in the governing instrument of a statutory trust. Most concern the rights of nonparties or public filing and notice requirements. By contrast, with two exceptions all the provisions of this Act concerning the duties and powers of a trustee, relations among trustees, and the rights and interests of a beneficial owner may be overridden or at least altered by the terms of the governing instrument. The first exception is the mandatory prohibition of indemnification, advancement, or exoneration for conduct involving bad faith, willful misconduct, or reckless indifference in paragraph (b)(7). This exception is familiar law. See Restatement (Second) of Trusts §222 (1959); George G. Bogert & George T. Bogert, The Law of Trusts and Trustees §542 (rev. 2d ed. 1993); Uniform Trust Code §1008 (2000). See also John H. Langbein, Mandatory Rules in the Law of Trusts, 98 Nw. U.L. Rev. 1105, 1121-25 (2004). In 2006, the Delaware Statutory Trust Act was revised in a similar vein. See 2006 Delaware Laws Ch. 418 §7, revising Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3806(e). As revised, §3806(e) provides that the “governing instrument may provide for the limitation or elimination of any and all liabilities for breach of contract and breach of duty (including fiduciary duties) of a trustee . . . ; provided, that the governing instrument may not eliminate the implied contractual covenant of good faith and fair dealing.”
[This paragraph was moved up from later in this comment, but with tracking off so that changes within the paragraph would be indicated.]There second exception is contained in paragraph (b)(5), which makes mandatory the invalidity under Section 405(b) of a direction to a trustee or other person that is manifestly contrary to the terms of the governing instrument or would constitute a serious breach of fiduciary duty. The reference to serious breach of fiduciary duty is designed to exclude an inconsequential, immaterial, or technical breach that does not harm a beneficial owner. For some purposes, trust law distinguishes between serious and not serious breaches of trust.. See, e.g., Uniform Trust Code §706(b)(1) (2000); Austin W. Scott, William F. Fratcher, & Mark L. Ascher, 2 Scott and Ascher on Trusts §11.10, p. 661 (5th ed. 2006); Restatement (Second) of Trusts §107 cmt. b (1959). However, the effect of paragraph (b)(5) is limited by paragraph (b)(4), which allows the trustee’s fiduciary duty to be altered by the governing instrument if the alteration is not manifestly unreasonable.
Paragraphs (b)(4), (b)(6), (b)(8), and (b)(9) allow the governing instrument to alter the nature of the trustee’s fiduciary obligation, the right of a trustee to information, the right of a beneficial owner to information, and the right of a beneficial owner to bring a derivative action, but only if the alteration is not “manifestly unreasonable.” In opting for a “manifestly unreasonable” standard instead of Delaware’s “good faith and fair dealing” formulation, see 2006 Delaware Laws Ch. 418 §5, revising Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3806(c), the drafting committee took notice of the use of “manifestly unreasonable” in Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act §110(d) (2006); Uniform Limited Partnership Act §110(b) (2001), Revised Uniform Partnership Act §103(b) (1997), Uniform Limited Liability Company Act §103(b) (1996), and intended a similar meaning here. See generally Mark J. Loewenstein, Fiduciary Duties and Unincorporated Business Entities: In Defense of the “Manifestly Unreasonable” Standard, __Tulsa L. Rev. ___ (2006). The term is also used variously in Uniform Commercial Code §§1-201(28); 1-302(b); 2A-103(u); 4-103(a); 8-402(c)(1); 8-403(c); 9-603(a).
[This paragraph has been moved up.]
The Investment Company Act of 1940
(the “1940 Act”) trumps this Act with respect a statutory trust that registers
as an investment company. For such a statutory
trust the 1940 Act imposes additional mandatory rules. See, e.g., the Comments to Sections 209 (name
of statutory trust), 408 (interested transactions), 410 (indemnification,
advancement, and exoneration), 411 (delegation by trustee), and 412 (action by
trustees).
Because
paragraph (b) refers specifically to other sections of the Act, enacting
jurisdictions that modify those other sections may also need to modify
paragraph (b).
SECTION 104. SCOPE OF GOVERNING INSTRUMENT.
(a) Subject to Section 103(b), a governing instrument may contain:
(1) any provision relating to the management and affairs of the statutory trust;
(2) any provision relating to the rights, interests, duties, obligations, and powers of the trustees, beneficial owners, and other persons; and
(3) any other provision
that is not inconsistent with this [act]. [This
paragraph is redundant with Section 103(a).]
(b) Subject to Section 103(b), a governing instrument may:
(1) provide the means by which beneficial ownership is determined and evidenced;
(2) limit a beneficial owner’s right to transfer its beneficial interest;
[The series provisions have been moved to Section 306.]
(3) if and to the extent that voting rights are granted under the governing instrument, include provisions relating to:
(A) notice of the time, place, or purpose of any meeting at which any matter is to be voted on;
(B) waiver of notice;
(C) action by consent without a meeting;
(D) establishment of record dates, quorum requirements, or voting in person, by proxy, recorded transmission, telephone, or video conference, or in any other manner; or
(E) any other matter with respect to the exercise of the right to vote;
(4) provide for any action to be taken without the vote or approval of any particular trustee or beneficial owner, or any class, group, or series of trustees or beneficial owners, including:
(A) amendment of the governing instrument;
(B) accomplishment of a merger, conversion, or reorganization;
(C) appointment of one or more trustees;
(D) sale, lease, exchange, transfer, pledge or other disposition of all or any part of the assets of the statutory trust or the assets of any series;
(E) dissolution
of the statutory trust. [For
discussion: This provision is in tension
with Section 103(b)(11), which makes Section 612 mandatory.]
[For discussion: Is not this provision mooted by Section
306(a)?]
(5) provide for the present or future creation of more than one statutory trust, including the creation of a future statutory trust to which all or any part of the assets, liabilities, profits, or losses of any existing statutory trust may be transferred or exchanged, and for the conversion of beneficial interests in an existing statutory trust, or series thereof, into beneficial interests in the separate statutory trust, or series thereof;
(6) provide for the
appointment, election, or engagement of agents or independent contractors of
the statutory trust or delegatees of the trustees, or agents, officers,
employees, managers, committees, or other persons that may manage the business
and affairs of the statutory trust, which may have such titles and such
relative rights, powers, and duties as the governing instrument provides;
(7) provide rights to any person, including a person that is not a party to the governing instrument;
(8) provide for the
manner in which the governing instrument may be amended, including by requiring
the approval of a person that is not a party to the instrument or the
satisfaction of specified conditions and, to the extent the instrument provides
for the manner in which it may be amended, provide that it may be amended only
in that manner or as otherwise permitted by law, but the approval of any person
may be waived by the person and these conditions may be waived by all persons
for whose benefit the conditions were intended;
(9) provide that a person becomes a beneficial owner, acquires a beneficial interest, and is bound by the governing instrument if the person complies with the conditions for becoming a beneficial owner set forth in the governing instrument such as payment to the statutory trust or to a previous beneficial owner;
(10) provide that a
person may comply under paragraph (9) by a representative authorized by the
person orally, in a record, or by conduct, such as payment by the
representative for a beneficial interest [For
discussion: “by” the representative versus “to” the representative.];
(11) provide that the statutory trust or the trustees, acting for and on behalf of the statutory trust, are deemed to hold beneficial ownership of any income earned on securities held by the statutory trust that are issued by any business entity formed, organized, or existing under the laws of any jurisdiction, including the laws of any foreign country; and
(12) provide for the establishment of record dates for allocations and distributions.
(c) The governing instrument may include one or more instruments, agreements, declarations, bylaws, or other records and refer to or incorporate any record containing provisions relating to the governance of the affairs of the statutory trust and the conduct of its business.
Comment
Principal
Sources – Scattered sections of the Delaware and Connecticut
Statutory Trust Acts.
The
unusual principal sources citation reflects the drafting committee’s decision
to collect in a single section—that is, in paragraphs (b) and (c) of this
Section—the various permissive rules regarding the scope of the governing
instrument that are scattered throughout the Delaware and Connecticut Statutory
Trust Acts. The main exceptions concern
the permissive rules regarding the creation of one or more series of a
statutory trust in Section 306(a), and the permissive rules regarding the
allowable remedies for a beneficial owner’s breach in Section 501(c).
Paragraph
(a) emphasizes the freedom of contract afforded to transactional planners by
the Uniform Statutory Trust Entity Act, which is primarily a default statute.
Paragraph
(b) enumerates a nonexhaustive list of provisions that may validly be included
in a statutory trust’s governing instrument.
The drafting committee concluded that the demand of third parties and
transactional planners to see language that expressly authorizes specific terms
justified inclusion of a detailed list. Prior
to statutory confirmation, doubts sometimes arose in opinion letters. Similar
reasoning underlies the provision of a detailed schedule of powers in Uniform
Trust Code §816 (2000) notwithstanding the broad general statement in Uniform
Trust Code §815.
SECTION 105. APPLICABILITY OF TRUST LAW. The law of this state pertaining to common law trusts supplements this [act], except to the extent modified or displaced by the governing instrument.
Comment
Principal Sources – Uniform Trust Code §106 (2000); Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3809; Connecticut Statutory Trust Act §34-519.
Consistent with the Delaware Statutory Trust Act, the Uniform Statutory Trust Entity Act provides that state trust law, not corporate law, supplements this Act and the terms of the governing instrument. Thus, in an enacting jurisdiction that has also enacted the Uniform Trust Code, the Code will apply to a statutory trust to the extent that the Code’s provisions are not displaced by this act or the governing instrument. However, because this Act’s schedule of mandatory rules in Section 103 does not include this Section, the rules scheduled in Uniform Trust Code §105 that are mandatory with respect to a common law trust are not mandatory with respect to a statutory trust. [For discussion: This statement warrants discussion.] To prevent evasion of the mandatory rules in the Uniform Trust Code, which enforce public policy limitations on donative transfers, Section 302 of this Act provides that a statutory trust may not have “a prevailingly donative purpose.” For further discussion of the relationship between this Act and the common law and the Uniform Trust Code, see the Prefatory Note to this Act under the heading “Relationship to Common Law Trusts and the Uniform Trust Code.”
In looking to trust law to supply
defaults to fill gaps in this act and the governing instrument, the drafting
committee was strongly influenced by the revealed preference for trust law among existing
users of statutory trusts as evidenced by the popularity of the Delaware Act as
compared to the business trust acts (such as those in Arizona, Indiana, Kansas,
Mississippi, Montana, Oregon, Tennessee, Washington, and West Virginia) that
look to corporate law. See Robert H.
Sitkoff, The Rise of the Statutory Business Trust [in progress].
SECTION 106. RULES OF CONSTRUCTION.
(a) This [act] must be liberally
construed to give maximum effect to the principle of freedom of contract and to
the enforceability of governing instruments. [For discussion: Style wants (a)
deleted (or at least moved to the comment) and (b) moved to 105. The purpose of (b) is stated in the comment
below.]
(b) The presumption that a civil
statute in derogation of the common law is construed strictly does not apply to
this [act].
Comment
Principal Sources – Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3825; Connecticut Statutory Trust Act §34-546.
Paragraph (a) emphasizes the freedom of contract afforded
to transactional planners by the Uniform Statutory Trust Entity Act, which is
primarily a default statute.
Paragraph
(b) admonishes the courts not to apply to this Act the canon of
construction that statutes in derogation of the common law are to be strictly
construed. Although Revised Uniform
Partnership Act §104 (1997) does not include a similar admonition on the ground
that the “principle is now so well established that it is not necessary to so
state in the Act,” id. cmt., the drafting committee for the Uniform Statutory
Trust Entity Act included this admonition because several of this Act’s
provisions are designed specifically to reject the application to a statutory
trust of one or more common law trust principles. Put differently, several
provisions of this Act derogate the common law.
Those provisions should be interpreted accordingly.
SECTION 201. CERTIFICATE OF TRUST.
(a) To form a statutory trust, a person must deliver a certificate of trust to the [Secretary of State] for filing.
(b) A certificate of trust must contain:
(1) the name of the statutory trust, which must comply with Section 209;
(2) the street and mailing addresses of the designated office of the statutory trust;
(3) the name and street and mailing addressed of the initial agent of the statutory trust for service of process; and
(4) notice if the statutory trust might have one or more series.
(c) A certificate of trust may contain any information in addition to that required by subsection (b) that is not inconsistent with this [act].
(d) Subject to Section 205(c) a statutory trust is formed when a certificate of trust that complies with subsection (b) is filed by the [Secretary of State].
(e) If a provision of a trust instrument is inconsistent with the filed certificate of trust, a filed statement of cancellation or change, or filed articles of conversion, reorganization, or merger:
(1) the inconsistent provision of the trust instrument prevails as to trustees and beneficial owners; and
(2) the certificate of
trust, statement of cancellation, or change or articles of conversion or merger
prevails as to a person other than a trustee or a beneficial owner that
reasonably relies to its detriment on the filed record.
Comment
Principal Sources – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §201 (2001); Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3810; Connecticut Statutory Trust Act §34-503.
Unlike
a common law trust, a statutory trust is a creature of statute that requires a
filing with the state to come into existence.
Filing rules are typical of limited liability entities. Such filing rules serve a notice function,
alerting interested parties to creation and existence of a new limited
liability juridical entity.
A
statutory trust comes into existence only if (1) a certificate of trust is
prepared and delivered to the specified public official for filing, and (2) the
public official files the certificate.
(For more on the meaning of “filing,” see Section 205 and the comment
thereto.) The certificate of trust
provides notice to interested third parties of the existence of the statutory
trust and the identification of the statutory trust’s initial agent for service
of process. Pursuant to Section 304(d)(2),
the certificate of trust also puts third parties on notice if the statutory
trust further segregates its assets and liabilities by creating one or more
series.
Although
formed by making a public filing, a statutory trust is also a creature of
contract. As such, it will be possible,
though improper, for the trust instrument to be inconsistent with the
certificate of trust or other public filings relating to the statutory trust. Paragraph (d) provides the rule for
determining which prevails in such circumstances. Under paragraph (d)(1), the inconsistent
provision of the trust instrument prevails as to trustees and beneficial owners.
Under paragraph (d)(2), the terms of the public filings trust prevail as
to all other parties that reasonably rely on the filing. The different rule is justified on the theory
that a party other than a beneficial owner or trustee is entitled to rely on
the public record.
Under
Section 103(b)(1), this Section is not subject to override by the governing
instrument.
SECTION 202. AMENDMENT OR RESTATEMENT OF CERTIFICATE OF TRUST.
(a) To amend its certificate of trust, a statutory trust must deliver to the [Secretary of State] for filing an amendment, articles of conversion, or articles of merger stating:
(1) the name of the statutory trust;
(2) the date of filing of its initial certificate; and
(3) the changes that any amendment makes to the certificate as most recently amended or restated.
(b) A trustee that knows or has reason to know that any information in a filed certificate of trust was incorrect when the certificate was filed or has become incorrect owing to changed circumstances shall promptly:
(1) cause the certificate to be amended; or
(2) if appropriate, deliver to the [Secretary of State] for filing a statement of correction.
(c) A certificate of trust may be amended at any time for any purpose as determined by the trustees.
(d) A restated certificate of statutory trust must be delivered to the [Secretary of State] for filing in the same manner as an amendment.
(e) Subject to Section 205(c), an amendment or restated certificate is effective when filed by the [Secretary of State].
Comment
Principal Sources – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §202 (2001); Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3810; Connecticut Statutory Trust Act §34-503.
Paragraph (a) provides a mechanism for updating a statutory trust’s filed certificate of trust. Paragraph (b) imposes an obligation directly on the trustee rather than on the statutory trust.
Under Section 103(b)(1), this
Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
SECTION 203. STATEMENT OF CANCELLATION.
(a) A terminated statutory trust that has completed winding up shall deliver to the [Secretary of State] for filing a statement of cancellation that states:
(1) the name of the statutory trust;
(2) the date of filing of its initial certificate of trust;
(3) that the statutory trust has completed winding up; and
(4) any other information as determined by the trustees filing the statement.
(b) Subject to Section 205(c), a statement
of cancellation is effective when filed by the [Secretary of State].[This paragraph was moved to Section 611.]
Comment
Principal Sources – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §203 (2001); Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3810; Connecticut Statutory Trust Act §34-503.
Unlike Uniform Limited Partnership Act §203, this section requires the filing of a statement of cancellation when a statutory trust is terminated.
Under Section 103(b)(1), this Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
SECTION 204. SIGNING OF RECORDS. A record delivered to the [Secretary of
State] for filing pursuant to this [act] must be signed by at least one of the
trustees.[For discussion: Style says that “This is redundant of the law
of agency.”]
Comment
Principal Sources – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §204 (2001); Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3811; Connecticut Statutory Trust Act §34-504.
Under Section 103(b)(1), this
Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
SECTION 205. DELIVERY TO AND FILING OF RECORDS BY [SECRETARY OF STATE]; EFFECTIVE TIME AND DATE.
(a) A record authorized or required to be delivered to the [Secretary of State] for filing under this [act] must be captioned to describe the record’s purpose, be in a medium permitted by the [Secretary of State], and be delivered to the [Secretary of State]. If all filing fees have been paid, unless the [Secretary of State] determines that a record does not comply with the filing requirements of this [act], the [Secretary of State] shall file the record and make available a copy of the filed record to the person on whose behalf the record was filed.
(b) Upon request and payment of a fee, the [Secretary of State] shall send to any person a certified copy of a record filed in the office of the [Secretary of State] pursuant to this [act].
(c) Except as otherwise provided in Sections 206 and 214, a record delivered to the [Secretary of State] for filing under this [act] may specify an effective time and a delayed effective date. Except as otherwise provided in this [act], a record filed by the [Secretary of State] is effective:
(1) if the record does not specify an effective time or delayed effective date, on the date and at the time the record is filed as evidenced by the [Secretary of State’s] endorsement of the date and time on the record;
(2) if the record specifies an effective time but not a delayed effective date, on the date the record is filed at the time specified in the record;
(3) if the record specifies a delayed effective date but not an effective time, at 12:01 a.m. on the earlier of:
(A) the specified date; or
(B) the 90th day after the record is filed; or
(4) if the record specifies an effective time and a delayed effective date, at the specified time on the earlier of:
(A) the specified date; or
(B) the 90th day after the record is filed.
Comment
Principal Sources – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §206 (2001); Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3812; Connecticut Statutory Trust Act §34-505.
For a record prepared by a private person to become part of the public record under this Act, (1) someone must put a properly prepared version of the record into the possession of the public official specified in the Act as the appropriate filing officer, and (2) the filing officer must determine that the record complies with the filing requirements of this Act and then officially make the record part of the public record. This Act refers to the first step as “delivery to the [Secretary of State] for filing” and refers to the second step as “filing.” Thus, under this Act “filing” is an official act.
Under paragraph (a), the caption need only indicate the title of the record—for example, Certificate of Trust or Statement of Change for Statutory Trust. Filing officers typically note on a filed record the fact, date, and time of filing. Copies provided by the filing officer under paragraph (a) should contain that notation. This Act does not provide a remedy if the filing officer wrongfully fails or refuses to file a record.
Paragraph (c) allows most records to have a delayed effective date, up to 90 days after the date the record is filed by the filing officer. A record specifying a longer delay will not be rejected. Instead, under paragraph (c)(3) and (4), the delayed effective date is adjusted by operation of law to the “90th day after the record is filed.” This Act does not require the filing officer to notify anyone of the adjustment.
Consistent with the existing statutory trust acts, but inconsistent with most corporate codes, this Act makes no provision for collecting a franchise tax. See generally Marcel Kahan & Ehud Kamar, Price Discrimination in the Market for Corporate Law, 86 Cornell L. Rev. 1205, 1218-33 (2001).
Under Section 103(b)(1), this
Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
SECTION 206. CORRECTING FILED RECORD.
(a) A statutory trust or qualified foreign statutory trust may deliver to the [Secretary of State] for filing a statement of correction to correct a filed record if at the time of filing the record contained incorrect information or was defectively or erroneously signed.
(b) A statement of correction under subsection (a) may not state a delayed effective date and must:
(1) describe the record to be corrected, including its filing date, or attach a copy of the record as filed;
(2) specify the incorrect information and the reason it is incorrect or the manner in which the signing was defective or erroneous; and
(3) correct the incorrect information or defective or erroneous signature.
(c) When filed by the [Secretary of State], a statement of correction under subsection (a) is effective:
(1) except as otherwise provided in paragraph (2), retroactively as of the effective date of the record the statement corrects; or
(2) with respect to persons that relied on the uncorrected record and would be adversely affected by the correction, when filed.
Comment
Principal Source – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §207 (2001).
A statement of correction is appropriate only to correct inaccuracies that existed or signatures that were defective “at the time of filing.” A statement of correction may not be used to amend or revise a record that was accurate when filed but has become inaccurate as a result of subsequent events.
Under paragraph (c), a statement of correction “relates back” by way of retroactive application except against persons that have relied on the uncorrected record and would be adversely affected if the correction related back.
Under Section 103(b)(1), this
Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
SECTION 207. CERTIFICATE OF EXISTENCE OR REGISTRATION.
(a) The [Secretary of State], upon request and payment of the requisite fee, shall furnish to the person making the request a certificate of existence for a statutory trust if the records filed in the [office of the Secretary of State] show that the [Secretary of State] has filed a certificate of trust and has not filed a statement of cancellation. A certificate of existence must state:
(1) the name of the statutory trust;
(2) that the statutory trust was formed under the laws of this state and the date of formation;
(3) that all fees and penalties due under this [act] or other law to the [Secretary of State] have been paid;
(4) that a statement of cancellation has not been filed by the [Secretary of State][; and
(5) whether the most recent annual report of the statutory trust required by Section 215 has been filed by the [Secretary of State]].
(b) The [Secretary of State], upon
request and payment of the requisite fee, shall furnish a certificate of registration
for a foreign statutory trust if the records filed in the [office of the
Secretary of State] show that the [Secretary of State] has filed a certificate
of authority, has not revoked the certificate of authority, and has not filed a
notice of cancellation. A certificate of
registration must state: [For
Discussion: Because Style believes that
(b) and part of (c) should be moved to Article 7, it asks that we reconsider
our decision last time not to do so. To
that end, it has supplied Sitkoff and Vigdor with a revision of this section,
and a new section for Article 7 (called “Certificate of Registration”).]
(1) the foreign statutory trust’s name and any alternate name adopted under Section 706 for use in this state;
(2) that all fees and penalties due under this [act] or other law to the [Secretary of State] have been paid;
(3) that the [Secretary of State] has not revoked its certificate of authority and has not filed a notice of cancellation[; and
(4) whether the foreign statutory trust’s most recent annual report required by Section 215 has been filed by the [Secretary of State]].
(c) Subject to any qualification stated in the certificate, a certificate of existence or registration issued by the [Secretary of State] may be relied upon as conclusive evidence that the statutory trust or [qualified?] foreign statutory trust is in existence or is authorized to transact business in this state.
Comment
Principal Source – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §209 (2001).
A certificate of existence or registration can reveal only information present in the public record. Under this Act significant information bearing on the status of a statutory trust may be outside the public record.
Section 205(b) provides a mechanism for obtaining a certified copy of a certificate of trust even if the trust has been terminated.
A certificate of registration furnished under paragraph (b) is different than a certificate of authority under Section 705.
Paragraphs (a)(5) and (b)(4) are bracketed in recognition of the diversity of approaches among the states with respect to annual reports. Uniformity is not expected.
Under Section 103(b)(1), this
Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
SECTION 208. ADMINISTRATIVE DISSOLUTION.
(a) A certificate of trust may be canceled
by the [Secretary of State] in the manner provided in subsections (b) and (c)
if the statutory trust does not:
(1) pay, within 60 days after the due date, any fee, tax, or penalty due to the [Secretary of State];
(2) appoint and maintain an agent for service of process;
(3) deliver for filing a statement of a change under Section 213 within 30 days after a change has occurred in the name or address of the agent for service of process[; or
(4) file the annual report required by Section 215].
(b) To cancel a certificate of trust, the [Secretary of State] must prepare, sign, and file a notice of administrative dissolution and send a copy to the statutory trust’s agent for service of process or, if the statutory trust does not appoint and maintain a proper agent in this state, to the statutory trust’s designated office. The notice must state:
(1) the effective date of cancellation, which must be at least 60 days after the date the [Secretary of State] sends the copy; and
(2) the basis for the cancellation under subsection (a).
(c) The authority of a statutory
trust to transact business ceases on the effective date of cancellation unless the
statutory trust cures the failures to comply with subsection (a) stated in the
notice.
(d) If a statutory trust cures the failures stated in the notice of cancellation under subsection (c), the [Secretary of State] shall indicate that the statutory trust is reinstated on the filed notice. The reinstatement of the statutory trust relates back for all purposes to the date of the notice of cancellation. [For discussion: (1) Rutledge’s letter to Sitkoff of April 2, 2007 regarding administrative dissolution, and (2) ReULLCA §§705-707. Both were circulated with this draft.]
Comment
Principal Source – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §906 (2001).
Under Section 103(b)(1), this
Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
SECTION 209. NAME OF STATUTORY TRUST.
(a) Unless authorized by the [Secretary of State] under subsection (c), the name of a statutory trust must be distinguishable in the records of the [Secretary of State] from:
(1) the name of any person, other than an individual, already incorporated, organized, or authorized to transact business in this state; and
(2) any name reserved under Section 210 [or other state laws allowing the reservation or registration of business names, including fictitious or assumed name statutes].
(b) The name of a statutory trust may contain the words: “company”, “association”, “club”, “foundation”, “fund”, “institute”, “society”, “union”, “syndicate”, “limited”, or “trust”, or words or abbreviations of similar import, and may contain the name of a beneficial owner, a trustee, or any other person.
(c) A statutory trust may apply to the [Secretary of State] for authorization to use a name that does not comply with subsection (a). The [Secretary of State] shall authorize use of the name applied for if, as to a conflicting name:
(1) the present user, registrant, or owner of the conflicting name consents in a signed record to the use and submits an undertaking in a form satisfactory to the [Secretary of State] to dissolve or to change the conflicting name to a name that complies with subsection (a) and is distinguishable in the records of the [Secretary of State] from the name applied for;
(2) the applicant delivers to the [Secretary of State] a certified copy of the final judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction establishing the applicant=s right to use in this state the name applied for; or
(3) the applicant delivers to the [Secretary of State] proof satisfactory to the [Secretary of State] that the present user, registrant, or owner of the conflicting name:
(A) has merged into the applicant;
(B) has been converted into the applicant; or
(C) has transferred substantially all of its assets, including the conflicting name, to the applicant.
(d) Subject to Section 706, this section applies to any foreign statutory trust transacting business in this state, having a certificate of authority to transact business in this state, or applying for a certificate of authority.
Comment
Principal Sources – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §108 (2001); Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3814.
The drafting committee opted not to require a traditional limited liability appellation. Such a requirement would be inconsistent with current practice under the Delaware Act, though the drafting committee contemplated that enacting jurisdictions with a strong policy regarding names of limited liability entities might modify this Section accordingly. Moreover, other regulatory law will sometimes limit the range of permissible names notwithstanding this Section. For example, the names of mutual funds typically do not contain a limited liability appellation, but Section 35(d) of the Investment Company Act of 1940, which is applicable to a statutory trust that is a registered investment company, prohibits “materially deceptive or misleading” names. 15 U.S.C. §80a-34(d). See also Rule 35d-1, 17 C.F.R. §270.35d-1 (listing types of names that have been deemed “materially deceptive or misleading”).
Under Section 103(b)(1), this
Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
SECTION 210. RESERVATION OF NAME.
(a) The exclusive right to the use of a name that complies with Section 209 may be reserved by:
(1) a person intending to form a statutory trust under this [act] and adopt the name;
(2) a statutory trust or a qualified foreign statutory trust intending to adopt the name;
(3) a foreign statutory trust intending to obtain a certificate of authority to transact business in this state and adopt the name;
(4) a person intending to organize a foreign statutory trust and intending to have it obtain a certificate of authority to transact business in this state and adopt the name;
(5) a foreign statutory trust formed under the name; or
(6) a foreign statutory trust formed under a name that does not comply with Section 209, but the name reserved under this paragraph may differ from the foreign statutory trust’s name only to the extent necessary to comply with Section 209.
(b) A person may apply to reserve a name under subsection (a) by delivering to the [Secretary of State] for filing an application that states the name to be reserved and the paragraph of subsection (a) that applies. If the [Secretary of State] finds that the name is available for use by the applicant, the [Secretary of State] shall file a statement of name reservation and thereby reserve the name for the exclusive use of the applicant for a 120-day period.
(c) An applicant that has reserved a name pursuant to subsection (b) may reserve the same name for additional 120-day periods. A person having a current reservation for a name may not apply for another 120-day period for the same name until 90 days have elapsed in the current reservation.
(d) A person that has reserved a name under this section may deliver to the [Secretary of State] for filing:
(1) a notice of transfer that states the reserved name, the name and street and mailing addresses of some other person to which the reservation is to be transferred, and the paragraph of subsection (a) that applies to the other person; or
(2) a notice of termination of the person’s reservation.
(e) Subject to Section 205(c), a transfer or termination under subsection (d) is effective when the [Secretary of State] files the notice of transfer.
Comment
Principal source – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §109 (2001).
Under Section 103(b)(1), this
Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
SECTION 211. AGENT FOR SERVICE OF PROCESS.
(a) A statutory trust or a qualified
foreign statutory trust shall designate and continuously maintain in this state
an agent for service of process.
(b) An agent for service of process of a statutory trust or qualified foreign statutory trust must be an individual who is a resident of this state or a person authorized to do business in this state which maintains an office in this state.
Comment
Principal Sources – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §114 (2001); Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3804; Connecticut Statutory Trust Act §34-507.
Under Section 201(a)(3), the initial designation of a statutory trust’s agent for service of process is made in the original certificate of trust. Under Section 702(a)(3), the initial designation of a foreign statutory trust’s agent for service of process is made in the original application for a certificate of authority. The initial designation may be changed pursuant to a statement of change under Section 213, by an amendment to the certificate of trust under Section 202, or by an annual report under Section 215(e) if the jurisdiction has adopted Section 215.
Under Section 103(b)(1), this
Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
SECTION 212. CHANGE OF DESIGNATED OFFICE OR AGENT FOR SERVICE OF PROCESS.
(a) A statutory trust or qualified foreign statutory trust may change its agent for service of process, the address of its agent for service of process, or its designated office by delivering to the [Secretary of State] for filing a statement of change containing:
(1) the name of the statutory trust or qualified foreign statutory trust;
(2) the street and mailing addresses of the current designated office of the statutory trust or qualified statutory trust;
(3) if the designated office is to be changed, the street and mailing addresses of the new designated office;
(4) the name and street and mailing addresses of the current agent of the statutory trust or qualified foreign statutory trust for service of process; and
(5) if the current agent for service of process or an address of the agent is to be changed, the new information.
(b) A statement of change is effective as provided in Section 205(c).
Comment
Principal Source – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §115 (2001).
Paragraph (a) uses “may” rather than “must” because a statutory trust may also change the information by an amendment to its certificate of trust under Section 202 and a qualified foreign statutory trust may also change the information by an amendment to its certificate of authority under Section 703. Further, if the information currently in the public record is not inaccurate, a statutory trust or qualified foreign statutory trust may change the information in an annual report under Section 215(e) if the jurisdiction has enacted Section 215.
Under Section 103(b)(1), this Section
is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
SECTION 213. RESIGNATION OF AGENT FOR SERVICE OF PROCESS.
(a) To resign as an agent for service of process of a statutory trust or qualified foreign statutory trust, the agent must deliver to the [Secretary of State] for filing a statement of resignation containing the name of the statutory trust or foreign statutory trust.
(b) After receiving a statement of resignation under subsection (a), the [Secretary of State] shall file it and transmit a copy to the designated office of the statutory trust or qualified foreign statutory trust and another copy to the principal office if the address of the office appears in the records of the [Secretary of State] and is different from the address of the designated office.
(c) An agency for service of process is terminated on the 31st day after the [Secretary of State] files the statement of resignation under subsection (a).
Comment
Principal Source – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §116 (2001).
This section provides the exclusive means for an agent to resign without cooperation from the statutory trust or qualified foreign statutory trust and the only way the agent, rather than the statutory trust or foreign statutory trust, can effect a change in the public record. Unlike most records authorized or required to be delivered to the filing officer for filing under this Act, a statement of resignation may not provide for a delayed effective date. Paragraph (c) mandates the effective date. An effective date included in a statement of resignation is disregarded. To satisfy Section 212(a), the statutory trust or qualified foreign statutory trust must designate a new agent for service of process before the effective date. If the statutory trust or foreign statutory trust fails to do so, under Section 214 service on the statutory trust or foreign statutory trust may be made on the [Secretary of State].
Under Section 103(b)(1), this
Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
SECTION 214. SERVICE OF PROCESS.
(a) An agent for service of process appointed by a statutory trust or qualified foreign statutory trust is an agent of the statutory trust or qualified foreign statutory trust for service of any process, notice, or demand required or permitted by law to be served upon the statutory trust or qualified foreign statutory trust.
(b) If a statutory trust or qualified foreign statutory trust does not appoint or maintain an agent for service of process in this state or the agent for service of process cannot with reasonable diligence be found at the agent’s address on file with the [Secretary of State], the [Secretary of State] is an agent of the statutory trust or qualified foreign statutory trust for service of process.
(c) Service of any process, notice, or demand on the [Secretary of State] under subsection (b) may be made by delivering to and leaving with the [Secretary of State] two copies of the process, notice, or demand. If a process, notice, or demand is served on the [Secretary of State], the [Secretary of State] shall forward one of the copies by registered or certified mail, return receipt requested, to the statutory trust or qualified foreign statutory trust at its designated office.
(d) Service is effected under subsection (c) at the earliest of:
(1) the date the agent for the statutory trust or qualified foreign statutory trust receives the process, notice, or demand;
(2) the date shown on the return receipt, if signed on behalf of the statutory trust or qualified foreign statutory trust; or
(3) five days after the process, notice, or demand is deposited with the United States Postal Service by the [Secretary of State], if correctly addressed and with sufficient postage.
(e) The [Secretary of State] shall keep a record of each process, notice, and demand served pursuant to this section and record the time of, and the action taken regarding, the service.
(f) This section does not affect the right to serve process, notice, or demand in any other manner provided by law.
Comment
Principal Source – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §117 (2001).
Paragraph (f) confirms that the authority of the Secretary of State to accept process under a state long-arm statute exists independently of paragraphs (b) through (e) of this Section.
Under Section 103(b)(1), this
Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
(a) A statutory trust or qualified foreign statutory trust must deliver to the [Secretary of State] for filing an annual report that contains the name of the statutory trust or qualified foreign statutory trust and:
(1) in the case of a statutory trust:
(A) the street and mailing addresses of its designated office; and
(B) the name and street and mailing addresses of its agent for service of process; or
(2) in the case of a qualified foreign statutory trust:
(A) any alternate name adopted under Section 706(a);
(B) the name of the state or other jurisdiction under whose law the qualified foreign statutory trust is formed; and
(C) the street and mailing addresses of its principal office and, if the laws of the jurisdiction under which the qualified foreign statutory trust is formed require it to maintain an office in that jurisdiction, the street and mailing addresses of that office; and
(D) the name and street and mailing addresses of its agent for service of process in this state.
(b) Information in an annual report under this section must be current as of the date the annual report is delivered to the [Secretary of State] for filing.
(c) The first annual report under this section must be delivered to the [Secretary of State] between [January 1 and April 1] of the year following the calendar year in which a statutory trust was formed or a qualified foreign statutory trust was authorized to transact business. An annual report must be delivered to the [Secretary of State] between [January 1 and April 1] of each subsequent calendar year.
(d) If an annual report does not contain the information required in subsection (a), the [Secretary of State] shall promptly notify the reporting statutory trust or qualified foreign statutory trust and return the report to it for correction. If the report is corrected to contain the information required in subsection (a) and delivered to the [Secretary of State] within 30 days after the date of the notice, it is timely delivered.
(e) If an annual report under this section contains an address of a designated office or the name or address of an agent for service of process which differs from the information shown in the records of the [Secretary of State] immediately before the filing, the differing information in the annual report is considered a statement of change under Section 212.]
Comment
Source – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §210 (2001).
This Section is in brackets in
recognition of the diversity of practice among the states regarding annual
reports. Uniformity is not expected. If adopted, under Section 103(b)(1) this
Section would not be subject to override by the governing instrument.
SECTION 301. STATUTORY TRUST AUTHORIZED. A statutory trust is an entity separate from its trustees and beneficial owners.
Comment
Principal
Sources – Delaware Statutory Trust Act §§3810; Connecticut Statutory Trust
Act §§34-502.
Because this Section implements an entity conception of the statutory trust, it confirms that any prior judicial decision that holds that a common law business trust violates the state’s corporate law, trust law, or public policy is not applicable to a statutory trust created under this Act. Examples of such decisions, which reflect the now outmoded concern that a business trust could be used to evade regulatory limitations on the corporate form, are collected in Robert H. Sitkoff, The Rise of the Statutory Business Trust [in progress].
SECTION 302. PERMISSIBLE PURPOSES. A
statutory trust may have any lawful purpose except a prevailingly donative
purpose.
Comment
Principal
Sources – Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3801; Connecticut Statutory Trust
Act §34-502a.
This Section provides that a statutory trust may be formed for “any lawful purpose except for a prevailingly donative purpose.” Thus, in addition to use in a commercial transaction, a statutory trust may be used in a custodial or other context that need not be for profit. See Section 307. The limitation to “lawful” activity addresses the concern that some states limit the type of organizations that may be used in regulated industries such as banking and insurance.
The exclusion of “a prevailingly
donative purpose” addresses the concern
that a statutory trust might be used in an estate planning or other donative
context to evade public policy limitations on donative transfers and common law
trusts. See, e.g., Uniform Trust Code §105 (2000); John H. Langbein, Mandatory
Rules in the Law of Trusts, 98 Nw. U.L. Rev. 1105 (2004). The
word “prevailingly” was included to account for the possibility that a donative
transfer might be structured to look otherwise in form but still be a donative
transfer in substance.
By prohibiting a statutory trust from having “a prevailingly donative purpose,” the drafting committee avoided the necessity of designing a comprehensive schedule of mandatory rules applicable only to statutory trusts with such a purpose, a task made more difficult by the increasing differentiation among the states on these matters, particularly with respect to the rights of the settlor’s creditors in a self-settled trust and the continued application of the Rule Against Perpetuities to interests held in trust. See Robert H. Sitkoff & Max M. Schanzenbach, Jurisdictional Competition for Trust Funds: An Empirical Analysis of Perpetuities and Taxes, 115 Yale L.J. 356 (2005).
Examples of mandatory rules applicable to common law trusts that drafters might have tried to avoid by using a statutory trust include the following:
·
the duty of a trustee to act in good faith and
in accordance with the terms and purposes of the trust and the interests of the
beneficiaries;
·
the requirement that a trust and its terms be
for the benefit of one or more ascertainable beneficiaries, and that the trust
have a purpose that is lawful, not contrary to public
policy, and possible to achieve;
·
the power of the court
to modify or terminate a trust;
·
the effect of a
spendthrift provision and the rights of the settlor’s and the beneficiary’s
creditors and assignees to reach the assets of a trust;
·
the power of the court
to adjust a trustee’s compensation specified in the terms of the trust which is
unreasonably low or high;
·
the power of the court
to remove a trustee for a serious breach of trust;
·
the duty of the
trustee to give information and make reports concerning the administration of
the trust to the beneficiary;
·
the effect of an exoneration
clause that purports to limit or eliminate the duties or liabilities of a
trustee to a beneficiary;
·
the rights of a party,
other than a trustee or beneficiary, that transacts with the trustee in the
trustee’s capacity as such;
·
the rules against perpetuities,
accumulations of income, and suspension of the power of alienation; and
·
the power of the court
to take such action and exercise such jurisdiction as may be necessary in the
interests of justice.
Most of the foregoing rules are scheduled in Uniform Trust Code §105 (2000), the Code’s schedule of mandatory rules.
The drafting committee declined the suggestion to exclude statutory trusts from having a charitable purpose on the ground that a statutory trust with a charitable purpose would covered by existing regulatory law applicable to charitable entities. See generally Marion R. Fremont-Smith, Governing Nonprofit Organizations: Federal and State Law and Regulation (2004).
Under Section 103(b)(2), this
Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
SECTION 303. GOVERNING LAW. The law of this state governs:
(1) the internal affairs of a statutory trust;
(2) the liability of a beneficial owner as beneficial owner and a trustee as trustee for the debts, obligations, or other liabilities of a statutory trust; and
(3) the liability of a series of a
statutory trust with respect to the statutory trust and other series thereof.
Comment
Principal
Sources – Connecticut Statutory Trust Act §34-502; Uniform Limited
Partnership Act §106 (2001); Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act §106
(2006).
Under paragraph (1) the internal affairs of a statutory trust formed under this act are governed by the laws of this state no matter in which state the statutory trust operates. Although the term “internal affairs” may be indeterminate at its edges, the concept certainly includes interpretation and enforcement of the governing instrument and relations among the trustees, beneficial owners, and the statutory trust. See generally Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws §302 cmt. a(1971) (defining “internal affairs” with reference to corporate law as “the relations inter se of the corporation, its shareholders, directors, officers or agents”).
Paragraph
(2) supports Sections 413 and 506 by confirming that the liability of a
beneficial owner or a trustee for the debts, obligations, or other liabilities
of the statutory trust is governed by the law of this state. This paragraph is stated separately from
Paragraph (1) because the liabilities of a beneficial owner or trustee to third
parties is arguably not an internal affair.
See, e.g., Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws §307 (1971)
(treating shareholders’ liability separately from the internal affairs
doctrine).
Section 701(a) states rules for qualified foreign statutory trusts that parallel and are analogous in scope to those of this section.
Under Section 103(b)(3), this
Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
(a) A statutory trust has perpetual existence.
(b) A statutory trust, or any series
thereof, may not be terminated or revoked by a beneficial owner or other person
except in accordance with this [act] or the terms of the governing instrument
of the statutory trust.
(c) The death, incapacity,
dissolution, termination, or bankruptcy of a beneficial owner or trustee does
not result in the termination or dissolution of a statutory trust or any series
thereof.
Comment
Principal Sources – Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3808; Connecticut Statutory Trust Act §34-518.
Following the corporate default rule
of perpetual existence, paragraph (a) provides a default rule of perpetual
existence for a statutory trust. The
duration of a common law trust, by contrast, is curtailed by the Rule Against
Perpetuities. See Restatement (Second) of Property: Donative
Transfers § 2.1 (1983). Accordingly, unless the
governing instrument provides otherwise, under this section a statutory trust
is exempt from the Rule Against Perpetuities.
Without taking a position on the policy soundness of the tax-driven
movement to abolish the Rule Against Perpetuities with respect to donative
trusts, see Max M. Schanzenbach & Robert H. Sitkoff, Perpetuities or Taxes?
Explaining the Rise of the Perpetual Trust, 27 Cardozo L. Rev. 2465 (2006), the
drafting committee concluded that the dead-hand worries that underpin
the Rule does not apply to a statutory trust.
Under Section302, a statutory trust may not have a prevailingly donative
purpose.
Paragraph (b) confirms that a
statutory trust may only be terminated in accordance with the terms of this Act
or the governing instrument. Thus,
paragraph (b) overrides the common law of trust termination that would
otherwise be applicable to a statutory trust pursuant to Section 105. Those rules are concerned with mediating the
tension between the donor’s intent and subsequent contrary preferences of the
beneficiaries, see Robert H. Sitkoff, An Agency Costs Theory of Trust Law, 89
Cornell L. Rev. 621, 658-63 (2004), an issue that is not applicable to a
statutory trust inasmuch as a statutory trust under this Act may not have a
prevailingly donative purpose. Instead,
the drafting committee contemplated that pursuant to Section 104(b)(8) the
governing instrument would provide for termination of the statutory trust or
modification of the governing instrument if such provisions are desirable.
Paragraph (c) confirms that the rule of partnership law under which a partnership is dissolved upon the death or incapacity of one of the partners does not apply to a statutory trust or any series thereof.
[For
discussion, whether to override the common law merger doctrine. See, e.g., Restatement (Third) of Trusts §69, which says “If the legal title to the
trust property and the entire beneficial interest become untied in one person,
the trust terminates.”]
SECTION 305. POWER TO SUE AND BE SUED; TITLE TO TRUST PROPERTY.
(a) A statutory trust has the power to sue and be sued in its own name.
(b) Except as otherwise provided in Section 306, the property of a statutory trust is subject to attachment and execution as if it were a domestic [“business”?] corporation.
(c) Legal title to the property of a
statutory trust or any part thereof may be held in the name of any trustee of
the statutory trust, in its capacity as trustee, with the same effect as if the
property were held in the name of the statutory trust. [For
discussion: Relation of this provision,
if any, to Section 104(b)(11).]
Comment
Principal Sources – Delaware Statutory Trust Act §§3803-3805; Connecticut Statutory Trust Act §§34-518, 34-523; Uniform Limited Partnership Act §303 (2001).
Paragraph (a) implements the concept that a statutory trust is a separate juridical entity by confirming that a statutory trust has the power to sue and be sued in its own name.
Paragraph (b) addresses the attachment and execution of a statutory trust’s property by absorbing the rules applicable to a domestic corporation in like circumstances.
Paragraph
(c) gives the trustee the option of holding property of the statutory trust in
the name of the trustee in the trustee’s capacity as such even though the
statutory trust is a juridical entity that can hold property in its own
name. The drafting committee reasoned
that this provision would be useful for a statutory trust that has dealings in
a state that has not provided for a statutory trust entity because property
ownership by a trustee in the trustee’s capacity as such is familiar from the
use of common law trusts. Indeed, because
a common law trust is not an entity separate from its trustee, property held in
a common law trust must be held by the trustee in its capacity as such. To police the boundary of the trustee’s
personal assets and the assets of the trust, the common law imposes on the
trustee duties to earmark trust property and not to commingle it with the
trustee’s own. See Uniform Trust Code
§810 (2000); Restatement (Third) of Trusts §84 (T.D. No. 4, 2005); Restatement
(Second) of Trusts §179 (1959). The
drafting committee contemplated that under appropriate circumstances Section 404(b)
would be read to require similar conduct by a trustee of a statutory trust that
takes title to property of the statutory trust in the name of the trustee in
the trustee’s capacity as such.
SECTION 306. SERIES OF STATUTORY
TRUST.
(a) The governing instrument may: [The subsections to this section were moved
from Section 104.]
(1) provide for classes, groups, or series of trustees, beneficial owners, or beneficial interests, having such relative rights, powers, and duties as the governing instrument may provide, and provide for the creation of additional classes, groups, or series of trustees, beneficial owners, or beneficial interests, having such relative rights, powers, and duties as may be established, including rights, powers, and duties senior or subordinate to existing classes, groups or series of trustees, beneficial owners, or beneficial interests;
(2) provide for designated series of trustees, beneficial owners, or beneficial interests having separate rights, powers, or duties with respect to [For discussion: This change came from style on the ground that the original was “unnecessary repetition.”] profits and losses associated with specified property or obligations, and permit the series to have a separate business purpose or investment objective;
(3) grant to, or withhold from, all or certain trustees or beneficial owners, or a specified class, group, or series of trustees or beneficial owners, the right to vote, separately or with any or all other classes, groups, or series of the trustees or beneficial owners, on any matter;
(b) If the governing instrument of a statutory trust creates one or more series as provided in subsection (a), the debts, obligations, liabilities, and expenses incurred, contracted for, or otherwise existing with respect to a particular series are enforceable against the assets of the series only, and not against the assets of the statutory trust generally or any other series thereof, and none of the debts, obligations, or other liabilities, or expenses incurred, contracted for, or otherwise existing with respect to the statutory trust generally or any other series thereof are enforceable against the assets of the series if:
(1) separate and distinct records are maintained for the series and the assets associated with the series are held in separate and distinct records, directly or indirectly, including through a nominee or otherwise, and accounted for in separate and distinct records separately from the other assets of the statutory trust, or any other series thereof; and
(2) notice of the limitation on liabilities of a series is set forth in the certificate of trust.
(c) If a statutory trust is a registered investment company under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, 15 U.S.C. Section 80a-1 et seq., any class, group, or series of beneficial interests established by the governing instrument of the statutory trust is a class, group, or series preferred as to distribution of assets or payment of dividends over all other classes, groups, or series in respect to assets specifically allocated to the class, group, or series under Section 18, or any amendment or successor provision, of the Investment Company Act of 1940[, 15 U.S.C. Section 80a-18], as amended, and any regulations issued thereunder.
Comment
Principal Sources – Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3804; Connecticut Statutory Trust Act §34-518.
Paragraph (a) confirms that a statutory trust may be organized with one or more series. The organization of a master statutory trust with several series is particularly common among statutory trusts that are registered investment companies under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, 15 U.S.C. Sections 80a-1 et seq.
Paragraph (b) provides that if a
statutory trust that has created separate series under paragraph (a), the
debts, liabilities, and other obligations of a particular series are enforceable
against the assets of that series only, but only if (1) separate records are
maintained for each series and (2) notice of the limitation on liabilities of a
series is set forth in the certificate of trust. Under Section 201 the certificate of trust is
made part of the public record and must indicate whether the statutory trust
might create one or more series.
Paragraph
(c) [Assistance on this portion of the comment is invited, particularly from
Bibb and Victor.]
Section
612 provides for the dissolution of a series.
SECTION 307. POWER TO HOLD PROPERTY. A statutory trust has the power to hold or take title to property its own name whether in an active, passive, or custodial capacity.
Comment
Principal Source – Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3801; Connecticut Statutory Trust Act §34-502a.
This Section implements the concept that a statutory trust is an entity separate from its trustee and beneficial owners by confirming that a statutory trust may transact over property in its own name. The property of a common law trust, by contrast, must be held in the name of the trustee as such. See also Section 408.
SECTION 401. MANAGEMENT OF STATUTORY TRUST. The business and affairs of a statutory trust must be managed by or under the authority of its trustees.
Comment
Principal Sources – Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3806; Connecticut Statutory Trust Act §34-517; Uniform Trust Code §815 (2000); Uniform Limited Partnership Act §105 (2001); Delaware General Corporation Law §141.
Section 102(16) defines trustee as a person designated as such in accordance with the governing instrument or applicable law. Section 104(b)(4)(C) confirms that the governing instrument may provide for trustee appointment. However, because no provision in this Act provides default rules for trustee appointment, if the governing instrument does not provide for trustee appointment, then under Section 105 the applicable law is the state’s law pertaining to trustee appointment in common law trusts. For treatment of the default rules of trustee appointment, removal, and succession in common law trusts, see Restatement (Third) of Trusts §§31-37 (2003); Uniform Trust Code §§701-02, 704-06 (2000); Restatement (Second) of Trusts §§101, 106-08 (1959).
(a) A trustee may exercise:
(1) powers conferred by the governing instrument;
(2) except as limited by the governing instrument, any other powers necessary or convenient to carry out the business and affairs of the statutory trust; and
(3) any other powers conferred by this [act].
(b) The trustee’s exercise of a power is subject to the fiduciary duties prescribed by Section 404 [An alternative: this [article]].
Comment
Principal Source –Uniform Trust Code §815 (2000).
Paragraph (a) is intended to grant trustees the broadest possible powers, but to be exercised always in accordance with the duties of the trustee and any limitations stated in the terms of the trust. Hence, paragraph (a) overrides the application to a statutory trust under Section 105 of the outmoded common law rule that a trustee has only those powers granted by the trust instrument. See Uniform Trust Code §815 (2000); Restatement (Third) of Trusts §85 cmt. a (T.D. No. 4, 2005).
Paragraph (b) confirms that the existence of a power, regardless of its source, does not speak to the question whether in a particular case it is consistent with the trustee’s fiduciary obligation to exercise that power. As the official comment to Uniform Trust Code §815 (2000) explains, “A power differs from a duty. A duty imposes an obligation or a mandatory prohibition. A power, on the other hand, is a discretion, the exercise of which is not obligatory. The existence of a power, however created or granted, does not speak to the question of whether it is prudent under the circumstances to exercise the power.” See also Restatement (Third) of Trusts §§70, 86 (T.D. No. 4, 2005); John H. Langbein, The Contractarian Basis of the Law of Trusts, 105 Yale L.J. 625, 640-43 (1995).
SECTION 403. PROTECTION OF PERSON DEALING WITH TRUSTEE.
(a) A person other than a beneficial owner that in good faith assists a trustee, or that in good faith and for value deals with a trustee, without knowledge that the trustee is exceeding or improperly exercising the trustee’s powers is protected from liability as if the trustee properly exercised the power.
(b) A person other than a beneficiary that in good faith deals with a trustee is not required to inquire into the extent of the trustee’s powers or the propriety of their exercise.
[For discussion: Whether to include also the following paragraphs
(c), (d), and (e), which are also taken from UTC 1012:
(c)
A person who in good faith delivers assets to a trustee need not ensure
their proper application.
(d)
A person other than a beneficiary who in good faith assists a former
trustee, or who in good faith and for value deals with a former trustee,
without knowledge that the trusteeship has terminated is protected from
liability as if the former trustee were still a trustee.
(e) Comparable protective provisions of other
laws relating to commercial transactions or transfer of securities by
fiduciaries prevail over the protection provided by this section.]
Comment
Principal Source – Uniform Trust Code §1012 (2000).
[For
discussion: Here is the full text of the
official comment from UTC 1012, which will need to be revised to reflect our
different context and purpose, and whether we include (c), (d), and (e).]
This section is derived from Section 7 of the Uniform Trustee Powers Act.
Subsection (a) protects two different classes; persons other than beneficiaries who assist a trustee with a transaction, and persons other than beneficiaries who deal with the trustee for value. As long as the assistance was provided or the transaction was entered into in good faith and without knowledge, third persons in either category are protected in the transaction even if the trustee was exceeding or improperly exercising the power. For the definition of “know,” see Section 104. This Code does not define “good faith” for purposes of this and the next section. Defining good faith with reference to the definition used in the State’s commercial statutes would be consistent with the purpose of this section, which is to treat commercial transactions with trustees similar to other commercial transactions.
Subsection (b) confirms that a third party who is acting in good faith is not charged with a duty to inquire into the extent of a trustee’s powers or the propriety of their exercise. The third party may assume that the trustee has the necessary power. Consequently, there is no need to request or examine a copy of the trust instrument. A third party who wishes assurance that the trustee has the necessary authority instead should request a certification of trust as provided in Section 1013. Subsection (b), and the comparable provisions enacted in numerous States, are intended to negate the rule, followed by some courts, that a third party is charged with constructive notice of the trust instrument and its contents. The cases are collected in George G. Bogert & George T. Bogert, The Law of Trusts and Trustees Section 897 (Rev. 2d ed. 1995); and 4 Austin W. Scott & William F. Fratcher, The Law of Trusts Section 297 (4th ed. 1989).
Subsection (c) protects any person, including a beneficiary, who in good faith delivers property to a trustee. The standard of protection in the Restatement is phrased differently although the result is similar. Under Restatement (Second) of Trusts Section 321 (1959), the person delivering property to a trustee is liable if at the time of the delivery the person had notice that the trustee was misapplying or intending to misapply the property.
Subsection (d) extends the protections afforded by the section to assistance provided to or dealings for value with a former trustee. The third party is protected the same as if the former trustee still held the office.
Subsection (e) clarifies that a
statute relating to commercial transactions controls whenever both it and this
section could apply to a transaction.
Consequently, the protections provided by this section are superseded by
comparable protective provisions of these other laws. The principal statutes in question are the
various articles of the Uniform Commercial Code, including Article 8 on the
transfer of securities, as well as the Uniform Simplification of Fiduciary
Securities Transfer Act. End discussion
note.]
(a)
In discharging the duties of trusteeship, a trustee of a statutory trust
shall act in good faith and in a manner that the trustee reasonably believes to
be in the best interests of the statutory trust.
(b) A trustee of a statutory trust shall discharge its duties with the care that a person in a similar position would reasonably believe appropriate under similar circumstances.
Comment
Principal
Source – Revised Model Business Corporation Act §8.30 (2002).
To police the exercise of the trustee’s broad powers under Section 402, this section subjects the trustee to fiduciary duties of loyalty (paragraph (a)) and care (paragraph (b)) akin to those of a corporate director.
Under Section 103(b), the trustee’s standards
of conduct under this section are mandatory rules that are not subject to
override by the governing instrument.
However, the governing instrument may prescribe the standards by which “good
faith,” “best interests of the statutory trust,” and “care that a person in a
like position would reasonable believe appropriate under similar circumstances”
are determined provided that the standards are not “manifestly unreasonable.” See also Delaware Statutory Trust Act
§3806(c), which as revised in 2006 provides that a trustee’s fiduciary duties “may
be expanded or restricted or eliminated by provisions in the governing
instrument; provided, that the governing instrument may not eliminate the
implied contractual covenant of good faith and fair dealing.”
The drafting committee opted to model the trustee’s duties on the corporate fiduciary obligation as stated in Revised Model Business Corporation Act §8.30 (2002) rather than the more restrictive trust law fiduciary obligation because the statutory trust is used chiefly as a mode of business organization. Unlike the trust law fiduciary obligation, which evolved in the context of donative transfers, the corporate law fiduciary obligation evolved to serve the needs of commercial actors. For a statement of the duties of loyalty and prudence in trust law, see Restatement (Third) of Trusts §§77-78 (T.D. No. 4, 2005). For a comparison, see Robert H. Sitkoff, Trust Law, Corporate Law, and Capital Market Efficiency, 28 J. Corp. L. 565, 572-82 (2003). See also sources cited in the Comment to Section 408.
Because the standards of conduct
stated in this section are drawn from corporate law, the drafting committee
contemplated that by default the business judgment rule would apply in
litigation under paragraph (b) unless the governing instrument provides
otherwise. [For discussion: RMBCA 8.31, Standards of Liability for Directors, which says:
(a) A director shall not be
liable to the corporation or its shareholders for any decision to take or not
to take action, or any failure to take any action, as a director, unless the
party asserting liability in a proceeding establishes that:
(1) any provision in the
articles of incorporation authorized by section 2.02(b)(4) or the protection
afforded by section 8.61 for action taken in compliance with section 8.62 or
8.63, if interposed as a bar to the proceeding by the director, does not
preclude liability; and
(2) the challenged conduct
consisted or was the result of:
(i) action not in good faith;
or
(ii) a decision
(A) which the director did
not reasonably believe to be in the best interests of the corporation, or
(B) as to which the director
was not informed to an extent the director reasonably believed appropriate in
the circumstances; or
(iii) a lack of objectivity
due to the director’s familial, financial or business relationship with, or a
lack of independence due to the director’s domination or control by, another
person having a material interest in the challenged conduct
(A) which relationship or
which domination or control could reasonably be expected to have affected the
director’s judgment respecting the challenged conduct in a manner adverse to
the corporation, and
(B) after a reasonable
expectation to such effect has been established, the director shall not
have stablished that the challenged
conduct was reasonably believed by the director to be in the best interests of
the corporation; or
(iv) a sustained failure of
the director to devote attention to ongoing oversight of the business and
affairs of the corporation, or a failure to devote timely attention, by making
(or causing to be made) appropriate
inquiry, when particular facts and circumstances of significant concern
materialize that would alert a reasonably attentive director to the need
therefore; or
(v) receipt of a financial
benefit to which the director was not entitled or any other breach of the
director’s duties to deal fairly with the corporation and its shareholders that
is actionable under applicable law.
(b) The party seeking to hold
the director liable:
(1) for money damages, shall
also have the burden of establishing that:
(i) harm to the corporation
or its shareholders has been suffered, and
(ii) the harm suffered was
proximately caused by the director’s challenged conduct; or
(2) for other money payment
under a legal remedy, such as compensation for the unauthorized use of
corporate assets, shall also have whatever persuasion burden may be called for
to establish that the payment sought is appropriate in the circumstances; or
(3) for other money payment
under an equitable remedy, such as profit recovery by or disgorgement to the
corporation, shall also have whatever persuasion burden may be called for to
establish that the equitable remedy sought is appropriate in the circumstances.
(c) Nothing contained in this
section shall (1) in any instance where fairness is at issue, such as consideration
of the fairness of a transaction to the corporation under section 8.61(b)(3),
alter the burden of proving the fact or lack of fairness otherwise applicable,
(2) alter the fact or lack of liability of a director under another section of
this Act, such as the provisions governing the consequences of an unlawful
distribution under section 8.33 or a transactional interest under section 8.61,
or (3) affect any rights to which the corporation or a shareholder may be
entitled under another statute of this state or the United States.]
SECTION 405. DIRECTION OF TRUSTEES. [NOTE:
In the prior draft this was section 409, but per our last meeting it has
been moved here, right after the section on fiduciary duties. The cut-and-past was made with the tracking
off so that the changes made within the section and its comment would be
indicated differently from the language that was not changed.]
(a) The governing instrument may authorize any person, including a beneficial owner, to direct a trustee or other person in the management of the statutory trust.
(b) If the terms of a statutory
trust confer upon a person a power to direct certain actions of a trustee or
other person, the trustee or other person shall act in accordance with an
exercise of the power unless the direction is manifestly [For discussion: Style would
like us to drop “manifestly.”] contrary to the terms of the governing
instrument or the trustee knows or has reason to know that following the
direction would constitute a serious breach of fiduciary duty by the trustee.
(c) Neither the power to direct a
trustee or other person nor the exercise of the power by any person, including
a beneficial owner, causes the person to be a trustee or imposes on the person
duties, including fiduciary duties, or liabilities relating thereto, to a
statutory trust or to a beneficial owner thereof.
Comment
Principal Sources – Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3806; Connecticut Statutory Trust Act §34-517; Uniform Trust Code §808 (2000).
Paragraph (a) ratifies the use of a directed trustee, meaning a trustee that must act in accordance with the directions of another person. Under paragraph (b), however, the trustee must not follow a direction that is manifestly contrary to the terms of the governing instrument or that the trustee knows or has reason to know would constitute a serious breach of fiduciary duty. Cf. Restatement (Third) of Trusts §75 (T.D. No. 4, 2005); Restatement (Second) of Trusts §185 (1959).
The reference in paragraph (b) to “serious” breach of fiduciary duty is designed to exclude an inconsequential, immaterial, or technical breach that does not harm a beneficial owner. For some purposes, trust law distinguishes between “serious” and not serious breaches of trust. See, e.g., Uniform Trust Code §706(b)(1) (2000); Austin Wakeman Scott, William F. Fratcher, & Mark L. Ascher, 2 Scott and Ascher on Trusts §11.10, p. 661 (5th ed. 2006); Restatement (Second) of Trusts §107 cmt. b (1959).
The trustee’s determination whether a direction is “manifestly contrary to the terms of the governing instrument” or “would constitute a serious breach of fiduciary duty by the trustee” is subject to the trustee’s fiduciary obligation under Section 404. The drafting committee contemplated that, in accord with conventional trust practice, a trustee could seek judicial resolution of whether an instruction falls within the exclusion of paragraph (b) by applying to the appropriate court for instructions. See Restatement (Second) of Trusts §259 (1959); Restatement (Third) of Trusts §71 (T.D. No. 4, 2005).
Under Section 103(b)(5), the limitation on direction of trustees stated in paragraph (b) is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
Under paragraph (c), unless the governing instrument provides otherwise, a person that has the power to direct the trustee is not a trustee and owes no duties, fiduciary or otherwise, to the statutory trust or the beneficial owners.
In conjunction with Section 411,
this section facilitates the current practice in existing statutory trusts of
creating a trusteeship with respect to some, but not all, aspects of the
trust—for example, in a mutual fund with an investment advisor or in a
securitization transaction with a person whose consent is required before the
statutory trust can petition for bankruptcy.
SECTION 406. INDEPENDENT TRUSTEE IN REGISTERED INVESTMENT COMPANY.
(a) In this section, the terms “affiliated person” and “interested person” have the meanings set forth in the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, 15 U.S.C. Section 80a-1 et seq., or any rule adopted thereunder.
(b) If a statutory trust is registered as an investment company under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, 15 U.S.C. Section 80a-1 et seq.[, or any successor statute thereto,] a trustee is an independent trustee for all purposes under this [act] if the trustee is not an interested person of the statutory trust. The receipt of compensation for service as an independent trustee of the statutory trust and for service as an independent trustee of one or more other investment companies managed by a single investment adviser or an affiliated person of an investment adviser, does not affect the status of the trustee as an independent trustee under this section.
Comment
Principal Source – Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3801.
It is not uncommon for a director of a mutual fund to serve on multiple mutual fund boards. This Section addresses the question of trustee independence in such circumstances, rejecting Strougo v. Padegs, 964 F. Supp. 783 (S.D.N.Y. 1997) (applying Maryland law). In Strougo the plaintiffs brought a derivative suit against a fund’s investment advisor alleging excessive fees. The plaintiffs did not, however, make a demand on the directors prior to filing suit. The court held that the plaintiffs were excused from the demand requirement because the fund’s directors served on multiple boards within the same fund complex, receiving “substantial remuneration,” and hence were not independent from the adviser. Id. at 793-95.
In 1998 the Maryland legislature effectively overruled Strougo by amending the Maryland corporate code to provide that directors who are not “interested persons” under the Investment Company Act of 1940 also would be deemed disinterested under Maryland law. See Md. Code (Corporations & Associations) §2-405.3. A similar provision took effect in Massachusetts in 1999, see Mass. Laws. 182, § 2B, and in Delaware in 2000, see Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3801(h). Almost all mutual funds are organized as Maryland corporations, Massachusetts trusts, or Delaware statutory trusts. See Robert H. Sitkoff, The Rise of the Statutory Business Trust [in progress].
[For
discussion: Are there further suggested
changes to this comment, perhaps from Bibb and Victor?]
SECTION 407. TRUSTEE’S RIGHT TO INFORMATION. A trustee has the right to information relating to the affairs of the statutory trust reasonably related to the trustee’s discharge of the trustee’s duties as trustee.
Comment
Under Section 103(b)(6), the trustee’s right to information under this section is not subject to override by the governing instrument. However, the trustee’s right to information is limited to information “reasonably related to” the trustee’s discharge of its duties as trustee, and under Section 103(b)(6) the governing instrument may prescribe the standards by which “reasonably related” is determined provided that those standards are not “manifestly unreasonable.”
By linking the trustee’s information rights to the scope of the trustee’s duties as trustee, this section makes the trustee’s right to information function specific. This section therefore allows for the creation of a limited-role or directed trustee that will not have access to confidential information unrelated to the trustee’s limited role. At the same time, this section ensures that such a trustee will have access to information reasonably related to discharging the trustee’s duties in connection with the trustee’s limited role.
Section 503 provides a comparable
rule for a beneficial owner’s right to information.
SECTION 408. INTERESTED TRANSACTIONS.
(a) A trustee, officer, employee, or manager of a statutory trust, or a related person of a trustee, officer, employee, or manager, may lend money to, borrow money from, act as a surety, guarantor, or endorser for, guarantee or assume one or more obligations of, provide collateral for, and transact other business with the statutory trust and has the same rights and obligations with respect to any such matter as a person that is not a trustee, officer, employee, manager, or related person of a trustee, officer, employee, or manager.
(b) No
contract or transaction between a statutory trust and a trustee, officer,
employee, or manager of the statutory trust, or between a statutory trust and
any other person in which a trustee, officer, employee, or manager of the
statutory trust is a trustee, officer, employee, or manager or has a financial
interest, shall be void or voidable solely for this reason, or solely because
the trustee, officer, employee, or manager is present at or participates in the
decision of the statutory trust to authorize the contract or transaction, or
solely because the trustee, officer, employee, or manager’s votes are counted
for such purpose, if the contract or
transaction is fair to the statutory trust as of the time it is authorized,
approved or ratified, by the trustees or beneficial owners. [For discussion: (1) Whether to require disclosure of the
interested person’s interest. (2) Whether to include related persons. This draft of paragraph (b) is based on DGCL
144(a)(3).]
Comment
Principal Sources – Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3806; Delaware General Corporation Law §144.
Consistent with the use of the term “best interests” instead of “sole interest” in Section 404(a), this section abrogates the no-further-inquiry rule of the common law of trusts, which forbids self-dealing transactions. See Restatement (Third) of Trusts §78 (T.D. No. 5, 2005); Restatement (Second) of Trusts §170 (1959); John H. Langbein, Questioning the Trust Law Duty of Loyalty: Sole Interest or Best Interest?, 114 Yale L.J. 929 (2005); Melanie B. Leslie, Trusting Trustees: Fiduciary Duties and the Limits of Default Rules, 94 Georgetown L.J. 67 (2005).
The application of this section to a statutory trust that is registered as an investment company is preempted by the Investment Company Act of 1940, which generally prohibits a trustee, officer, employee, manager, and their related persons from lending money to, borrowing money from, and engaging in other transactions with the mutual fund without exemptive relief from the Securities and Exchange Commission. See 15 U.S.C. §80a-17(a), (d).
SECTION 409. GOOD-FAITH RELIANCE ON GOVERNING INSTRUMENT.
(a) A trustee that acts in good-faith reliance on the terms of the governing instrument is not liable to the statutory trust or to a beneficial owner for breach of any duty, including a fiduciary duty, to the extent the breach resulted from the reliance.
(b) An officer, employee, manager, or committee of a statutory trust, or other person designated pursuant to Section 104(b)(6) that acts in good-faith reliance on the terms of the governing instrument is not liable to the statutory trust or to a beneficial owner for breach of any duty, including a fiduciary duty, to the extent the breach resulted from the reliance.
Comment
Principal
Source – Uniform Trust Code §1006 (2000); Delaware Statutory Trust Act
§3806; Connecticut Statutory Trust Act §34-517.
A trustee, officer, employee, manager, committee, or other such person or persons should be able to administer a statutory trust with dispatch and without concern that a reasonable reliance on the terms of the governing instrument is misplaced. This section protects a person that so relies on a trust instrument, but only to the extent the breach of trust resulted from such reliance and only if the person’s reliance was in good faith.
The drafting committee contemplated
that a trustee’s good faith reliance on the records of the statutory trust, or
on a report made by a person that is within the person’s professional or expert
competence, would be protected from liability under Section 404(b) by the
business judgment rule. [For discussion: Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3806(k), which
as revised in 2006 now says, “A trustee, beneficial owner or an officer, employee, manager
or other person designated in accordance with paragraph (b)(7) of this section
shall be fully protected in relying in good faith upon the records of the
statutory trust and upon information, opinions, reports or statements presented
by another trustee, beneficial owner or officer, employee, manager or other
person designated in accordance with paragraph (b)(7) of this section, or by
any other person as to matters the trustee, beneficial owner or officer,
employee, manager or other person designated in accordance with paragraph
(b)(7) of this section reasonably believes are within such other person's
professional or expert competence, including information, opinions, reports or
statements as to the value and amount of the assets, liabilities, profits or
losses of the statutory trust, or the value and amount of assets or reserves or
contracts, agreements or other undertakings that would be sufficient to pay
claims and obligations of the statutory trust or to make reasonable provision
to pay such claims and obligations, or any other facts
pertinent to the existence and amount of assets from which distributions to
beneficial owners or creditors might properly be paid.”]
SECTION 410. INDEMNIFICATION, ADVANCEMENT, AND EXONERATION.
(a) A statutory trust may indemnify
and hold harmless any trustee or beneficial owner or other person with respect
to any claim or demand on the person by reason of the person’s relationship with
the statutory trust if the claim or demand does not arise from the person’s bad
faith, willful misconduct, or reckless indifference.
(b) Expenses, including reasonable attorney’s fees and costs, incurred by a
trustee, beneficial owner, or any other person in connection with a claim
or demand on the person by
reason of the person’s relationship with or to a statutory trust may be paid by
the statutory trust in advance of the final disposition of the claim or demand
upon an undertaking by or on behalf of the person to repay the statutory trust
if the person is ultimately determined not to be entitled to be indemnified under
subsection (a).
(c) A term in the governing
instrument relieving or exonerating a trustee from liability is unenforceable
to the extent that it relieves the trustee from liability for conduct involving
bad faith, willful misconduct, or reckless indifference.
Comment
Principal Sources – Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3817; Connecticut Statutory Trust Act §34-524; Delaware General Corporation Law §145; Uniform Trust Code §§105, 1008 (2000).
In Nakahara v. The NS 1991 American Trust, 739 A.2d 770 (Del. Ch. 1998), the court held that a Delaware statutory trust had the power to advance litigation expenses, but denied the trustees’ request for indemnification on the ground of unclean hands.
Under Section 103(b)(7), this section’s prohibition of indemnification, advancement, or exoneration for conduct involving bad faith, willful misconduct, or reckless indifference is not subject to override by the governing instrument. Prohibiting indemnification, advancement, or exoneration for such conduct is consistent with traditional trust doctrine. See Restatement (Second) of Trusts §222 (1959); George G. Bogert & George T. Bogert, The Law of Trusts and Trustees §542 (rev. 2d ed. 1993); Uniform Trust Code §1008. See also John H. Langbein, Mandatory Rules in the Law of Trusts, 98 Nw. U.L. Rev. 1105, 1121-25 (2004). It is also consistent with the Delaware Statutory Trust Act. As revised in 2006, Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3806(e) provides that the “governing instrument may provide for the limitation or elimination of any and all liabilities for breach of contract and breach of duty (including fiduciary duties) of a trustee . . . ; provided, that the governing instrument may not eliminate the implied contractual covenant of good faith and fair dealing.” See 2006 Delaware Laws Ch. 418 §7.
Any indemnification provision in the governing instrument
of a statutory trust operating as a mutual fund is subject to Section 17(h) of
the Investment Company Act of 1940, which generally prohibits a fund from
including in its organizational documents any provision that protects a trustee
or officer of a fund against liability to the fund or its shareholders by
reason of “willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence, or reckless
disregard” of the person’s duties as trustee or officer. 15 U.S.C. § 80a-17(h).
The SEC has taken the position that, before advancing
legal fees to a trustee of a mutual fund, the fund’s “board must either (1)
obtain assurances, such as by obtaining insurance or receiving collateral
provided by the [trustee], that the advance will be repaid if the trustee is
found to have engaged in disabling conduct, or (2) have a reasonable belief
that the [trustee] has not engaged in disabling conduct and ultimately will be
entitled to indemnification.” SEC
Interpretation: Matters Concerning
Independent Directors of Investment Companies, Investment Company Act Rel. No.
24083 (Oct. 14, 1999), 1999 WL 820629, *10.
The SEC has also taken the position that there is a rebuttable
presumption that an independent trustee (see Section 406) has not engaged in
disabling conduct. Id.
[Moved to paragraph (c) of Section 305.]
[Now Section 405.]
SECTION 411. DELEGATION BY TRUSTEE.
(a) A trustee may delegate duties and powers that a prudent trustee of comparable skills could properly delegate under the circumstances. The trustee shall exercise reasonable care, skill, and caution in:
(1) selecting an agent;
(2) establishing the scope and terms of the delegation; and
(3) periodically reviewing the agent’s actions in order to monitor the agent’s performance and compliance with the terms of the delegation.
(b) Subject to subsection (a), a trustee may delegate duties and powers to a co-trustee.
(c) In performing a delegated function, an agent owes a duty to the statutory trust to exercise reasonable care to comply with the terms of the delegation.
(d) A trustee that complies with subsection (a) is not liable to the beneficial owners or to the statutory trust for an action of the agent to whom the function was delegated.
(e) By accepting a delegation of powers or duties from the trustee of a trust that is subject to the law of this State, an agent submits to the jurisdiction of the courts of this State.
Comment
Principal Sources – Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3806; Connecticut Statutory Trust Act §34-517; Uniform Trust Code §807 .
This section reverses the outmoded common law rule against delegation by a trustee. In reversing the common law rule against delegation, the drafting committee followed both the Delaware Statutory Trust Act and the modern trend with respect to common law trusts. Most states have abrogated the common law nondelegation rule with legislation based on the Uniform Prudent Investor Act, Uniform Trust Code, or the Restatement (Third) of Trusts. See Uniform Trust Code §807 (2000); Uniform Prudent Investor Act §9 (1994); Restatement (Third) of Trusts: Prudent Investor Rule §171 (1992). See also Restatement (Third) of Trusts §80 (T.D. No. 4, 2005). See generally John H. Langbein, Reversing the Nondelegation Rule of Trust-Investment Law, 59 Mo. L. Rev. 105 (1994).
Paragraphs (a), (c), (d), and (e)
track the language of Uniform Trust Code §807 (2000), which is derived from
Uniform Prudent Investor Act §9 (1994). Following
the Delaware Statutory Trust Act, however, paragraph (b) treats delegation to a
co-trustee in the same manner as delegation to another agent. By contrast, traditional trust law disfavors
delegation by one co-trustee to another.
See Restatement (Second) of Trusts §184 (1959). See also Uniform Trust Code §703(e) (2000); Restatement
(Third) of Trusts §81 cmt. c(1) (T.D. No. 4, 2005).
Mutual funds often receive a common set of services from an organization that specializes in operating mutual funds, which is typically the investment adviser or an affiliate. The trustees monitor the service providers and the Investment Company Act of 1940 requires the trustees to approve the contracts with the adviser and distributor. See 15 U.S.C. § 80a-15.
SECTION 412. ACTION BY TRUSTEES. On any matter that is to be acted on by trustees:
(1) the trustees act by majority of their number;
(2) the trustees may take the action without a meeting, without previous notice, and without a vote, if a consent or consents, in a record, setting forth the action so taken, are signed by trustees having at least the minimum number of trustees necessary to authorize or take the action at a meeting at which all trustees entitled to vote thereon were present and voted, but prompt notice of the action must be given to those trustees that did not consent; and
(3) a trustee may vote in person or
by proxy, but if by proxy, the proxy must be contained in a signed record.
Comment
Principal Sources – Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3806; Connecticut Statutory Trust Act § 34-517; Delaware General Corporation law §228; Uniform Trust Code §703 (2000).
In accord with Uniform Trust Code §703(a) (2000) and Restatement (Third) of Trusts §39 (2003), paragraph (a)(1) rejects the common law rule requiring unanimity among the trustees of a private trust, replacing it with a default rule requiring a majority.
The remainder of this section allows
for maximum flexibility in the mechanics of allowing the trustees to act or
vote on actions. Section 104(b)(3)
confirms that the rules stated in this Section are subject to override by the
governing instrument.
The Investment Company Act of 1940 requires a mutual
fund’s investment advisory contract, underwriting contract, fidelity bond, independent
public accountants, and other such matters to be approved by the trustees of
the mutual fund. See 15 U.S.C. §
80a-15(a); 15 U.S.C. 80a-31(a); 17 C.F.R. § 270.17g-1. Investment advisory and underwriting
contracts, and selection of independent public accountants, must be approved by
the noninterested trustees at an in-person meeting. See 15 U.S.C. §80a-15(c); 15 U.S.C. 80a-31(a).
SECTION 413. NO RIGHTS OF TRUSTEE’S CREDITORS IN TRUST
PROPERTY. Property of a statutory trust is not subject
to personal obligations of the trustee. In the event that the trustee becomes
insolvent or bankrupt, the trustee’s creditors have no claim upon the assets of
the statutory trust.
Comment
Principal Sources – Uniform Trust Code §507 (2000); Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3805.
This
section confirms that the personal creditors of a trustee have no recourse
against the assets of the statutory trust.
The rule of this section is familiar from the operation of common law
trusts. See Uniform Trust Code Restatement
§507 (2000); Restatement (Third) of Trusts §42 cmt. c (2003); Restatement
(Second) of Trusts §308 (1959). The
protection afforded by this section is also consistent with that provided by
the Bankruptcy Code. Property in which
the trustee holds legal title as trustee is not part of the trustee’s
bankruptcy estate. See 11 U.S.C.
§541(d).
For a general discussion of asset partitioning rules in
organizational law, see Henry Hansmann
& Reinier Kraakman, The Essential
Role of Organizational Law, 110 Yale L.J. 387 (2000); Henry Hansmann
& Ugo Mattei, The Functions of
Trust Law: A Comparative
Legal and Economic Analysis, 73 N.Y.U. L. Rev. 434 (1998). See
also Henry Hansmann, Reinier Kraakman,
& Richard Squire, Law and the Rise of the Firm, 119 Harv. L. Rev. 1333
(2006).
SECTION 414. TRUSTEE NOT LIABLE FOR ACTS, OMISSIONS, OR OBLIGATIONS OF STATUTORY TRUST. An obligation of a statutory trust, whether arising in contract or tort or otherwise, is not an obligation of a trustee. A trustee, by reason of being a trustee, is not liable to any person other than the statutory trust or a beneficial owner for any act, omission, or obligation of the statutory trust or any series thereof.
Comment
Principal Source – Uniform Limited Liability Company §303 (1996).
This section implements the concept that the statutory trust is an entity separate from its trustee by confirming that a trustee, as a manager of the statutory trust, is not liable for the debts, obligations, and liabilities of the statutory trust. As such, this section overrides the outmoded common law rule that held the trustee liable for the debts of the trust but that gave the trustee a right to indemnity out of the trust fund. Compare Restatement (Second) of Trusts §§244, 261 (1959) (stating the old rule), with Uniform Trust Code §1010 (2000) (eliminating the personal liability of the trustee for debts, obligations, and liabilities arising in the trustee’s fiduciary capacity).
Nothing in this Section limits the personal liability of the trustee to the statutory trust for breach of duty under Section 404.
SECTION 415. AGENTS, OFFICERS, EMPLOYEES, MANAGERS, COMMITTEES AND AGENTS NOT LIABLE FOR ACTS, OMISSIONS, OR OBLIGATIONS OF STATUTORY TRUST. Any person acting pursuant to Section 104(b)(6) is not liable, by reason of acting in that capacity, to any person other than the statutory trust or a beneficial owner for any act, omission, or obligation of the statutory trust or any series thereof.
Comment
Principal Sources – Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3803; Connecticut Statutory Trust Act §34-523.
A
statutory trust acts through agents.
This section confirms that the statutory trust, not the statutory
trust’s agents, is liable for the acts, omissions, and obligations of agents
acting on the statutory trust’s behalf.
SECTION 501. CONTRIBUTIONS BY BENEFICIAL OWNERS.
(a) A contribution of a beneficial
owner to a statutory trust may be in cash, property, or services rendered or a
promissory note or other obligation to contribute cash or property or to
perform services. A person may become a
beneficial owner of a statutory trust and may receive a beneficial interest in
a statutory trust without making a contribution or being obligated to make a
contribution to the statutory trust.
(b) A beneficial owner is liable to the statutory trust for failure to perform any promise to contribute cash or property or to perform services, even if the beneficial owner is unable to perform because of death, disability, or any other reason. If a beneficial owner does not make the required contribution of property or services, the beneficial owner is obligated, at the option of the statutory trust, to contribute cash equal to that portion of the value of the contribution that has not been made. This option is in addition to, and not in place of, any other rights, including the right to specific performance, that the statutory trust may have against the beneficial owner under the governing instrument or applicable law.
(c) The governing instrument may provide that a beneficial owner that fails to make a contribution that the beneficial owner is obligated to make, or fails to perform in accordance with, or to comply with the terms and conditions of, the governing instrument is subject to specified penalties or consequences of the failure, including:
(1) reduction or elimination of the defaulting beneficial owner’s proportionate interest in the statutory trust;
(2) subordination of the defaulting beneficial owner’s beneficial interest to that of nondefaulting beneficial owners;
(3) forced sale of the defaulting beneficial owner’s beneficial interest;
(4) forfeiture of the defaulting beneficial owner’s beneficial interest;
(5) imposing an obligation
to repay a loan to the statutory trust by another beneficial owner of the
amount necessary to meet the defaulting beneficial owner’s commitment; or
(6) fixing the value of the defaulting beneficial owner’s beneficial interest by appraisal or by formula and redemption or sale of the defaulting beneficial owner’s beneficial interest at that value.
Comment
Principal Sources – Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3802; Connecticut Statutory Trust Act §34-515.
Although statutory trusts are used primarily as a mode of business organization in commercial transactions, paragraph (a) acknowledges that a beneficial owner may obtain a beneficial interest without an exchange of consideration, an event that is not uncommon in existing commercial practice. However, a statutory trust may not be used to effect a donative transfer because Section 302 prohibits a statutory trust from having a “prevailingly donative purpose.”
Paragraph (c) repudiates the hostility of traditional law to penalties, thereby resolving the doubts that arose prior to statutory confirmation about the validity of particular remedies for a beneficial owner’s breach.
Under Section 104(b)(1), the governing instrument may provide the means by which beneficial ownership is determined and evidenced. Under Section 104(b)(9)-(10), the governing instrument may specify the conditions under which a person becomes a beneficial owner.
SECTION 502. REDEMPTION OF BENEFICIAL INTERESTS. A statutory trust may acquire, by purchase, redemption, or otherwise, any beneficial interest in the statutory trust. An interest so acquired by a statutory trust is canceled.
Comment
Principal
Source – Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3818.
A registered investment company organized as an open-end
mutual fund generally is obligated to honor redemption requests by its
shareholders at the net asset value per share next calculated after receipt of
the request, with payment to be made in cash (or, in some cases, in kind)
within seven days of the request. See 15 U.S.C. §80a-22(e); 17 CFR §270.22c-1.
In narrowly defined circumstances, this redemption right and obligation may be
postponed. See 15 U.S.C. §80a-22(e).
The redemption proceeds may be reduced by various fees retained by the fund
and/or its selling agent (i.e., sales loads and redemption fees). See 17 CFR §§270.22c-2; 270.6c-10.
SECTION 503. BENEFICIAL OWNER’S RIGHT TO INFORMATION. A beneficial owner has the right to information relating to the affairs of the statutory trust reasonably related to the beneficial owner’s ability to enforce its rights as beneficial owner.
Comment
Principal Source – Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3819.
Under Section 103(b)(8), a beneficial owner’s right to information under this section is not subject to override by the governing instrument. However, a beneficial owner’s right to information under this section is limited to information “necessary” for the beneficial owner to enforce its rights as such, and under Section 103(b)(8) the governing instrument may prescribe the standards by which “necessary” is determined if those standards are not “manifestly unreasonable.” Imposing a mandatory right to information critical to the beneficiary’s ability to enforce the trust is familiar law. See Restatement (Second) of Trusts §173 cmt. c (1959).
Section 404 provides a comparable rule for a trustee’s right to information.
SECTION 504. RIGHTS OF BENEFICIAL OWNER IN TRUST PROPERTY.
(a) A creditor of a beneficial owner does not have the right to obtain possession of, or otherwise exercise legal or equitable remedies with respect to, the property of the statutory trust.
(b) A beneficial interest in the statutory trust is personal property regardless of the nature of the property of the statutory trust. A beneficial owner does not have any interest in specific property of the statutory trust.
(c) A beneficial interest in the statutory
trust is freely transferable.
(d) When a beneficial owner becomes entitled to receive a distribution, the beneficial owner has the status of, and is entitled to all remedies available to, a creditor of the statutory trust with respect to the distribution.
(e) A beneficial owner does not have a preemptive right to subscribe to any additional issue of beneficial interests or any other interest.
[Moved to article 3’s new section on
series.]
Comment
Principal Source – Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3805; Connecticut Statutory Trust Act §34-516.
Paragraph (a) implements the concept that a statutory trust is an entity separate from its beneficial owners by confirming that a creditor of a beneficial owner cannot seize property of the statutory trust. For discussion of the parallel provision in the Delaware Statutory Trust Act, see Wendell Fenton & Eric A. Mazie, Delaware Statutory Trusts, in 2 R. Franklin Balotti & Jesse A. Finkelstein, The Delaware Law of Corporations & Business Organizations §19.4, at 19-9 – 19-10 (3d ed. 2005 Supp.).
Paragraph (c) provides as a default rule that a beneficial owner’s interest in the statutory trust is freely transferable. Thus, this paragraph overrides the rule in some states, which would otherwise be applicable to a statutory trust pursuant to Section 105, that makes a common law trust spendthrift by default. See Jeffrey A. Schoenblum, 2007 Multistate Guide to Estate Planning Table 9.05, Part 1, Column 2 (collecting authority). However, because the rule stated in paragraph (c) is not scheduled in Section 103(b), it is subject to override by the governing instrument. Section 104(b)(2) confirms that the governing instrument may limit a beneficial owner’s right to transfer its beneficial interest.
Under Section 104(b)(12), the
governing instrument may provide for the establishment of record dates for
allocations and distributions.
SECTION 505. TRANSACTION WITH BENEFICIAL OWNER. A beneficial owner or related person of a beneficial owner may lend money to, borrow money from, act as a surety, guarantor or endorser for, guarantee or assume one or more obligations of, provide collateral for, or transact other business with the statutory trust and, subject to other law, has the same rights and obligations with respect to those matters as a person that is not a beneficial owner.
Comment
Principal Source – Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3806.
SECTION 506. LIMITED LIABILITY OF BENEFICIAL OWNERS. A beneficial owner has the same limitation of
liability accorded to a shareholder of a domestic business corporation.
Comment
Principal Sources – Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3803; Connecticut Statutory Trust Act §34-523.
By providing as a default rule that
the beneficial owners of a statutory trust enjoy the same limited liability as
shareholders of a domestic corporation, this section confirms that the “control
test” of Williams v. Inhabitants of Milton, 102 N.E. 355 (Mass. 1913), and
Restatement (Second) of Agency §14B (1958), is not applicable to a statutory
trust. Under the control test, if a
beneficial owner of a common law business trust had a say in the administration
of the trust or the right to remove and replace the trustees, the beneficial
owner might be held liable for the debts of the trust. By contrast, under this section a beneficial
owner may participate in the management of the statutory trust without exposure
to liability for the debts of the statutory trust. For discussion of the
parallel provision in the Delaware Statutory Trust Act, see Wendell Fenton
& Eric A. Mazie, Delaware
Statutory Trusts, in 2 R. Franklin Balotti & Jesse A. Finkelstein, The Delaware Law of Corporations &
Business Organizations §19.3 (3d ed. 2005 Supp.).
SECTION 507. VOTING OR CONSENT BY BENEFICIAL OWNERS. On any matter that is to be acted on by beneficial
owners, the following rules apply:
(1) The beneficial owners act by
majority of their vote. [For
discussion: “majority of their vote” is
unclear. What “vote” rights do the
beneficial owners have? Per capita? Per capital?]
(2) The beneficial owners may take the action without a meeting, without notice, and without a vote, if a consent, or consents, in a record, setting forth the action so taken, are signed by beneficial owners having at least the minimum number of votes necessary to authorize or take the action at a meeting at which all beneficial owners entitled to vote thereon were present and voted, but prompt notice of the action must be given to those beneficial owners that did not consent.
(3) A beneficial owner may vote in person or by proxy, but if by proxy, the proxy must be contained in a signed record.
Comment
Principal Source – Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3806; Delaware General Corporation Law §228.
Except for a conversion, merger, or
dissolution under Article 6, nothing in this act provides for the beneficial
owners to act on any matter. However,
because the beneficial owners may be given such a right by the terms of the
governing instrument, paragraph (a) supplies a default rule requiring a
majority of the number of beneficial interests.
Section
104(b)(3) confirms that the rules stated in this Section are subject to
override by the governing instrument.
[For
discussion: Is there a ’40 Act section
relevant for statutory trusts that are mutual funds? If so, assistance on explanatory commentary
is invited, particularly from Bibb and Victor.]
SECTION 508. DERIVATIVE ACTION.
(a) A beneficial owner may maintain a derivative action in the [appropriate court] to enforce a right of the statutory trust if:
(1) the beneficial owner first makes a demand on the trustees, requesting that the trustees cause the statutory trust to bring an action to enforce the right, and the trustees do not bring the action within a reasonable time; or
(2) a demand would be futile.
(b) A derivative action on behalf of a statutory trust may be maintained only by a person that is a beneficial owner at the time the action is commenced and:
(1) was a beneficial owner when the conduct giving rise to the action occurred; or
(2) whose status as a beneficial owner devolved upon the person by operation of law or pursuant to the terms of the governing instrument from a person that was a beneficial owner at the time of the conduct.
(c) In a derivative action on behalf of the statutory trust, the complaint must state with particularity:
(1) the date and content of the derivative plaintiff’s demand and the trustees’ response to the demand; or
(2) the reason the demand should be excused as futile.
(d) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (e):
(1) any proceeds or other benefits of a derivative action on behalf of a statutory trust, whether by judgment, compromise, or settlement, are the property of the statutory trust and not of the derivative plaintiff; and
(2) if the derivative plaintiff receives any proceeds, it shall immediately remit them to the statutory trust.
(e) If a derivative action on behalf of a statutory trust is successful in whole or in part, the court may award the plaintiff reasonable expenses, including reasonable attorney’s fees and costs, from the recovery by the statutory trust.
(f) A derivative action on behalf of
a statutory trust may not be voluntarily dismissed or settled without the court’s
approval.
Comment
Principal Sources - Uniform Limited Partnership Act §§1002-1005 (2001); Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3816; Connecticut Statutory Trust Act §34-522.
Under Section 103(b)(9), the right of a beneficial owner to bring a derivative action under this Section may not be eliminated by the governing instrument. However, Section 103(b)(9) permits the governing instrument to subject the right to additional standards and restrictions including the requirement that beneficial owners owning a specified amount or type of beneficial interest join in bringing the derivative action, provided that the additional standards and restrictions are not manifestly unreasonable.
In preserving a mandatory right to bring a derivative action, but allowing that right to be subjected to additional standards and restrictions that are not manifestly unreasonable, the drafting committee endeavored to strike an honorable compromise between two policy aims that are in tension. On the one hand, without the right to bring a derivative action, a beneficial owner might have no recourse in the event of trustee misconduct. On the other hand, without appropriate safeguards, a meritless derivative action might be brought with the aim of extracting a quick settlement. See, e.g., Reinier Kraakman, Hyun Park, & Steven Shavell, When Are Shareholder Suits in Shareholder Interests?, 82 Georgetown L.J. 1733 (1994).
[Further
suggestions for this comment are welcome, particularly from Bibb and Victor
concerning Section 16(c) of the ’40 Act.]
SECTION 601. DEFINITIONS. In this [article]:
(1) “Constituent organization” means an organization that is party to a merger.
(2) “Constituent statutory trust” means a constituent organization that is a statutory trust.
(3) “Converted organization” means the organization into which a converting organization converts pursuant to Sections 602 through 605.
(4) “Converting organization” means an organization that converts into another organization pursuant to Section 602.
(5) “Converting statutory trust” means a converting organization that is a statutory trust.
(6) “Governing statute” of an organization means the statute that governs the organization’s internal affairs.
(7) “Organization” means a general partnership, including a limited liability partnership; limited partnership, including a limited liability limited partnership; limited liability company; corporation; statutory trust; or any other person having a governing statute. The term includes a domestic or foreign organization whether or not organized for profit.
(8) “Organizational documents” means the basic records that create the organization and determine its internal governance and the relations among the persons that own it, have an interest in it, or are members of it.
(9) “Surviving organization” means an organization into which one or more other organizations are merged, whether the surviving organization preexisted the merger or was created by the merger.
Comment
Principal
Source – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §1101 (2001).
This section contains definitions specific to this Article. Under Section 103(b)(10), this Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
(a) An organization other than a statutory trust may convert to a statutory trust, and a statutory trust may convert to another organization pursuant to this section and Sections 603 through 605 and a plan of conversion, if:
(1) the other organization’s governing statute authorizes the conversion;
(2) the conversion is not prohibited by the law of the jurisdiction that enacted the other organization’s governing statute; and
(3) the other organization complies with its governing statute in effecting the conversion.
(b) A plan of conversion must be in a record and must include:
(1) the name and form of the organization before conversion;
(2) the name and form of the organization after conversion;
(3) the terms and conditions of the conversion, including the manner and basis for converting interests in the converting organization into any combination of money, interests in the converted organization, and other consideration; and
(4) the organizational documents of the converted organization.
Comment
Principal Sources – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §1102 (2001).
In a statutory conversion an existing entity changes its form, the jurisdiction of its governing statute, or both. For example, a statutory trust formed under the laws of one jurisdiction might convert to a corporation, limited liability company, or limited partnership under the laws of the same or another jurisdiction (referred to in some statutes as “domestication”).
In contrast to a merger, which involves at least two entities, a conversion involves only one. The converting and converted organization are the same entity. See Section 605(a). For this Act to apply to a conversion, either the converting or converted organization must be a statutory trust subject to this Act.
A plan of conversion may provide that some persons with interests in the converting organization will receive interests in the converted organization while other persons with interests in the converting organization will receive some other form of consideration. Thus, a “squeeze out” conversion is possible.
For a general discussion of conversion and its effect, see Model Entity Transactions Act §406 (2006) and comment 1 thereto.
SECTION 603. ACTION ON PLAN OF CONVERSION BY CONVERTING STATUTORY TRUST.
(a)
A plan of conversion must be consented to by all trustees and all beneficial
owners of a converting statutory trust. [For
discussion: Rutledge note to Sitkoff
urging additional language to the effect that “no beneficial owner shall have
the right to dissent from a conversion.”
Rutledge also suggests a parallel provision with respect to mergers.]
(b) A converting statutory trust may amend a plan of conversion or abandon the planned conversion:
(1) as provided in the plan; and
(2) except as prohibited
by the plan, by the same consent as was required to approve the plan.[For discussion: Style asks, “When does the authority to amend
or abandon a plan end?”]
Comment
Principal Source – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §1103 (2001).
The requirement in paragraph (a) of unanimous consent by all trustees and beneficiaries is a default rule that may be overridden by the governing instrument. See Section 104(b)(4)(B). Hence, the governing instrument may state a different quantum of consent or provide a different approval mechanism. Varying this subsection’s rule means that a beneficial owner might be subject to a conversion (including a “squeeze out” conversion) without consent and with no appraisal remedy. If the converting organization is a statutory trust subject to this Act, the trustee of the converting organization is subject to the duties and obligations stated in this Act. Those duties would apply to the process and terms under which the conversion occurs. However, if the governing instrument allows for a conversion with less than unanimous consent, the mere fact that a beneficial owner objects to a conversion does not mean that a trustee that is favoring, arranging, consenting to, or effecting the conversation has breached a duty under this Act.
In the case of a statutory trust that is a registered investment company organized as an open-end mutual fund, a shareholder may elect to redeem any or all beneficial interests in the statutory trust at the current net asset value per share, see 17 C.F.R. §270.22c-1, which is a price that is akin to an appraisal value. Except for limited circumstances, a mutual fund is required to pay proceeds to the redeeming shareholder within seven days of the date of redemption request. See 15 U.S.C. §80a-22(e). Thus, a mutual fund generally does not afford dissenting rights to its shareholders because any shareholder of a mutual fund being converted may redeem fund shares at net asset value prior to the closing date of the proposed conversion.
(a) After a conversion is approved:
(1) a converting statutory trust shall deliver to the [Secretary of State] for filing articles of conversion, which must include:
(A) a statement that the statutory trust has been converted into another organization;
(B) the name and form of the converting organization and the jurisdiction of its governing statute;
(C) a statement that the conversion was approved as required by this [act];
(D) a statement that the conversion is not prohibited by the governing statute of the converted organization; and
(E) if the converted organization is a foreign organization not authorized to transact business in this state, the street and mailing address of an office which the [Secretary of State] may use for the purposes of Section 605(c); and
(2) if the converting organization is not a converting statutory trust, the converting organization shall deliver to the [Secretary of State] for filing a certificate of trust, which must include, in addition to the information required by Section 201:
(A) a statement that the statutory trust was converted from another organization;
(B) the name and form of the organization and the jurisdiction of its governing statute; and
(C) a statement that the conversion was approved in a manner that complied with the organization’s governing statute.
(b) A conversion becomes effective:
(1) if the converted organization is not a statutory trust, as provided by the governing statute of the converted organization; or
(2) if the converted organization is a statutory trust, when the certificate of trust takes effect.
Comment
Principal Source – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §1104 (2001).
Under paragraph (b) the effective date of a conversion is determined under the governing statute of the converted organization.
Under Section 103(b)(10), this Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
(a) An organization that has been converted pursuant to this [article] is for all purposes the same entity that existed before the conversion.
(b) When a conversion takes effect:
(1) all property owned by the converting organization remains vested in the converted organization;
(2) all debts, obligations, or other liabilities of the converting organization continue as debts, obligations, or other liabilities of the converted organization;
(3) an action or proceeding pending by or against the converting organization may be continued as if the conversion had not occurred;
(4) except as prohibited by law other than this [act], all of the rights, privileges, immunities, powers, and purposes of the converting organization remain vested in the converted organization;
(5) except as otherwise provided in the plan of conversion, the terms and conditions of the plan of conversion take effect; and
(6) except as otherwise agreed, the conversion does not dissolve a converting statutory trust or any series thereof for the purposes of Sections 611 and 612.
(c) A converted organization that is a foreign organization consents to the jurisdiction of the courts of this state to enforce any debt, obligation, or other liability for which the converting statutory trust is liable, if, before the conversion, the converting statutory trust was subject to suit in this state on the debt, obligation, or other liability. A converted organization that is a foreign organization and not authorized to transact business in this state appoints the [Secretary of State] as its agent for service of process for purposes of enforcing a debt, obligation, or other liability under this subsection. Service on the [Secretary of State] under this subsection is made in the same manner and with the same consequences as in Section 214(c) and (d).
Comment
Principal Source – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §1105 (2001).
Paragraph (a) confirms that conversion changes an entity’s legal type, but does not create a new entity. Unlike a merger, a conversion involves a single entity. Therefore under paragraph (b) a conversion does not transfer any of the entity’s rights or obligations. For further discussion, see Model Entity Transactions Act §406 (2006) and comment 1 thereto.
Under Section 103(b)(10), this
Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
(a) A statutory trust may merge with one or more other constituent organizations pursuant to this section and Sections 607 through 609 and a plan of merger if:
(1) the governing statute of each of the other organizations authorizes the merger;
(2) the merger is not prohibited by the law of a jurisdiction that enacted any of the governing statutes; and
(3) each of the other organizations complies with its governing statute in effecting the merger.
(b) A plan of merger must be in a record and must include:
(1) the name and form of each constituent organization;
(2) the name and form of the surviving organization and, if the surviving organization is to be created by the merger, a statement to that effect;
(3) the terms and conditions of the merger, including the manner and basis for converting or exchanging the interests in each constituent organization into any combination of money, interests in the surviving organization, and other consideration;
(4) if the surviving organization is to be created by the merger, the surviving organization’s organizational documents; and
(5) if the surviving organization is not to be created by the merger, any amendments to be made by the merger to the surviving organization’s organizational documents.
Comment
Principal Source – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §1106 (2001).
For this Act to apply to a merger, at least one of the constituent organizations must be a statutory trust subject to this Act.
A plan of merger may provide that some persons with interests in a constituent organization will receive interests in the surviving organization, while other persons with interests in the same constituent organization will receive some other form of consideration. Thus, a “squeeze out” merger is possible. As noted in the comment to Section 603, the duties and obligations stated in this Act apply to a trustee of a constituent organization that is a statutory trust subject to this Act. Those duties would apply to the process and terms under which a “squeeze out” merger occurs.
SECTION 607. ACTION ON PLAN OF MERGER BY CONSTITUENT STATUTORY TRUST.
(a) A plan of merger must be consented to by all trustees and beneficial owners of a constituent statutory trust.
(b) After a merger is approved, and at any time before a filing is made under Section 608, a constituent statutory trust may amend the plan or abandon the planned merger:
(1) as provided in the plan; and
(2) except as prohibited by the plan, with the same consent as was required to approve the plan.
Comment
Principal Sources – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §1107 (2001).
The requirement in paragraph (a) of unanimous consent by all trustees and beneficiaries is a default rule that may be overridden by the governing instrument. See Section 104(b)(4)(B). Hence, the governing instrument may state a different quantum of consent or provide a completely different approval mechanism. Varying this subsection’s rule means that a beneficial owner might be subject to a merger (including a “squeeze out” merger) without consent and with no appraisal remedy. The trustee of a constituent statutory trust is subject to the duties and obligations stated in this Act, and those duties would apply to the process and terms under which the merger occurs. However, if the governing instrument allows for a merger with less than unanimous consent, the mere fact a beneficial owner objects to a merger does not mean that a trustee that is favoring, arranging, consenting to, or effecting the merger has breached a duty under this Act.
For the reasons discussed in the
comment to Section 603, a mutual fund generally does not afford dissenting
rights to its shareholders because any shareholder of an acquired mutual fund
may redeem acquired fund shares at net asset value prior to the closing
date of the proposed reorganization of the acquired fund.
(a) After each constituent organization has approved a merger, articles of merger must be signed on behalf of:
(1) each constituent statutory trust, by one or more trustees or other authorized representative; and
(2) each other constituent organization, by an authorized representative.
(b) Articles of merger under this section must include:
(1) the name and form of each constituent organization and the jurisdiction of its governing statute;
(2) the name and form of the surviving organization, the jurisdiction of its governing statute, and, if the surviving organization is created by the merger, a statement to that effect;
(3) if the surviving organization is to be created by the merger:
(A) if it will be a statutory trust, the statutory trust’s certificate of trust; or
(B) if it will be an organization other than a statutory trust, the organizational document that creates the organization;
(4) if the surviving organization preexisted the merger, any amendments provided for in the plan of merger for the organizational document that created the organization;
(5) a statement as to each constituent organization that the merger was approved as required by the organization’s governing statute;
(6) if the surviving organization is a foreign organization not authorized to transact business in this state, the street and mailing addresses of an office that the [Secretary of State] may use for the purposes of Section 609(b); and
(7) any additional information required by the governing statute of any constituent organization.
(c) The articles of merger shall be filed in the [office of the Secretary of State].
(d) A merger becomes effective under this [article]:
class=Section6>(1) if the surviving organization is a statutory trust, upon the later of:
(A) compliance with subsection (c); or
(B) subject to Section 205(c)(2), (3), or (4), as specified in the articles of merger; or
(2) if the surviving organization is not a statutory trust, as provided by the governing statute of the surviving organization.
Comment
Principal Source – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §1108 (2001).
Under Section 103(b)(10), this Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
(a) When a merger becomes effective:
(1) the surviving organization continues or comes into existence;
(2) each constituent organization that merges into the surviving organization ceases to exist as a separate entity;
(3) all property owned by each constituent organization that ceases to exist vests in the surviving organization;
(4) all debts, obligations, or other liabilities of each constituent organization that ceases to exist continue as debts, obligations, or other liabilities of the surviving organization;
(5) an action or proceeding pending by or against any constituent organization that ceases to exist continues as if the merger had not occurred;
(6) except as prohibited by other law, all of the rights, privileges, immunities, powers, and purposes of each constituent organization that ceases to exist vest in the surviving organization;
(7) except as otherwise provided in the plan of merger, the terms and conditions of the plan of merger take effect; and
(8) if the surviving organization is created by the merger:
(A) if it is a statutory trust, the certificate of trust becomes effective; or
(B) if it is an organization other than a statutory trust, the organizational document that creates the organization becomes effective; and
(9) if the surviving organization preexisted the merger, any amendments provided for in the articles of merger for the organizational document that created the organization become effective.
(b) A surviving organization that is a foreign organization consents to the jurisdiction of the courts of this state to enforce any debt, obligation, or other liability owed by a constituent organization, if before the merger the constituent organization was subject to suit in this state on the obligation. A surviving organization that is a foreign organization and not authorized to transact business in this state appoints the [Secretary of State] as its agent for service of process for the purposes of enforcing a debt, obligation, or other liability under this subsection. Service on the [Secretary of State] under this subsection is made in the same manner and with the same consequences as in Section 215(c) and (d).
Comment
Principal Source – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §1109 (2001).
Under Section 103(b)(10), this Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
SECTION 610. [ARTICLE] NOT EXCLUSIVE. This [article] does not preclude an entity from being converted or merged under law other than this [act].
Comment
Principal Source – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §1113 (2001).
(a) A statutory trust may be
dissolved by agreement of all trustees and beneficial owners.
(b) Upon dissolution of a statutory trust and until the filing of a statement of cancellation, the trustees or other persons that under the governing instrument are responsible for winding up the statutory trust’s affairs, in the name of and for and on behalf of the statutory trust, may:
(1) institute, maintain, and defend suits, whether civil, criminal, or administrative;
(2) settle and close the business of the statutory trust;
(3) dispose of and convey the
property of the statutory trust;
(4) discharge or make reasonable provision for the liabilities of the statutory trust; and
(5) distribute to the beneficial owners any remaining assets of the statutory trust.
(c) A statutory trust that has dissolved shall pay or make reasonable provision to pay all claims and obligations, including all contingent, conditional, and unmatured claims and obligations, known to the statutory trust and all claims and obligations that are known to the statutory trust but for which the identity of the claimant is unknown, in accordance with the following rules:
(1) If there are sufficient assets, the claims and obligations must be paid in full, and any provision for payment must be made in full.
(2) If there are insufficient assets, the claims and obligations must be paid or provided for according to their priority and, among claims and obligations of equal priority, ratably to the extent of assets available therefor.
(3) Any remaining assets must be distributed to the beneficial owners.
(d) Any person, including any trustee, that under the governing instrument is responsible for winding up a statutory trust’s affairs which has complied with this section is not liable to the claimants of the statutory trust by reason of the person’s actions in winding up the statutory trust.
(e) On application of any person
that shows good cause, the [appropriate court] may appoint a person to be a
receiver for a terminated statutory trust with the power to undertake any
action that might have been done by the statutory trust before its termination
if the action is necessary for final settlement of unfinished business of the
statutory trust. [Moved here from Section 203.]
Comment
Principal Source – Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3808; Delaware Limited Liability Company Act §18-805.
Paragraph (a) provides as a default rule that a statutory trust may be dissolved by agreement of all the trustees and all the beneficiaries.
Paragraph (e) provides for the possibility that after dissolution additional unfinished business of the statutory trust is discovered.
Under Section 103(b)(11), this
Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
[As noted above, we have four discussion
issues on this section that were circulated with this draft on a separate page styled
“discussion notes regarding USTEA Section 611 (Dissolution of Statutory
Trust).”]
(a) A series may be dissolved and its affairs wound up without causing the dissolution of the statutory trust or any other series thereof in accordance with the following rules:
(1) The dissolution, winding up, liquidation, or termination of any series does not affect the limitation of liability with respect to a series.
(2) A series is dissolved and its affairs must be wound up at the time or upon the happening of events specified in the governing instrument of the statutory trust.
(3) Upon dissolution of a series of
a statutory trust, the persons that under the governing instrument of the
statutory trust are responsible for winding up the series’s affairs, in the
name of the statutory trust and for and on behalf of the statutory trust and the
series, may take all actions with respect to the series as are permitted under Section
604(a) and shall provide for the claims and obligations of the series and
distribute the assets of the series as provided Section 604(b).
(b) Any person, including a trustee, that under the governing instrument is responsible for winding up the affairs of a series under subsection (a) which has complied with this section is not liable to the claimants of the series by reason of the person’s actions in winding up the series.
[For
discussion: (1) The omission in this
Section of several paragraphs in the comparable Section 611. (2)
Whether this section should be moved into Section 306 on series.]
Comment
Principal Source – Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3808.
This section parallels and is analogous in scope and effect to Section 604, except that it applies to a series rather than the entire statutory trust. On the series concept, see the Comment to Section 306.
SECTION 701. GOVERNING LAW.
(a) The law of the state or other jurisdiction under which a foreign statutory trust is formed governs:
(1) the internal affairs of the foreign statutory trust;
(2) the liability of a beneficial owner as beneficial owner and trustee as trustee for the debts, obligations, or other liabilities of the foreign statutory trust; and
(3) the liability of a series of a foreign statutory trust with respect to the foreign statutory trust and other series thereof. .
(b) The [Secretary of State] may not deny a foreign statutory trust a certificate of authority by reason of any difference between the laws of the jurisdiction under which the foreign statutory trust is formed and the laws of this state.
(c) A certificate of authority does not authorize a foreign statutory trust to engage in any business or exercise any power that a statutory trust may not engage in or exercise in this state.
Comment
Principal Sources – Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company §801 (2006); Uniform Limited Partnership Act §901 (2001); Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3851; Connecticut Statutory Trust Act §34-530.
Paragraph (a) parallels and is analogous in scope and effect to Section 303 for a domestic statutory trust. Paragraph (b) allows for a foreign statutory trust to operate domestically even if the law governing it is different from the laws governing domestic statutory trusts, but under paragraph (c) a foreign statutory trust cannot engage in any business or exercise any power that a domestic statutory trust could not.
Under Section 103(b)(1), this
Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
(1) the name of the foreign statutory trust and, if the name does not comply with Section 209, an alternate name adopted pursuant to Section 706(a).
(2) the name of the state or other jurisdiction under whose law the foreign statutory trust is formed;
(3) the street and mailing addresses of the foreign statutory trust’s principal office and, if the laws of the jurisdiction under which the foreign statutory trust is formed require it to maintain an office in that jurisdiction, the street and mailing address of the required office; and
(4) the name and street and mailing addresses of the foreign statutory trust’s initial agent for service of process in this state.
Comment
Principal Source – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §902 (2001).
A certificate of authority applied for under this section is different than a certificate of existence or registration furnished under Section 207.
Under Section 103(b)(1), this
Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
(a) To amend its certificate of authority, a qualified foreign statutory trust must deliver to the [Secretary of State] for filing an amendment or articles of merger stating:
(1) the name of the qualified foreign statutory trust;
(2) the date of filing of its initial certificate; and
(3) the changes that the amendment makes to the certificate as most recently amended or restated.
(b) A trustee that knows or has reason to know that any information in a filed certificate of authority was incorrect when the certificate was filed or has become incorrect due to changed circumstances shall promptly:
(1) cause the certificate to be amended; or
(2) if appropriate, deliver to the [Secretary of State] for filing a statement of correction pursuant to Section 206.
(c) A certificate of authority may be amended at any time for any purpose as determined by the trustees.
(d) An amendment or restated certificate of authority of a foreign statutory trust is effective as provided in Section 205(c).
Comment
Principal Source – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §202 (2001).
Paragraph (a) provides a mechanism for updating a statutory trust’s certificate of authority. Paragraph (b) imposes an obligation directly on the trustee rather than on the statutory trust.
Under Section 103(b)(1), this
Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
(a) Activities of a foreign statutory trust which do not constitute transacting business in this state within the meaning of this [article] include:
(1) maintaining, defending, or settling an action or proceeding;
(2) holding meetings of its trustees or carrying on any other activity concerning its internal affairs;
(3) maintaining accounts in financial institutions;
(4) maintaining offices or agencies for the transfer, exchange, and registration of the foreign statutory trust’s own beneficial interests or securities or maintaining trustees or depositories with respect to those beneficial interests or securities;
(5) selling through independent contractors;
(6) soliciting or obtaining orders, whether by mail or electronic means or through employees or agents or otherwise, if the orders require acceptance outside this state before they become contractual obligations;
(7) creating or acquiring indebtedness, mortgages, or security interests in real or personal property;
(8) securing or collecting debts or enforcing mortgages or other security interests in property securing the debts, and holding, protecting, or maintaining property so acquired;
(9) conducting an isolated transaction that is completed within 30 days and is not in the course of similar transactions; and
(10) transacting business in interstate commerce.
(b) This section does not apply in determining the contacts or activities that may subject a foreign statutory trust to service of process, taxation, or regulation under law of this state other than this [act].
(c) A person is not deemed to be doing business in the state solely by reason of being a trustee or a beneficial owner of a foreign statutory trust.
Comment
Principal Sources – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §903 (2001).
The schedule of activities that in paragraph (a) that do not constitute transacting business in the state are illustrative and not exhaustive. As revised in 2006, the Delaware Statutory Trust Act contains a similar schedule. See 2006 Delaware Laws Ch. 418 §20 (H.B. 445), adding Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3863.
Under Section 103(b)(1), this
Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
SECTION 705. FILING OF CERTIFICATE OF AUTHORITY. If all filing fees have been paid, unless the
[Secretary of State] determines that an application for a certificate of
authority of a foreign statutory trust does not comply with the filing
requirements of this [act], the [Secretary of State] shall file the
application, prepare, sign, and file a certificate of authority to transact
business in this state and make available a copy of the filed certificate to
the foreign statutory trust or its representative.
Comment
Principal Source – Based on Uniform Limited Partnership Act §904 (2001).
A certificate of authority filed under this section is different than a certificate of registration under Section 207.
Under Section 103(b)(1), this
Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
(a) A foreign statutory trust whose name does not comply with Section 107 may not obtain a certificate of authority until it adopts, for the purpose of transacting business in this state, an alternate name that complies with Section 107. A foreign statutory trust that adopts an alternate name under this subsection and obtains a certificate of authority with the name need not comply with [fictitious or assumed name statute]. After obtaining a certificate of authority with an alternate name, a foreign statutory trust shall transact business in this state under the name unless the foreign statutory trust is authorized under [fictitious or assumed name statute] to transact business in this state under another name.
(b) If a qualified foreign statutory trust changes its name to one that does not comply with Section 107, it may not thereafter transact business in this state until it complies with subsection (a) and obtains an amended certificate of authority.
Comment
Principal
Source – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §905 (2001).
Under Section 103(b)(1), this
Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
(a) A certificate of authority of a qualified foreign statutory trust to transact business in this state may be revoked by the [Secretary of State] in the manner provided in subsections (b) and (c) if the foreign statutory trust does not:
(1) appoint and maintain an agent for service of process;
(2) deliver for filing a statement of change within 30 days after a change has occurred in the name or address of the agent[;
(3) file an annual report; or
(4) pay, within 60 days after the due date, any fee, tax or penalty due to the [Secretary of State]].
(b) To revoke a certificate of authority of a foreign statutory trust, the [Secretary of State] must prepare, sign, and file a notice of revocation and send a copy to the foreign statutory trust’s agent for service of process in this state, or if the foreign statutory trust does not appoint and maintain a proper agent in this state, to the foreign statutory trust’s designated office. The notice must state:
(1) the effective date of the revocation, which must be at least 60 days after the date the [Secretary of State] sends the copy; and
(2) the basis for the revocation.
(c) Unless a foreign statutory trust cures the failures to comply with subsection (a) stated in the notice of revocation before the date state in the notice, the authority of the foreign statutory trust to transact business in this state ceases on that.
(d) If a foreign statutory trust cures the failures stated in the notice of revocation under subsection (c), the [Secretary of State] shall indicate that the foreign statutory trust is reinstated on the filed notice. The reinstatement of the statutory trust relates back for all purposes to the date of the notice of revocation.
Comment
Principal Source – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §906 (2001).
Paragraph (a)(3)-(4) is bracketed in
recognition of the diversity of approaches among the states with respect to
annual reports ((a)(3)) and taxes and other fees ((a)(4)). Uniformity is not expected.
Under Section 103(b)(1), this
Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
(a) To cancel its certificate of authority to transact business in this state, a qualified foreign statutory trust must deliver to the [Secretary of State] for filing a notice of cancellation that states:
(1) the name of the foreign statutory trust;
(2) the date of filing of its initial certificate of authority;
(3) that the certificate of authority is being canceled; and
(4) any other information as determined by the trustees filing the statement.
(b) A certificate of authority under
subsection (a) is canceled when the notice of cancellation becomes effective
under Section 205. [For discussion,
whether to split this section into two, with (a) and (b) as cancellation of
certificate of authority, and the rest as effect of failure to have a
certificate.]
(c) A foreign statutory trust transacting business in this state may not maintain an action or proceeding in this state unless it has a certificate of authority to transact business in this state.
(d) The failure of a foreign statutory trust to have a certificate of authority to transact business in this state does not impair the validity of a contract or act of the foreign statutory trust or prevent the foreign statutory trust from defending an action or proceeding in this state.
[For
discussion, whether to add a provision based on ReULLCA 808(c), which says “A
member or manager of a foreign limited liability company is not liable for the
debts, obligations, or other liabilities of the company solely because the
company transacted business in this state without a certificate of authority.”]
(e) If a foreign statutory trust transacts business in this state without a certificate of authority or cancels its certificate of authority, it appoints the [Secretary of State] as its agent for service of process for actions arising out of the transaction of business in this state.
Comment
Principal Source – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §907 (2001).
Under Section 103(b)(1), this
Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
SECTION 709. ACTION BY [ATTORNEY GENERAL]. The [Attorney General] may maintain an action to enjoin a foreign statutory trust from transacting business in this state in violation of this [article].
Comment
Principal Source – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §908 (2001).
Under Section 103(b)(1), this
Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
[For discussion: Rutledge urges that we include a reservation
of power to amend or repeal clause. Such
a clause appeared in an earlier draft, but was later removed when the
conference dropped the clause from its routine boilerplate.]
SECTION 801. UNIFORMITY OF APPLICATION AND CONSTRUCTION. In applying and construing this uniform act, consideration must be given to the need to promote uniformity of the law with respect to its subject matter among states that enact it.
Comment
Principal Source – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §1201 (2001).
Under Section 103(b)(1), this
Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
SECTION 802. RELATION TO ELECTRONIC SIGNATURES IN GLOBAL AND NATIONAL COMMERCE ACT. This [act] modifies, limits, or supersedes the federal Electronic Signatures in Global and National Commerce Act[, 15 U.S.C. Section 7001 et seq.], but this [act] does not modify, limit, or supersede Section 101(c) of that act or authorize electronic delivery of any of the notices described in Section 103(b) of that act.
Comment
Principal Source – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §1203 (2001).
Under Section 103(b)(1), this
Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
SECTION 803. SAVING CLAUSE. This [act] does not affect an action commenced, proceeding brought, or right accrued before this [act] takes effect.
Comment
Principal Source – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §1207 (2001).
Under Section 103(b)(1), this
Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
(a) This [act] does not limit,
prohibit, or invalidate the existence, acts, or obligations of any common-law
trust created or doing business in this state before or after the effective
date of the act. The laws of this state
other than this [act] pertaining to trusts apply to common-law trusts.
(b) A common-law trust created before or after the effective date of this [act] that does not have a prevailingly donative purpose may elect to be governed by this [act] by filing of a certificate of trust under Section 201.
[(c) A trust created pursuant to a statute of this state that was required by that statute to file a certificate of trust with [the Secretary of State] before the effective date of this [act] may elect to be governed by the provisions of this [act] by filing an amendment to its certificate of trust under Section 202.]
[(d) On two years after the effective date of this [act], this [act] governs the organization and internal affairs of all trusts created pursuant to a statute of this state that was required by that statute to file a certificate of trust with the [Secretary of State] before the effective date of this [act].]
Under Section 103(b)(1), this
Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
Comment
Principal Source – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §1206 (2001).
This Act governs all statutory trusts formed on or after the Act’s effective date. For pre-existing statutory trusts, this section establishes an optional “elect in” period and a mandatory, all-inclusive date of two years following the effective date. Beginning on the all-inclusive date, each pre-existing statutory trust that has not previously elected in becomes subject to this Act—including the schedule of mandatory rules in Section 103(b)—by operation of law.
Consistent with Section 302, paragraph (b) of this Section prohibits a common law trust with a prevailingly donative purpose from converting to a statutory trust.
The drafting committee contemplated
that some enacting jurisdictions might modify this section—particularly
paragraphs (c) and (d), which are bracketed to signal that uniformity is not
expected—to address other transition problems arising from differences between
this Act and prior law. [For discussion: States that lack a reserved power
clause. Perhaps the answer is simply to
remark the problem in this comment?]
SECTION 805. REPEALS. On [all-inclusive date], the following acts are repealed:
(1) [the State Statutory Trust Act as amended and in effect immediately before the effective date of this [act]];
(2) [the State Business Trust Act as amended and in effect immediately before the effective date of this [act]]; and
(3) [the State Real Estate Investment Trust Act as amended an in effect immediately before the effective date of this [act]].
Comment
Principal Sources – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §1205 (2001).
Paragraphs (1) and (2) supply model language for enacting jurisdictions
that have previously enacted a Statutory Trust Act or a Business Trust
Act.
Paragraph (3) supplies model language for enacting jurisdictions that have previously enacted a Real Estate Investment Trust statute. A real estate investment trust, also known as a REIT, is not a type of trust but rather is a tax status awarded to any business entity that qualifies under 26 U.S.C. §§856 et seq., or that qualifies as a real estate mortgage investment conduit under 26 U.S.C. §860D. In spite of the use of the word “trust” in its title, there is no reason why a REIT must be organized as a trust, whether statutory or common law. Indeed, in contemporary practice nearly all publicly-traded REITs are organized as Maryland corporations, not as trusts. See Robert H. Sitkoff, The Rise of the Statutory Business Trust __ [citation]. Nonetheless, a number of states have enacted REIT statutes that authorize the creation of a REIT-specific entity designed to qualify as a REIT under the Internal Revenue Code. Because a statutory trust under this Act could serve the same purpose, the drafting committee contemplated that enacting jurisdictions might take the occasion of enacting this act to repeal their REIT statutes.
Under Section 103(b)(1), this Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
SECTION 806. EFFECTIVE DATE. This [act] takes effect . . . .
Comment
Principal Source – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §1204 (2001).
Section 804 specifies how this Act affects statutory trusts, with special provisions pertaining to statutory trusts formed before the Act’s effective date. Section 804 contains no comparable provisions for foreign statutory trusts. Therefore, once this Act is effective, it applies immediately to all foreign statutory trusts, whether formed before or after the Act’s effective date.
Under Section 103(b)(1), this
Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.