D R A F T
FOR DISCUSSION ONLY
UNIFORM STATUTORY TRUST ENTITY ACT
NATIONAL CONFERENCE OF COMMISSIONERS
ON UNIFORM STATE LAWS
For February 27
– March 1, 2009 Drafting Committee MeetingDRAFT AS OF
MARCH 11, 2009
With Prefatory Notes and Comments
Copyright 82009
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, 121 W. Washington, Suite 300, Ann Arbor, MI 48104
ANN E. CONAWAY, Widener University School of Law, 4601 Concord Pike, Wilmington, DE 19803
LANI LIU EWART, 1099 Alakea St., Suite 1800, Honolulu, HI 96813
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, Harvard Law School, 1575 Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge, MA 02138, Reporter
EX OFFICIO
MARTHA LEE
WALTERS, Oregon Supreme Court, 1163 State St., Salem, OR 97301-2563, President
ANNE L. MCGIHON, 837 Sherman St., Denver, CO 80203, 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, 111 N. Wabash Ave., Suite 1010, Chicago, IL 60602, Executive Director
Copies of this Act may be obtained from:
NATIONAL CONFERENCE OF COMMISSIONERS
ON UNIFORM STATE LAWS
111 N. Wabash Ave., Suite 1010
Chicago, Illinois 60602
312/450-6600
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.
SIGNING OF RECORDS
SECTION 204.
DELIVERY TO AND FILING OF RECORDS BY [SECRETARY OF STATE]; EFFECTIVE
TIME AND DATE
SECTION 205.
CORRECTING FILED RECORD
SECTION 206.
CERTIFICATE OF GOOD STANDING
SECTION 207. NAME
OF STATUTORY TRUST
SECTION 208.
RESERVATION OF NAME
SECTION 209. AGENT
FOR SERVICE OF PROCESS
SECTION 210.
CHANGE OF DESIGNATED OFFICE OR AGENT FOR SERVICE OF PROCESS
SECTION 211.
RESIGNATION OF AGENT FOR SERVICE OF PROCESS
SECTION 212.
SERVICE OF PROCESS
SECTION 213.
ANNUAL REPORT FOR [SECRETARY OF STATE].
GOVERNING
LAW; AUTHORIZATION; DURATION; POWERS
SECTION 302.
STATUTORY TRUST AUTHORIZED
SECTION 303.
PERMISSIBLE PURPOSES
SECTION 305.
RIGHTS OF BENEFICIAL OWNER AND TRUSTEE IN TRUST PROPERTY.
SECTION 307. POWER
TO HOLD PROPERTY; TITLE TO TRUST PROPERTY
SECTION 308. POWER
TO SUE AND BE SUED
SECTION 401.
SERIES OF STATUTORY TRUST
SECTION 402.
LIABILITY OF SERIES
SECTION 403.
GOVERNANCE OF SERIES TRUST
SECTION 404.
SERIES TRUST AS INVESTMENT COMPANY
SECTION 405.
DISSOLUTION OF SERIES.
SECTION 501.
MANAGEMENT OF STATUTORY TRUST
SECTION 503. ACTION
BY TRUSTEES.
SECTION 504.
PROTECTION OF PERSON DEALING WITH TRUSTEE.
SECTION 505.
STANDARDS OF CONDUCT FOR TRUSTEES.
SECTION 506.
GOOD-FAITH RELIANCE
SECTION 507.
INTERESTED TRANSACTIONS
SECTION 508.
TRUSTEE’S RIGHT TO INFORMATION..
SECTION 509.
INDEMNIFICATION, ADVANCEMENT, AND EXONERATION
SECTION 510.
DIRECTION OF TRUSTEES
SECTION 511.
DELEGATION BY TRUSTEE
SECTION 512.
INDEPENDENT TRUSTEE IN REGISTERED INVESTMENT
COMPANY
BENEFICIARIES
AND BENEFICIAL RIGHTS
SECTION 601.
BENEFICIAL INTEREST
SECTION 602.
VOTING OR CONSENT BY BENEFICIAL OWNERS
SECTION 603.
CONTRIBUTION BY BENEFICIAL OWNER
SECTION 604.
DISTRIBUTION TO BENEFICIAL OWNER
SECTION 605.
REDEMPTION OF BENEFICIAL INTEREST
SECTION 607.
TRANSACTION WITH BENEFICIAL OWNER
SECTION 608.
BENEFICIAL OWNER’S RIGHT TO INFORMATION
SECTION 609.
ACTION BY BENEFICIAL OWNER
SECTION 703.
ACTION ON PLAN OF CONVERSION BY CONVERTING
STATUTORY TRUST
SECTION 704.
FILINGS REQUIRED FOR CONVERSION; EFFECTIVE DATE.
SECTION 705.
EFFECT OF CONVERSION.
SECTION 707.
ACTION ON PLAN OF MERGER BY CONSTITUENT STATUTORY TRUST
SECTION 708.
FILINGS REQUIRED FOR MERGER; EFFECTIVE DATE.
SECTION 709.
EFFECT OF MERGER.
SECTION 710.
[ARTICLE] NOT EXCLUSIVE.
SECTION 801.
EVENTS CAUSING DISSOLUTION
SECTION 802.
ARTICLES OF DISSOLUTION.
SECTION 804. KNOWN
CLAIMS AGAINST DISSOLVED STATUTORY TRUST
SECTION 805. OTHER
CLAIMS AGAINST DISSOLVED STATUTORY TRUST
SECTION 806.
ADMINISTRATIVE DISSOLUTION
SECTION 807.
REINSTATEMENT FOLLOWING ADMINISTRATIVE DISSOLUTION
SECTION 808.
APPEAL FROM REJECTION OF REINSTATEMENT
SECTION 902.
APPLICATION FOR CERTIFICATE OF QUALIFICATION.
SECTION 903.
ACTIVITIES NOT CONSTITUTING TRANSACTING BUSINESS.
SECTION 904.
FILING OF CERTIFICATE OF QUALIFICATION.
SECTION 905.
CERTIFICATE OF REGISTRATION
SECTION 906.
NONCOMPLYING NAME OF FOREIGN STATUTORY TRUST.
SECTION 907.
REVOCATION OF CERTIFICATE OF QUALIFICATION.
SECTION 908.
CANCELLATION OF CERTIFICATE OF QUALIFICATION.
SECTION 909.
EFFECT OF FAILURE TO HAVE CERTIFICATE
SECTION 910.
ACTION BY [ATTORNEY GENERAL].
SECTION 1001. UNIFORMITY OF APPLICATION AND CONSTRUCTION
SECTION 1002. RELATION TO ELECTRONIC SIGNATURES IN GLOBAL
AND NATIONAL COMMERCE ACT
SECTION 1004. RESERVATION
OF POWER TO AMEND OR REPEAL.
SECTION 1005.
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 enterprise that is not
organized as a sole proprietorship makes use of the partnership, limited
liability company, or a 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.
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 in the name of the trustee in the
trustee’s capacity as such. By contrast,
a statutory trust is formed by delivering a certificate of trust to a public
official, typically the Secretary of State, for filing in the public record. 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 in its own name. See Sections 3021,
307-308.
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, thea
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.
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, &and James M.
Storey, The Massachusetts Business
Trust and Registered Investment Companies, 13 Del. J. Corp. L. 421
(1988).
The statutory trust has also come to be used in various tax-advantaged real
estate transactions. See, e.g.,
Rev. Rul. 2004-86, 2004-33 IRB 191.
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 the 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 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 state laws 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 legislation
exists in several states. Notable examples include the statutory trust
acts of Connecticut, Delaware, Maryland, New Hampshire, Nevada, South Dakota, Wyoming,
and Virginia, all of which were consulted in the drafting of the Uniform Act. 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 take the Delaware Statutory Trust Act as its starting point, the
drafting committee relied on a recent study that presents state-levelwas
strongly influenced by data collected
by the reporter and later confirmed by [IACA] on the aggregate
number of statutory trusts and the number of new statutory trust formations over
the last several years. See
Sitkoff, supra, at __. These
data indicate that the Delaware Act dominates the field. Id. at __.
For a general discussion of the Delaware Statutory Trust Act, see Wendell
Fenton &and Eric A.
Mazie, Delaware Statutory Trusts,
in 2 R. Franklin Balotti &and Jesse A.
Finkelstein, The Delaware Law of
Corporations &and Business
Organizations ch. 19 (3d ed. 2005 Supp.). [UPDATE CITE]
Following
the Delaware model, Section 105 provides that ordinary trust law supplements this
Act. However, several substantive
provisions of this Act are drawn from corporate or unincorporated entity
law rather than trust law. See,
e.g., Sections 501 (management by or under the authority of the trustees); 505 (standards
of conduct of trustees); 507 (interested transactions). Looking to corporate law 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.Looking variously to corporate and unincorporated
entity law in addition to trust law is consistent with the hybrid nature of the
Delaware Statutory Trust, which likewise includes provisions that draw
variously on all three traditions.
In
drafting the public filing and other procedural provisions
not unique to the statutory trust form, the drafting committee took the Uniform
Limited Partnership Act (2001) and the Revised Uniform Limited Liability
Company Act (2006) as its starting points.
For guidance on the common law of trusts, the drafting committee took
the Uniform Trust Code (2000) as its starting point, referencing also the
Restatements (Third) of Trusts (2003, 2007) and
Restatement (Second) of Trusts (1959).
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(c));
(2) clearer guidance on the applicability of ordinary trust law to a statutory
trust entities (§105); (3) exclusion
of trusts withprohibition against a statutory trust having
a prevailingly donative purpose (§302); (4) an entire article on series trusts
(Article 4); (5) a charging order provision (§606); (6) systematic treatment of
conversion and merger (Article 7), and of dissolution (Article 8); and (7)
clearer guidance on the relationship between the common-law trust and statutory
trust entities (§1005).
[To
come: Further comment about the series provisions and charging order around
here.]
Default and Mandatory Rules. Most
of the Uniform Statutory Trust Entity Act consists of default rules that apply
only if the governing instrument does not sufficiently address a particular
issue. Under Section 103(a)-(b), the
governing instrument may override a substantial majority of the Act’s
provisions. The exceptions are scheduled
in Section 103(c). Section 104 collects
various permissive rules regarding the scope of the governing instrument.
Relationship to Common-Law TRrusts
and the Uniform Trust Code. In the culture of American law the common-law
trust is customarily considered to betypically
thought of 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); 1 Austin Wakeman Scott, William F. Fratcher, &and
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.” Restatement (Third) of Trusts, supra.
There
is, however, no separate body of general business law that applies to a common-law
trust that has a business purpose. The
common law of trusts applies to all trusts arising 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 also applies to trusts that have a business
or commercial purpose to the extent that neither the
trust instrument nor other legislation do not displace
the Code’s provisions. UTC See the
comment to Uniform Trust Code §102 cmt(2000).
Accordingly,
tThe Uniform Statutory Trust Entity Act
is not therefore 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 1005(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 more closely resembles 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 the trustee and the beneficial owners. See Sections 3021,
307-08. Like those entities, but unlike
a common-law trust, a statutory trust is formed by delivering a certificate of
trust to a public official for filing.
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, 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 505) and termination
of trusts (Section 306). Section 1005(b)
allows an existing common-law trust that does not have a prevailingly donative
purpose to convert into a statutory trust by delivering a certificate of trust for
filing 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 603(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 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 3032 provides
that a statutory trust may not have a prevailingly donative purpose. For discussion of the nonapplicability to a
statutory trust of the mandatory rules applicable to common-law trusts
(including Uniform Trust Code §105), see the comment to Section 103 under the
heading “Relationship to Mandatory Rules Under the Uniform Trust Code” and the
comments to Sections 105 and 3032.
Citation Convention. [To come: A statement here about citation conventions, for example, that state statutory cites are current as of Lexis or Westlaw on X date.]
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
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 in its own name. A common-law trust, by contrast, is not a juridical
entity. Second, 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 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(15). Further, because the
drafting committee wanted a statutory trust under this act to receive treatment
under applicable regulatory law similar to that of a Delaware statutory trust,
the entity features of a statutory trust under this act closely resemble those
of a Delaware statutory trust.
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 3032 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 on whether a
statutory trust would qualify as a “business trust” under the bankruptcy code. 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.
Third,
the drafting committee was influenced by the revealed preference for “statutory trust” over “business trust” among
existing users of statutory business trustsin practice
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 (2002). The Connecticut
statute, which is the second most popular, is likewise cast as a Statutory
Trust Act. See Connecticut Statutory
Trust Act §§34-500, 34-501(2).
(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 has been filed by the [Secretary of State] under
Section 201. The term includes the
record as amended or restated.
(3) “Common-law trust” means a fiduciary relationship with
respect to property arising from a manifestationion
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) for a statutory
trust, the mailing address that it is required to designate under Section 201(ba)(2);
or
(B) for a foreign statutory trust, its principal office.
(5) “Foreign statutory trust” means a
trust that is formed under the laws of a jurisdiction other than this state that
would be a statutory trust if formed under the laws of this state.
(6) “Governing instrument” means the trust instrument and certificate of trust.
(7) “Jurisdiction” means a state, a foreign
country, or a subdivision of a foreign country.
(8) “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.
(9) “Property” means all property,
whether real, personal, or mixed, or tangible,
or
intangible, or any interest therein.
(10) “Qualified foreign statutory
trust” means a foreign statutory trust that is authorized to do business in
this state.
(11) “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.
(12) “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; or
(F) a person that is directly or indirectly controlled by, or is under common
control withof, the
person.
(13) “Series trust” means
a statutory trust that has one or more series under Section 401.
(143)
“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.
(154)
“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.
(165)
“Statutory trust” means an unincorporated entity formed under this [act].
(1617)
“Trust” includes a common-law trust, statutory trust, and foreign statutory
trust.
(1718)
“Trust instrument” means a record other than the certificate of trust which
provides for the governance of the affairs of the statutory trust and the
conduct of its business. The term
includes a trust agreement, a declaration of trust, and bylaws.
(1819)
“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); SEC Rule 144(a)(1), 17 C.F.R.
§230.144(a)(1).
Paragraphs (2), (6), and (187)
define “certificate of trust,” “governing instrument,” and “trust instrument”
respectively. The certificate of trust
is the record that under Section 201 must be delivered to a public official for
filing to form a statutory trust. The
trust instrument is the transaction document that provides for the governance
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 commercialprevailing usage. Conflicts between the certificate of trust
and the governing instrument are resolved pursuant to Section 201(ed). Although
the term “trust instrument” is phrased in the singular, consistent with current
commercial practice the drafting committee contemplated that there would often
be more than one such instrument.
Section 104(b)104(c) makes
authorization of multiple instruments explicit.
Paragraph
(3) 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 the
Comment to Uniform Trust Code §102 cmt. (2000).
Paragraph (12) defines the term “related person,” which is used in Sections 507 and 607 concerning the legality of certain interested transactions. In using but not defining the term “substantial” in Paragraph (12)(D), the drafting committee contemplated that a totality of the circumstances test would apply. Section 512 defines the term “independent trustee” with respect to a statutory trust that is an investment company under the Investment Company Act of 1940.
Paragraph (198)
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 501.
(a) Except as otherwise provided in
subsection (c) or and the terms
of the governing instrument, this [act] governs the management,
and
affairs, and conduct of the business of a
statutory trust and the rights, interests, duties, obligations, and powers of,
and the relations among, the trustees, the beneficial owners, the
statutory trust, and other persons.
(b) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (c), a governing instrument may contain any provision relating to:
(1) any provision relating to the
management and , affairs, and
conduct of the business of the statutory trust; and
(2) any provision relating to the
rights, interests, duties, obligations, and powers of, and
relations among, the trustees, the beneficial owners, the
statutory trust, and other persons.
(c) The terms of the governing instrument prevail over any provision of this [act] except:
(1)
the provisions of [Articles] 2, 8 except for section 8018(b2),
except
for 703, 9, and 10;
(2) the exclusion of a
prevailingly donative purpose under Section 302;
(32)
the choice of governing law as provided in Section 301_;
(3) the exclusion of a prevailingly
donative purpose under Section 303;
(4) the
provisions pertaining to series trusts in Sections 401(ba), (c),
and (d), 402(b) and (c), 404, and 406, 403,
and 405.
(5) the standards of
conduct for trustees under Section 505, 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 similar position would reasonably believe appropriate under
similar circumstances are determined, if the standards are not manifestly
unreasonable;
(6) the nonliability of a
trustee or other person that relies in good faith on the terms of the governing
instrument, the records of the statutory trust, or the opinions, reports, or
statements of an expert, but the governing instrument may prescribe the
standards for assessing whether the reliance was in good faith, if the
standards are not manifestly unreasonable.
(76) the right
of a trustee to information under Section 508, 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;
(87)
the prohibition under Section 509 of indemnification, advancement, or exoneration
for conduct involving bad faith, willful misconduct, or reckless indifference;
(98)
the limitations
obligations of a trustee in Section 510(c)
on
not to follow a direction of
trustees that is manifestly contrary to the terms of the governing
instrument or would constitute a serious breach of trust;
(109)
the right of a judgment creditor of a beneficial owner to seek a charging order
under Section 606;
(110)
the right of a beneficial owner to information under Section 608, 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; and
(121)
the right of a beneficial owner to bring an action under Section 609, but the
governing instrument may subject the right to additional standards and
restrictions including the requirement that beneficial owners owning a
specified amount or type of beneficial interest including, in a series
trust, an interest in the series, join in bringing the action, if
the additional standards and restrictions are not manifestly unreasonable; and.
(132)
the provisions pertaining to conversion and merger stated in Sections 701, 704,
705, 708, and 709.
[FOR DISCUSSION: Bad
mandatory rule decision in Chicago.]
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.
Default
Rules. Paragraphs (a) and (b)
emphasize that the Uniform Statutory Trust Entity Act is primarily a states default
statuterules. Most of the Act’s provisions may be
overridden by the terms of the governing instrument.
Mandatory
Rules. Paragraph (c) schedules the provisions
of this act that are not subject to override in the governing instrument of a
statutory trust. The
provisions included in this schedule are the only rules that have mandatory
application to a statutory trust.
Most of the provisions scheduled in
paragraph (c) concern the rights of nonparties or public filing and notice requirements. By contrast, with two exceptions all the
provisions of this Act concerning the powers and duties 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
(c)(87). This exception is familiar trust law. See Uniform Trust Code §1008 (2000); Restatement
(Second) of Trusts §222 (1959); 4 Austin Wakeman Scott, William Franklin
Fratcher, and Mark L. Ascher, Scott and Ascher on Trusts §24.27.3 (5th ed.
2007). For a general discussion, see
John H. Langbein, Mandatory Rules in the Law of Trusts, 98 Nw. U.L. Rev. 1105, 1121-25
(2004); Melanie B. Leslie, Trusting
Trustees: Fiduciary Duties and the Limits of Default Rules, 94 Georgetown L.J.
67 (2005).
The Delaware Statutory Trust Act likewise limits the permissible scope of exoneration. See Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3806(e), which 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.”
Limitations on permissible exoneration are also familiar corporate and alternative entity law. See, e.g., Delaware General Corporation Law §102(b)(7); Delaware Limited Liability Company Act §18-1101; [To come: Citation to MBCA 2.02(b)(4) and/or other uniform acts].
The second exception is contained
in paragraph (c)(98), which
makes mandatory the invalidity under Section 510(c) 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 meant to
exclude an inconsequential, immaterial, or technical breach that does not harm the
trust or 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); 2 Austin W. Scott, William F. Fratcher, &and
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 (c)(58)
is limited by paragraph (c)(45), which
allows the trustee’s fiduciary duty to be altered by the governing instrument
if the alteration is not manifestly unreasonable.
Paragraphs (c)(5), (c)(6), (c) (7),
(c)(110), and (c)(121)
allow the governing instrument to alter the nature of the trustee’s fiduciary
obligation; the nonliability of a trustee or another for good
faith reliance on the governing instrument, records of the statutory trust, or
opinions of experts;, the right of a trustee to
information, the right of a beneficial owner to information, and the right of a
beneficial owner to bring an action, but only if the alteration is not “manifestly
unreasonable.” In opting for the “manifestly
unreasonable” standard instead of Delaware’s “good faith and fair dealing”
formulation, see Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3806(c) and (e), the drafting
committee took notice of the use of the term “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 Mark J. Loewenstein,
Fiduciary Duties and Unincorporated Business Entities: In Defense of the “Manifestly Unreasonable”
Standard, 41 Tulsa L. Rev. 411 (2006).
Relationship
to Mandatory Rules and the Uniform Trust Code. Section 105(a) provides that the law of this
state pertaining to common-law trusts supplements this act. However, Section 105(b) provides that, except
for the mandatory rules scheduled above in Section 103(c), the governing
instrument of a statutory trust may override or modify the application to the
statutory trust of any rule pertaining to common-law trusts. Accordingly, in aan
enacting jurisdiction
that has also enacted the Uniform Trust Code (UTC), the UTC will apply to a statutory
trust, but only to the extent that the Code’s UTC’s provisions
are not displaced by this act or the governing instrument. No provision of the UTC, including the rules
stated in UTC §105 that are mandatory with respect to a common-law trust, is mandatory
with respect to a statutory trust.
Likewise, any common law rule that is mandatory with respect to a common-law
trust may nonetheless be overridden with respect to a statutory trust by the
governing instrument of the statutory trust.
In sum, the governing instrument of a statutory trust may override or
alter any rule of trust law other than those scheduled in §103(c) of this act.
To prevent evasion of the public
policy limitations on donative transfers that underpin the mandatory rules
applicable to a common-law trust, see John
H. Langbein, Mandatory Rules in the Law of Trusts, 98 Nw. U.L. Rev. 1105 (2004),
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, 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” and the comments to Sections 105 and 3032.
Registered
Investment Companies. The Investment
Company Act of 1940 (the “1940 Act”) supersedes this Act with respect to 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 207 (name of statutory trust), 503 (action by trustees),
___
507 (interested transactions), ___ 509 (indemnification,
advancement, and exoneration), and ___ 511 (delegation
by trustee), and ___ (action by trustees).
SECTION 104. SCOPE OF GOVERNING INSTRUMENT.
(a) The governing
instrument may be amended with the consent
of all the beneficial owners.
(b) The governing instrument may
include one or more instruments, agreements, declarations, bylaws, or other
records and refer to or incorporate any record.
(ac)
Except as otherwise provided in Section 103(c), 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;
(3) provide for one or more series under [Article] 4;
(4) 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, any form of communication that creates a record, telephone, or video conference, or in any other manner; or
(E) any other matter with respect to the exercise of the right to vote;
(5) provide for any action to be taken without the vote or approval of any particular trustee or beneficial owner, or series of trustees, beneficial owners, or beneficial interests, 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 property of the statutory trust or the property of any series thereof; and
(E) dissolution of the statutory trust;
(6)
provide for the present or future creation of more
than onea statutory trust, including the
creation of a future statutory trust to which all or
any part of the property, 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 new statutory
trust, or series thereof;
(7) 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;
(8) provide rights to any person, including a person that is not a party to the governing instrument;
(9) provide for the manner in
which the governing instrument may be amended, including a requirement that 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;provide for the manner in
which the governing instrument may be amended, including:
(A) a
condition that a person that is not a party to the instrument must approve the
amendment for it to be effective;
(B) a
requirement that the governing instrument may be amended only as provided in
the governing instrument or as otherwise permitted by law.
Any condition or
requirement under subsections (A) or (B) may be waived by all persons for whose
benefit the condition or requirement was intended.
(10) 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;
(11) provide that a
person may comply with paragraph (10) by a representative authorized by the
person orally, in a record, or by conduct;
(12) provide that the
statutory trust or the trustees, acting for the statutory trust, 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; and
(13) provide for the
establishment of record dates; and
(14) provide for the
creation of one or more classes of trustees, beneficial owners, or beneficial
interests having separate rights, powers, or duties; and
(15) grant
to, or withhold from, all or certain trustees or beneficial owners, or a
specified class of trustees or beneficial owners, the right to vote, separately
or with any or all other trustees or beneficial owners, or class of trustees or
beneficial owners, on any matter..
(b) 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.
Paragraph (a) provides a default
rule that the governing instrument may be amended by unanimous agreement of the
beneficial owners. This paragraph therefore provides for an amendment mechanism
in circumstance where the governing instrument does not already do so.
[Paragraph
(b) note to come]
The
unusual principal sources citation reflects the drafting committee’s decision
to collect in a single 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 exception concerns the allowable remedies for a beneficial owner’s breach
in Section 603(c).
Paragraph
(c) collects various permissive rules regarding the scope of the governing
instrument. Most are based on scattered
provisions of the Delaware and Connecticut Statutory Trust Acts. [Comment
to be expanded to explain that this section implements Section 103(b) without
limiting the generality of 103(b).] 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 in
addition to the broad statement of freedom of contract in Sections 103(a)-(b)
and 106. Statutory confirmation
reduces transaction costs by resolving doubts in practice over the
permissibility of such provisions. Similar reasoning underlies the provision of
a detailed schedule of powers in Uniform Trust Code §816 (2000) in addition to
the broad general statement in Uniform Trust Code §815.
SECTION 105. APPLICABILITY OF TRUST LAW.
(a) The law of this state pertaining to common-law trusts supplements this [act].
(b) Except as otherwise provided in
section 103(c), the governing instrument may override or modify application to
the statutory trust of any law of this state pertaining to common-law trusts.
Comment
Principal Sources – Uniform Trust Code §106 (2000); Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3809; Connecticut Statutory Trust Act §34-519.
Trust
Law Supplements this Act. Paragraph
(a) provides that state trust law supplements this aAct
and the terms of the governing instrument.
In looking to trust law to supplement this act and the governing
instrument, the drafting committee was strongly influenced by the preference for trust law among existing users of
statutory trusts. This preference is evidenced
by the popularity of the Delaware Statutory Trust Act, which
likewise looks to trust law, in comparison 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].
No
Mandatory Rules Other Than Those Scheduled in Section 103(c). Paragraph (b) confirms that, except for
the mandatory rules scheduled in §103(c), the governing instrument may override
any rule or law pertaining to common-law trusts that would otherwise be
applicable to a statutory trust under paragraph (a).
Relationship
to the Uniform Trust Code. In an enacting
jurisdiction that has also enacted the Uniform Trust Code, the joint effect of
paragraphs (a) and (b) is to make the Code UTC applicable
to a statutory trust, but only to the extent that the Code’s UTC’s provisions—including
the mandatory rules scheduled in UTC §105—are not displaced by this act or the trust’s
governing instrument. For further
discussion, see the comment to Section 103 under the heading “Relationship
to Mandatory Rules and the Uniform Trust Code.”
Remedies. The rules pertaining to common-law
trusts that, unless the governing instrument provides otherwise, are absorbed
by this Section for application to a statutory trust include the law of remedies
for breach of trust.Under this Section, the law of remedies for breach
of trust applies to a statutory trust unless the governing instrument provides
otherwise. See 4 Austin
Wakeman Scott, William F. Fratcher, &and
Mark L. Ascher, 2 Scott and Ascher on Trusts §24.9 (5th ed. 2006); Uniform
Trust Code §1002 (2000). However, when a
breach of trust injures the trust rather than a beneficial owner directly, such
remedies are properly sought in a derivative suit under Section 609 rather than
in
a direct suit by the beneficiary because a statutory trust is
itself an entity. See generally ALI
Principles of Corporate Governance §7.01 (1994).
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.
(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; Uniform Statute and Rule Construction Act §18 (1995).
Paragraph (a) emphasizes the freedom of contract afforded
to transactional planners by the Uniform Statutory Trust Entity Act, which is
primarily a default statute. The only
mandatory rules applicable to a statutory trust are those scheduled in section
103(c). The drafting committee
contemplated that section 106(a) would apply to the construction of section
103(c).
Paragraph
(b) admonishes the courts not to apply to this Aact
the canon of construction that statutes in derogation of the common law are to
be strictly construed. The drafting
committee included this admonition because several of this Aact’s
provisions are designed specifically to to
rejectpreclude the application to a
statutory trust of one or more common-law trust principles. See, e.g., Sections ____. 203. 302, 304, 306, 502, 503,
504, 505, 506, 507, 511, [to
come]. Those
provisions, which deliberately derogate the common law, should be interpreted
in accord with that purpose.
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 207;
(2) the street and mailing addresses of the designated office of the trust;
(3) the name and street and mailing address of the initial agent of the trust for service of process; and
(4)
notice
whether the trust may create one or more series
under Section 401operate as a series trust.
(c) A certificate of trust may contain any provision in addition to that required by subsection (b) except as otherwise provided in Section 103(c).
(d) Except as otherwise provided in Section 204(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 or merger, the certificate of trust, statement of cancellation,
or change, or articles of conversion or merger
prevails.
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. See Section 204(b), which
entitles any person to a certified copy of a filing made pursuant to this act.
Unlike a common-law
trust, a statutory trust is a creature of statute. A statutory trust comes into
existence only if (1) a certificate of trust is prepared and delivered to the
specified public official for filing (see Section 204),
and (2) the public official files the certificate. For more on the meaning of “filing,” see
Section 204 and the comment thereto. Filing
rules are typical of limited liability entities. Such rules serve a notice function, alerting
interested parties to the creation and existence of a new juridical entity with
limited liability. The
certificate of trust provides notice to interested third parties of the
existence of the statutory trust also identifies and the
identification of the statutory trust’s initial agent for service
of process. And in
connection with Pursuant to Section ___, 401, the
certificate of trust also puts third parties on notice if
the statutory trust further segregates its property and liabilities by creating
one or more series.
[Discussion of (b)(4) to
come.] 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 that in such circumstances the public filing controls.
Under Section 103(c)(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 trust;
(2) the date of filing of its initial certificate; and
(3) the changes to the certificate.
(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 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 restated certificate of statutory trust must be delivered to
the [Secretary of State] for filing in the same manner as an amendment.
(d) An amended or restated certificate is effective as provided in Section 204(c).
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(c)(1), this Section is not subject to override by the governing
instrument.
SECTION 203. SIGNING OF RECORDS.
(a) A record delivered by the statutory trust to the [Secretary of State] for filing pursuant to this [act] must be signed by at least one of the trustees.
(b)
Any person may sign by an attorney in fact any record filed pursuant to this
[act].
Comment
Principal Sources – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §204 (2001); Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3811; Connecticut Statutory Trust Act §34-504.
Paragraph (b) confirms that the signing of a public record by a trustee is a delegable act, ensuring that the discredited common law nondelegation rule will not apply. See Uniform Trust Code §807 (2000); Restatement (Third) of Trusts §80 (2007).
Under
Section 103(c)(1), this Section is not subject to override by the governing
instrument.
SECTION 204. 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 205 and 212, 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 aAct, (1)
someone must put a properly prepared version of the record into the possession
of the public official specified in the aAct
as the appropriate filing officer, and (2) the filing officer must determine
that the record complies with the filing requirements of this aAct
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 aAct
“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 paragraphs (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 &and
Ehud Kamar, Price Discrimination in the Market for Corporate Law, 86 Cornell L. Rev. 1205, 1218-33 (2001).
Under
Section 103(c)(1), this Section is not subject to override by the governing
instrument.
SECTION 205. CORRECTING FILED RECORD.
(a) A statutory trust or qualified foreign statutory trust shall 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(c)(1), this Section is not subject to override by the governing
instrument.
SECTION 206. CERTIFICATE OF GOOD STANDING.
(a) The [Secretary of State], upon request and payment of the requisite fee, shall furnish to the person making the request a certificate of good standing for a statutory trust if the records filed in the [office of the Secretary of State] show that:
(1) the [Secretary of State] has filed a certificate of trust;
(2) all fees and penalties due under this [act] or other law to the [Secretary of State] have been paid;
(3)
the most recent annual report of the trust required by Section 2135
has been filed by the [Secretary of State];
(4) a statement of cancellation or dissolution has not be filed by the [Secretary of State]; and
(5)
the [Secretary of State] has not filed a notice of administrative dissolution
under Section 8065 or, if the
[Secretary of State] has filed such a notice, that the [Secretary of State] has
filed a declaration of reinstatement under Section 8076.
(b) A certificate of good standing must state:
(1) the name of the trust;
(2) that the trust was formed under the laws of this state and the date of formation; and
(3) that the conditions stated in subsection (a) have been satisfied.
(c) Subject to any qualification stated in the certificate, a certificate of good standing issued by the [Secretary of State] may be relied upon as conclusive evidence that the statutory trust is in good standing as of the date of the certificate.
Comment
Principal Source – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §209 (2001).
A
certificate of good standing 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 905 provides for the issuance of a
certificate of registration for a qualified foreign statutory trust.
Under
Section 103(c)(1), this Section is not subject to override by the governing
instrument.
SECTION 207. 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 that is already incorporated, organized, formed, or authorized to do business in this state; and
(2)
any name reserved under Section 20810 [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 with the applicant;
(B) has been converted into the applicant; or
(C) has transferred substantially all of its property, including the conflicting name, to the applicant.
(d)
Subject to Section 906, this section applies to any foreign statutory trust doing transacting
business in this state, having a certificate of qualification to do
business in this state, or applying for a certificate of qualification.
Comment
Principal Sources – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §108 (2001); Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3814.
The
drafting committee opted considered but decided not
to require that the name of a statutory trust contain a traditional limited
liability appellation. Such a
requirement would be inconsistent with current practice under the Delaware Statutory
Trust Act, though the drafting committee contemplated that an enacting
jurisdiction 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”).
[Cross – 903]
Under
Section 103(c)(1), this Section is not subject to override by the governing
instrument.
SECTION 208. RESERVATION OF NAME.
(a) The exclusive right to the use of a name that complies with Section 207 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 qualification to do 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 qualification to do 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 207, 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 207.
(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 under 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) A transfer or termination under subsection (d) is effective as provided in Section 204(c).
Comment
Principal source – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §109 (2001).
Under
Section 103(c)(1), this Section is not subject to override by the governing
instrument.
SECTION 209. 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 incorporated, organized, formed, or 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(ba)(3), the
initial designation of a statutory trust’s agent for service of process is made
in the original certificate of trust.
Under Section 902(a)(4), the initial designation of a foreign statutory
trust’s agent for service of process is made in the original application for a certificate
of qualification. The initial
designation may be changed pursuant to a statement of change under Section 210,
by an amendment to the certificate of trust under Section 202, or by an annual
report under Section 213(e).
Under
Section 103(c)(1), this Section is not subject to override by the governing
instrument.
SECTION 210. CHANGE OF DESIGNATED OFFICE OR AGENT FOR SERVICE OF PROCESS. 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 trust;
(2) the street and mailing addresses of the current designated office of the 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 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.
Comment
Principal Source – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §115 (2001).
This
section uses the term “may” rather than “must” in the first sentence because a
statutory trust may also change the information by an amendment to its
certificate of trust under Section 202.
Further, if the information currently in the public record is accurate,
a statutory trust or qualified foreign statutory trust may change the
information in an annual report under Section 213(e).
Under
Section 103(c)(1), this Section is not subject to override by the governing
instrument.
SECTION 211. 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:
(1) the name of the trust;
(2) the name of the agent;
(3) a statement that the agent resigns as agent for service of process.
(b) The resigning agent must transmit a copy of the statement of resignation 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 aAct,
a statement of resignation may not provide for a delayed effective date.
Paragraph (c) mandates the effective date of
the agent’s resignation. 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 of the current agent’s resignation. If the statutory trust or foreign statutory trust fails to do so, under Section 212 service on the statutory trust or foreign statutory trust may be made on the Secretary of State.
Under
Section 103(c)(1), this Section is not subject to override by the governing
instrument.
SECTION 212. 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 trust for service of any process, notice, or demand required or permitted by law to be served upon the 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 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 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 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(c)(1), this Section is not subject to override by the governing
instrument.
SECTION 213. ANNUAL REPORT FOR [SECRETARY OF STATE].
(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 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 906;
(B) the name of the state or other jurisdiction under whose law the trust is formed; and
(C) the street and mailing addresses of its principal office and, if the laws of the jurisdiction under which the 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 do business in this State. 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 trust and return the report to it for correction. If the report is corrected to contain the information required in subsection (a) and is 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 210.
Comment
Source – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §210 (2001).
A
statutory trust that fails to comply with this section is subject to
administrative dissolution. See Section
8065.
Under
Section 103(c)(1), this Section is not subject to override by the governing
instrument.
SECTION 301. 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 a debt, obligation, or other liability of a statutory trust or a series thereof; and
(3) the enforceability of a debt,
obligation, or other liability of the statutory trust or a series
thereof against the property of the trust or any any series
thereof. [For discussion: Does this rewrite resolve the problem, that
is, preserve the desired choice of law for creditor rights without implying
that the series is an entity?]
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 law of this state even if the trust operates in other states. 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 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 ___ 304 and ___ 305 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 liability of a beneficial owner or
trustee to third parties is arguably not an internal affair. See Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws
§307 (1971) (treating shareholders’ liability separately from the internal
affairs doctrine).
Paragraph
(3) [to come].
Section 901 states rules for qualified foreign statutory trusts that parallel and are analogous in scope to those of this section.
Under Section 103(c)(3), this Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
SECTION 302. STATUTORY TRUST AUTHORIZEDAS
ENTITY. 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 sSection
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 sSuch
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].See, e.g., [To
Come].
SECTION
303. 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.
Under this sSection,
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 might 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
drafting committee declined the suggestion to prohibit a statutory trusts
from having a charitable purpose on the ground that a statutory trust with a
charitable purpose would be covered by existing regulatory law applicable to
charitable entities. See Marion R. Fremont-Smith,
Governing Nonprofit Organizations: Federal and State Law and Regulation 187-427
(2004).
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 &and
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 otherwise try 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 property 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 referenced in Uniform Trust
Code §105 (2000), the Code’s UTC’s schedule
of mandatory rules. For
discussion of why the rules that are mandatory with respect to a common-law
trust are not mandatory with respect to a statutory trust, see the comments to
Sections 103 and 105.
[Possible
discussion of series purpose provision and cross-reference to come.]
Under Section 103(c)(2), this
Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
SECTION 304. STATUTORY TRUST SOLELY LIABLE FOR DEBTS,
OBLIGATIONS, AND OTHER LIABILITIES OF STATUTORY TRUST. A
debt, obligation, or other liability of a statutory trust or series thereof is
solely a debt, obligation, or other liability of the trust or series thereof.
A beneficial owner, trustee, agent of
the trust, or agent of the trustee is not personally liable, directly or
indirectly, by way of contribution or otherwise, for a debt, obligation, or other
liability of the trust solely by reason of being or acting as a trustee,
beneficial owner, agent of the trust, or agent of the trustee.
Comment
Principal Sources – Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3803; Connecticut Statutory trust Act §34-523; Revised Uniform Partnership Act §306 (1994); Uniform Limited Liability Company Act §303; Uniform Limited Partnership Act §§303, 404 (2001); Uniform Trust Code §507 (2000).
This
section implements the concept that the statutory trust is a legaln
entity separate from the its trustees
and beneficial owners in three ways. First, this section confirms 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 and
then 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). However, nothing in this Section limits the
personal liability of the trustee to the statutory trust for breach of duty
under Section 505.
[Cross-reference and/or discussion of
series to come.]
Second,
this section confirms that the
statutory trust, not the agent of the statutory trust or the
trustee, is solely liable for the debts,
obligations, and liabilities of the trust incurred by an agent of
the trust or the trustee acting on behalf of the trust or
the trustee.
Third, this section confirms the
limited liability of a beneficial owner and trustee by providing that the neither
a beneficial owner nor trustee of a statutory trust is not liable
for the debts, obligations, or liabilities of the statutory trust. An agent of the beneficial owner or trustee
is likewise not liable for the debts, obligations, or liabilities of the
statutory trust. This section therefore 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 ownerbeneficiary
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 ownerry
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 a beneficial owner’s limited
liability under the Delaware Statutory Trust Act, see Wendell Fenton &and
Eric A. Mazie, Delaware Statutory
Trusts, in 2 R. Franklin Balotti &and
Jesse A. Finkelstein, The Delaware Law
of Corporations &and Business
Organizations §19.3 (3d ed. 2005 Supp.). [Placeholder: Update cite.]
SECTION
305. NO RIGHTS OF
BENEFICIAL OWNER AND TRUSTEECREDITOR RIGHTS IN
TRUST PROPERTY.
(a) A beneficial owner’s beneficial
interest in the statutory trust is personal
property regardless of the nature of the property of the trust. A beneficial owner has no
interest in specific property of the trust.
Except as provided
otherwise in Section 606, (b) Aa
creditor of a beneficial owner or of a trustee 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.
Comment
Principal Sources - Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3805; Connecticut Statutory Trust Act §34-516; Uniform Trust Code §507 (2000); Revised Uniform Partnership Act §203 (1994); Uniform Limited Liability Company Act §501 (1996); Uniform Limited Partnership Act §701 (2001).
Paragraph (b) implements the concept that a statutory trust is an entity separate from its trustees and beneficial owners by confirming that a creditor of a beneficial owner or a trustee has no recourse against the property of the statutory trust.
With
respect to trustees, the rule of this paragraph is familiar from the operation
of common-law trusts. See Uniform Trust
Code §507 (2000); Restatement (Third) of Trusts §42, cmt. c
(2003); Restatement (Second) of Trusts §308 (1959). The rule of this section is also consistent
with bankruptcy law. 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).
With respect to beneficial owners, for
discussion of the parallel provision in the Delaware Statutory Trust Act, see
Wendell Fenton &and Eric A.
Mazie, Delaware Statutory Trusts,
in 2 R. Franklin Balotti &and Jesse A.
Finkelstein, The Delaware Law of
Corporations &and Business
Organizations §19.4, at 19-9 – 19-10 (3d ed. 2005 Supp.). However, [cross-reference
to charging order provision to come.]
For
a general discussion of asset partitioning rules in organizational law, see Henry
Hansmann &and Reinier
Kraakman, The Essential Role of
Organizational Law, 110 Yale L.J. 387 (2000); Henry Hansmann &and
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, &and
Richard Squire, Law and the Rise of the Firm, 119 Harv. L. Rev. 1333
(2006).
(a) A statutory trust has perpetual existence.
(b) A statutory trust, or any series
thereof, may not be terminated or revoked except in accordance with this [act]
or the terms of the governing instrument.
(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.
(d) A statutory trust or any series
thereof does not terminate because the same person is the sole trustee and sole
beneficial owner.
Comment
Principal Sources – Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3808; Connecticut Statutory Trust Act §34-518.
Paragraph (a) provides a default
rule of perpetual existence for a statutory trust. See also Section 801, which provides for dissolution
of a statutory trust only upon the occurrence of an event or circumstance
stated in the governing instrument, and Section 8065,
which provides for administrative dissolution.
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)[RST3 prop cite to come],
the drafting committee concluded that the dead-hand worries that
underpin the Rule do not apply to a statutory trust. Under Section 302, 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 aAct
or the governing instrument. Thus,
paragraph (b) overrides the rules of common-law 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 because a statutory trust under this Act
may not have a prevailingly donative purpose.
Instead, the drafting committee contemplated that pursuant to Section
104(ab)(9)
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. Section 405(c) provides a similar rule for the
series of a statutory trust.
Paragraph (d) overrides the
application to a statutory trust under Section 105 of the common law rule of
merger whereby legal and equitable title to the trust property merge and the
trust terminates if the same person is the sole trustee and sole beneficiary. See Restatement (Third) of Trusts §69 (2003);
Restatement (Second) of Trusts §341 (1959); Comment, The Doctrine of Merger as
Applied to Commercial Trusts, 29 Yale L.J. 97 (1919).
SECTION 307. POWER TO HOLD PROPERTY; TITLE TO TRUST PROPERTY. A statutory trust has the power to hold or take title to property in its own name, or in the name of a trustee in the trustee’s capacity as trustee, 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 trustees and beneficial owners by confirming that a statutory trust may transact in its own name. The property of a common-law trust, by contrast, must be held in the name of the trustee as such.
However,
this section also permits the statutory trust to take title to property in the
name of the trustee in the trustee’s capacity as such even though the trust 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. Property ownership by a trustee
in the trustee’s capacity as such is familiar from the use of common-law trusts.
To
police the boundary of the trustee’s personal property and the property 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 (2007);
Restatement (Second) of Trusts §179 (1959).
The drafting committee contemplated that under appropriate circumstances
Section 505(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 308. POWER TO SUE AND BE SUED.
(a) A statutory trust has the power to sue and be sued in its own name.
(b) Except as otherwise provided in [Article]
4, property of a statutory trust held in the name of the statutory trust
or by the trustee in the trustee’s capacity as trustee is subject to attachment
and execution to satisfy a debt, obligation, or other liability of the trust.
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 an entity separate from the trustee and beneficial owner 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 subject to the possibility that the statutory trust has formed one or more series under Article 4.
SECTION
401. SERIES OF STATUTORY TRUST.
(a) Subject to subsection (d),
tThe governing instrument may provide
for the creation by the statutory trust of one or more series of trustees, beneficial
owners, or beneficial interests having
separate rights, powers, or duties with respect to specified property or
obligations of the statutory trust.
(b) A series of a statutory trust is not an entity separate from the statutory trust.
(c) A series of a statutory trust
may have a separate purpose from the trust or any other series thereof provided
that the purpose of the series is lawful and not a prevailingly donative
purpose.
(d) Section (a) applies only if:
(1)
records are maintained for the series that reasonably identify the property of
the series, including by specific listing, category, type, quantity, or
computational or allocational formula or procedure, including a percentage or
share of any property, or by any other method where the identity of the
property of the series is objectively determinable; and
(2) notice that the trust might operate as a series trust is set forth in the certificate of trust pursuant to Section 201(b)(4).
Comment
Principal Sources – Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3806.
Paragraph
(a) of this section confirms that a statutory trust may be organized with one
or more series. [To come: Commentary
explaining that the inclusion of “trustees” in paragraph (a) is meant to
account for the possibility of a series-specific trustee. Such a trustee might
favor the series even to the detriment of the trust as a whole. Put otherwise,
inclusion of the term “trustees” is meant to address the problem of a conflict
between the best interests of a series and the best interests of the trust in a
case where the governing instrument provides that the trustee has duties only
to a series of the trust. See also the
changes to Sections 403 and 505.] [Comparison to classes under Section 104 (c) (15)
to come.]
Paragraph (b) [discussion of non-entity status to come, including the points that we are making explicit what is implicit in the Delaware act, that we decided against specifying entity type powers that are not granted (such as the power to sue and be sued in its own name) to avoid a negative implication, and that entity status for tax purposes is a separate question not addressed here (analogy is to common law trust, which is not an entity under state trust law but is for federal tax purposes)].
Paragraph (c) [discussion and cross-reference to Section
302 to come.]
[Paragraph (d) discussion
to come.]
The
organization of a master statutory trust with several series is particularly
common among statutory trusts that are registered as investment companies under
the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, 15 U.S.C. Sections 80a-1 et
seq. (the “1940 Act”). In such a case, any series of
beneficial interests established by the governing instrument of the trust is a
series preferred in distribution of property or payment of dividends over all
other series with respect to property specifically allocated to the series
under Section 18 of the Investment Company Act of 1940. [For
discussion: (1) Conversion of former Section 404 to this comment. (2) Comparison with Delaware §3805(h): “Except to the extent otherwise provided in
the governing instrument of the statutory trust, where the statutory trust is a
registered investment company under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as
amended (15 U.S.C. § 80a-1 et seq.), any class, group or series of beneficial
interests established by the governing instrument with respect to such
statutory trust shall be 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 as
contemplated by § 18 (or any amendment or successor provision) of the
Investment Company Act of 1940 [15 U.S.C. § 80a-18], as amended, and any regulations
issued thereunder, provided that this section is not intended to affect in any
respect the provisions of § 3804(a) of this title.”]Paragraph (c) [discussion and
cross-reference to Section 302 to come.]
Under
Section 103(c)(4), paragraphs (b), and (c), and
(d) of this Section are not subject to override by the governing
instrument.
SECTION 402. LIABILITY OF SERIES TRUST.
(a) Subject to subsection (b),
iIf a statutory trust has one or more
series as provided in Section 401:
(1) a debt, obligation, or other liability incurred or otherwise existing with respect to the property of a particular series is enforceable against the property of the series only, and not against the property of the trust generally or any other series thereof; and
(2) none of the debts,
obligations, or other liabilities incurred or otherwise existing with respect
to the trust generally or the property of any other series thereof is
enforceable against the property of the series;
(b) Section (a) applies
only if:
(1)
records are maintained for the series that reasonably identify the property of
the series, including by specific listing, category, type, quantity, or
computational or allocational formula or procedure, including a percentage or
share of any property, or by any other method where the identity of the
property of the series is objectively determinable; and
(2)
notice of series is set forth in the certificate of trust pursuant to Section
201(b)(4).
(bc)
Property
of the statutory trust or any series thereof may not be associated, disassociated,
or reassociated with the trust or a series thereof if tThe
association, disassociation, or reassociation would be a fraudulentof property
of the statutory trust or a series
thereof to the trust or a series thereof,
including by conversion or merger under [article] 7 is
deemed to be a transfer under [Uniform Fraudulent Transfers Act or
other state fraudulent transfer statute] as if the
statutory trust and each series thereof were separate persons. [For Discussion: Is this paragraph, as rewritten, better? Are we there yet?]
Comment
Principal Sources – Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3804; Delaware Limited Liability Company Act §18-215.
Paragraph (a) provides that if a
statutory trust creates one or more series under Section 401 and satisfies the
conditions of paragraph (b), the debts, liabilities, and other obligations of a
particular series are enforceable against the property of that series only. In such circumstances, the debts,
liabilities, and other obligations of the trust generally and any other series
thereof are not enforceable against the property of the series. [Possible
discussion of the common creditor problem and the idea of the trust as a
separate bucket from each series to come.]
Paragraph (b) sets forth two conditions that must be satisfied before the liability-limiting rules of paragraph (a) may apply: (1) records must be maintained that reasonably identify the property of the series, and (2) notice of the limitation on liabilities of a series must be set forth in the certificate of trust.
The earmarking requirement of paragraph (b)(1) safeguards the separate
interests of the beneficial owners of each series by clarifying the boundaries
between the property and liabilities of each series. For similar reasons, the earmarking
requirement also protects third parties that deal with a series trust. Third parties are further protected by
paragraph (b)(2), which conditions limited liability across series on notice in
the certificate of trust that the trust might have one or more series.
Failure to satisfy paragraph (b) exposes the property of one series to the creditors of another series and the creditors of the trust generally. In such a case, the failure to maintain separate records would likely amount to a breach of trust under Section 505, remediable by a beneficial owner in a derivative or direct suit against the trustee. [Placeholder for possible further discussion of trust versus series-level buckets to come.]
Paragraph (bc)
addresses the concern that [to come, the
basic idea is that we don’t want to allow transfer of property from series A to
series B, thereby frustrating the creditors of series A, if the transfer will
leave series A insolvent or otherwise would have qualified as a fraudulent
transfer if A and B were separate entities].
Under
Section 103(c)(4), paragraphs (b) and (c) of this Section
are
is not subject to override by the
governing instrument.
SECTION 403.
GOVERNANCE OFDUTIES OF TRUSTEE IN
SERIES TRUST.
(a) The governing
instrument may limit the duties of a trustee under Section 505 to one or more
series of the statutory trust provided that there is at least one trustee that
owes fiduciary duties to the statutory trust without limitation to one or more
series thereof. [For Discussion: Is this provision sufficient? Can we do better, that is, design a more
elegant provision? Should we drop “under
Section 505”?]If there is at least one trustee that, in
discharging its duties, must
consider the interests of the statutory trust and all series thereof, then the
governing instrument may provide that one or more other trustees, in
discharging their duties, may consider only the interests of the
trust or one or more series thereof.
(b) The governing instrument may grant
to, or withhold from, all or certain trustees or beneficial owners, or a
specified series of trustees or beneficial owners, the right to vote,
separately or with any or all other trustees or beneficial owners, or series of
trustees or beneficial owners, on any matter.
Comment
Principal Sources – [to come].
[Default rule notation and
discussion of section to come.][Comment to come]
Under Section 103 (c) (4), this
Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
SECTION 404. SERIES TRUST AS INVESTMENT COMPANY. 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., [or any
successor statute thereto,] [and any regulations issued thereunder,] any series
of beneficial interests established by the governing instrument of the trust is
a series preferred in distribution of property or payment of dividends over all
other series with respect to property specifically allocated to the series
under Section 18 of the Investment Company Act of 1940, [as amended,] 15 U.S.C.
Section 80a-1 et seq., [or any amendment or successor provision,] [and any
regulations issued thereunder].
Comment
Principal
Sources – Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3805.
The organization of a master statutory trust with
several series is particularly common among statutory trusts that are
registered as investment companies under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as
amended, 15 U.S.C. Sections 80a-1 et seq. (the “1940 Act”).
[Remainder
of commentConversion
to comment to 402 to come.]
SECTION 4045.
DISSOLUTION OF SERIES.
(a) A series of a statutory trust may be dissolved or its property distributed without causing the dissolution of the trust or any other series thereof.
(b) A series is dissolved, and its activities must be wound up, upon the occurrence of an event or circumstance that the governing instrument states causes dissolution or upon the dissolution of the statutory trust.
(c)
Upon dissolution of a series, the persons that under the governing instrument
are responsible for winding up the affairs of the series may cause the
statutory trust to take all actions as are permitted under Section 802(c)3,
and
shall provide for the claims and obligations of the series as
provided in Sections 803 and 804to 805., and
distribute the property of the series as provided in Section 808.
(d) Any person, including a trustee, that under the governing instrument is responsible for winding up the affairs of a series under subsection (a) is not liable to the claimants of the dissolved series by reason of the person’s actions in winding up the series if the person complied with this section.
[For
discussion: In the conference call, we
discussed adding a provision that the series is not dissolved or terminated if
a beneficiary dies, etc. But are not these
possibilities adequately addressed by Section 306 (“or any series thereof”)?]
Comment
Principal Source – Delaware
Statutory Trust Act §3808; Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act
§§701-02 (2006).
[Comment to
explain that series dissolves as if it were a trust to come.]
Under Section 103(c)(4), paragraph
(c) of this Section is not subject to override by the governing
instrument.
SECTION 501. MANAGEMENT OF STATUTORY TRUST. The business and affairs of a statutory trust are managed by or under the authority of its trustees.
Comment
Principal Sources – Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3806; Connecticut Statutory Trust Act §34-517; Uniform Limited Partnership Act §105 (2001); Delaware General Corporation Law §141; Revised Model Business Corporation Act §8.01 (2005).
Section 102(189)
defines the term “trustee” as a person designated as such in accordance with
the governing instrument or applicable law.
Section 104(cb)(5)(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 controls.
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). See also chapter
11 of 2 Austin Wakeman
Scott, William F. Fratcher, &and Mark L.
Ascher, 1 Scott and Ascher on Trusts Ch. 2 (5th
ed. 2006).;
SECTION
502. TRUSTEE POWERS.
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].
Comment
Principal Source –Uniform Trust Code §815 (2000).
This section is intended to grant trustees the broadest possible powers. Hence, this section 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 (2007).
However, the existence of a power,
regardless of its source, does not speak to the question whether the exercise
of that power in a particular case is consistent with the trustee’s fiduciary
obligation. The trustee’s exercise of
the broad powers conferred by this section is always subject to the trustee’s
fiduciary obligations. See Uniform Trust Code §815,
cmt. (2000); Restatement (Third) of
Trusts §§70, 86 (2007); John H. Langbein, The Contractarian Basis of the Law of Trusts, 105 Yale L.J. 625, 640-43
(1995).
SECTION 503. 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 act without a
meeting [For
discussion: The inherent awkwardness of the meeting clause and this entire
paragraph, per Haynsworth from the floor.], without previous
notice, and without a vote, if a consent or consents, in a record, setting
forth the action so taken, are signed by 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 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 of the trustees.
The remainder of this section allows
for maximum flexibility in the mechanics of allowing the trustees to act or
vote on actions. Section 104(ab)(4)
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).
(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
power, is protected from liability as if the trustee properly exercised the
power.
(b) A person, other than a beneficial
owner, that in good faith deals with a trustee is not required to
inquire into the extent of a trustee’s power or the propriety of its exercise.
(c) A person that in good faith delivers property to a trustee need not ensure its proper application.
(d) A person, other than a beneficial
owner, that in good faith assists a former trustee as if the
former trustee were still trustee, or that in good faith and for value deals
with a former trustee as if the former trustee were still trustee, without
knowledge that the trusteeship has terminated is protected from liability as if
the former trustee were still a trustee.
[For Discussion: We
should discuss, once again, the different meanings of good faith and whether to
try to define the term, per the fresh comments from the floor, or to give
more/better commentary on the statutory trust’s hybrid trust/corporate roots.]
Comment
Principal Source – Uniform Trust Code §1012 (2000).
Paragraph (a) protects two different classes of persons:
(1) a person other than a beneficial owner that
assists a trustee with a transaction, and (2) a person other than a beneficial
owner that deals with the trustee for value. As long as the assistance was provided or the
transaction was entered into in good faith and without knowledge that the
trustee was exceeding or improperly exercising the trustee’s powers, a thirdthe
person in either category is protected in the
transaction.
Paragraph (b) confirms that a third partyperson
that is acting in good faith is not charged with a duty to inquire into the
extent of a trustee’s power or the propriety of its exercise. The third partyperson
may assume that the trustee has the necessary power. Paragraph (b) therefore overrides the
application to a statutory trust under Section 105 of the outmoded common-law
rule that a third party is charged with constructive notice of the trust
instrument and its contents. See Austin
Wakeman Scott, William F. Fratcher, &and
Mark L. Ascher, 5 Scott and Ascher on Trusts §29.2 (5th ed. 2008).
Paragraph (c) protects any person,
including a beneficial owner, that in good faith delivers property
to a trustee. The standard of protection
in Restatement (Second) of Trusts §321 (1959) is phrased differently, but the
result is similar. Under the Restatement (Second)
of Trusts, 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.
Paragraph (d) extends the protections afforded by this section
to assistance provided to or dealings for value with a former trustee. The third partyperson
is protected as if the former trustee still held the office if the third
partyperson acted in good faith.
[To come:
Discussion of differences with the UTC.]
For discussion of the
meaning of good faith, see the comment to Section 505.
(a)
Subject to Section 403, in discharging the dutiesexercising
the powers of trusteeship, a trustee 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)
Subject
to Section 403, aA trustee shall discharge its duties
with the care that a person in a similar position would reasonably believe
appropriate under similar circumstances. [For
discussion, duty to be reasonably informed and the rest of RMBCA 8.30, based on
a question from the floor.]
Comment
Principal
Source – Revised Model Business Corporation Act §8.30 (2005).
To police the exercise of the
trustee’s broad powers under Section 502, this section subjects the trustee to
fiduciary duties of loyalty (paragraph (a)) and care (paragraph
(b)) akin to those of a corporate director.
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 (2005) 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 (2007). 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 the sources cited in the Comment to Section 507.
[Discussion of Cargill, to come.]
The
drafting committee declined the suggestion to define the term good faith on the
ground that such a definition necessarily would be over- and under-inclusive.
Instead, the committee contemplated that the term would be interpreted in light
of its evolving meaning in the business and trust law cases.
[Discussion of Cargill, to come.]
[To
come: Commentary explaining
rationale for the “subject to Section 403” language.]
Under Section 103(c)(5), 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 similar position would reasonably believe appropriate under similar circumstances are determined provided that the standards are not manifestly unreasonable.
Delaware Statutory Trust Act
§3806(c) 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,” and §3806(e), which provides that a “governing
instrument may provide for the limitation or elimination of any and all
liabilities for . . . breach of duties (including fiduciary duties) . . .;
provided, that a governing instrument may not limit or eliminate liability for
any act or omission that constitutes a bad faith violation of 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 (2005) 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 (2007). 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 the sources cited in the Comment to Section ___[interested
transactions].
SECTION 506. GOOD-FAITH RELIANCE. A trustee, officer, employee, manager, or
committee of a statutory trust, or other person designated pursuant to Section
104(ca)(7),
is not liable to the trust or to a beneficial owner for breach of any duty,
including a fiduciary duty, to the extent the breach resulted from the good-faith
reliance on:
(1) the terms of the governing instrument;
(2) the records
of the statutory trust; or
(3) the
opinions, reports, or statements of another person that are the
trustee reasonably believes is in the other person’s professional
or expert competence and are made or delivered to the trustee, officer,
employee, manager, or committee of a statutory trust, or other person
designated pursuant to Section 104(b)104(c)(7).
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 (1) the terms of the governing instrument, (2) the
records of the statutory trust, or (3) the opinions of experts is
misplaced. This section protects a
person that so relies, but only to the extent the breach of trust resulted from
such reliance and only if the person’s reliance was in good faith. “Taking the advice of
legal counsel,” for example, “evidences prudence on the part of the
trustee. Reliance on the advice of
counsel, however, is not a complete defense to an alleged breach of trust,
because that would reward a trustee who shopped for legal advice that would
support the trustee’s desired course of conduct or who otherwise acted
unreasonably in procuring or following legal advice. In seeking and considering advice of counsel,
the trustee has a duty to act with prudence.
Thus, if a trustee has selected trust counsel prudently and in good
faith, and has relied on plausible advice on a matter within counsel’s
expertise, the trustee’s conduct is significantly probative of prudence.” Restatement (Third) of Trusts §77, cmt. b(2)
(2007).
[Treatment of Section 103 (b)(b) to come.]
[For discussion: Haynsworth’s concern that this
provision isn’t mandatory and the role of Section 505 as a backstop. Ditto for Section 507.]
SECTION 507. INTERESTED TRANSACTIONS.
(a) In this section, “related covered party”
means a trustee, officer, employee, or manager of a statutory trust, or a
related person of a trustee, officer, employee, or manager.
(b) Subject to subsection (c), a related covered party
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 do 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 managercovered party.
(c) A
transaction under subsection (b) is voidable by the statutory trust unless the related covered party
shows that the transaction is fair to the trust. [For
Discussion: (1) Per a comment from the floor, should we use a “best interests
of the trust” standard instead? (2) Note that there is a new paragraph (a), which
neatened up the section.]
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 505(a), this section abrogates
the no-further-inquiry rule of the common law of trusts, which forbids
self-dealing transactions even if the transaction is fair and in the best
interests of the trust and the beneficiaries.
See Restatement (Third) of Trusts §78 (2007); 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).
Instead, this section
follows the corporate model whereby an interested transaction is voidable by
the statutory trust unless the related party shows that the transaction is fair
to the trust. For discussion of the
fairness test as applied in corporate law, see Steven M. Bainbridge,
Corporation Law and Economics §7.2, at pp. 315-16 (2002), citing Marciano v.
Nakash, 535 A.2d 400 (Del. 1987). [Change
to/add ALI Principles? Explain best interest versus fairness.]
[To
come: possible additional commentary on the point that this section is not
scheduled in 103(c), hence ratification and related ideas may be
addressed/altered in the governing instrument; and that the purpose of this
section is to override the no-further-inquiry rule, not to validate all
self-dealing transactions]
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 508. TRUSTEE’S RIGHT TO INFORMATION. A
trustee has the right to information receive or to obtain by
summary proceeding in the [appropriate court] information from the statutory
trust or another trustee 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(c)(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 the trustee’s duties as trustee,” and under Section 103(c)(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 608 provides for a
beneficial owner’s right to information.
SECTION 509. 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 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 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 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.
[For
Discussion, questions from the floor: 1.
What about an unknowing violation of law? 2. Why the trust law model rather
than a corporate model? 3. What about taking as a model section 27 of the
Revised Uniform Unincorporated Nonprofit Associations Act:
(b) An unincorporated
nonprofit association may indemnify a member or manager for any debt,
obligation, or other liability incurred in the course of the member’s or
manager’s activities on behalf of the association if the person seeking
indemnification has complied with Sections 18 and 23.
Governing principles in a record may broaden or limit indemnification.
(c) If a
person is made or threatened to be made a party in an action based on that
person’s activities on behalf of an unincorporated nonprofit association and
the person makes a request in a record to the association, a majority of the
disinterested managers may approve in a record advance payment, or
reimbursement, by the association, of all or a part of the reasonable expenses,
including attorney’s fees and costs, incurred by the person before the final
disposition of the proceeding. To be entitled to an advance payment or
reimbursement, the person must state in a record that the person has a good
faith belief that the criteria for indemnification in subsection (b) have been
satisfied and that the person will repay the amounts advanced or reimbursed if
the criteria for payment have not been satisfied.
The governing principles in a record may broaden or limit the advance payments
or reimbursements.
(d) An unincorporated nonprofit association may purchase insurance on behalf of
a member or manager for liability asserted against or incurred by the member or
manager in the capacity of a member or manager, whether or not the association
has authority under this [act] to reimburse, indemnify, or advance
expenses to the member or manager against the liability.
(e) The rights of reimbursement, indemnification, and advancement of expenses
under this section apply to a former member or manager for an activity
undertaken on behalf of the unincorporated nonprofit association while a member
or manager. ]
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).
This Section confirms that
the governing instrument may provide for indemnification, advancement, or
exoneration, and it states limitations on any such provisions. This Section
does not, by itself, compel indemnification,
advancement, or exoneration. In Nakahara v. The NS 1991
American Trust, 739 A.2d 770 (Del. Ch. 1998), the Delaware Chancery 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(c)(87),
this section’s prohibition of against 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, and the drafting committee contemplated that this
section would be interpreted in accordance with existing trust law precedent.
See Uniform Trust Code §1008 (2000); Restatement (Second) of Trusts §222
(1959); 4 Austin Wakeman Scott, William Franklin Fratcher, and Mark L. Ascher,
Scott and Ascher on Trusts §24.27.3 (5th ed. 2007). [RST3 TO CITE.]
The Delaware Statutory Trust Act likewise
limits the permissible scope of exoneration.
See Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3806(e), which 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.”
In Nakahara v. The NS 1991 American Trust, 739 A.2d 770 (Del. Ch. 1998), the Delaware Chancery 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.
Limitations on permissible exoneration are also familiar corporate and alternative entity law. See, e.g., Delaware General Corporation Law §102(b)(7); Delaware Limited Liability Company Act §18-1101; [To come: Citation to MBCA 2.02(b)(4) and/or other uniform acts to come].
Any indemnification provision in the
governing instrument of a statutory trust that operates 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 ___) 512 has
not engaged in disabling conduct. Id.
SECTION
510. DIRECTION OF TRUSTEES.
(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) The governing instrument may
provide that 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.
(c) If the governing instrument
confers 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 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.
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. For general discussion,
see Restatement (Third) of Trusts §75 (2007); Restatement (Second) of Trusts
§185 (1959); Richard W. Nenno, Directed Trusts: Can Directed Trustees Limit
Their Liability?, 21 Prob. &and Prop. 45
(Nov./Dec. 2007).
Paragraph (b) confirms that the governing instrument may provide that 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 a beneficial owner.
The reference in paragraph (c) 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, such as trustee removal, trust
law distinguishes between “serious” and not serious breaches of trust. See Uniform Trust Code §706(b)(1) (2000);
Austin Wakeman Scott, William F. Fratcher, &and
Mark L. Ascher, 2 Scott and Ascher on Trusts §11.10, at 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 obligations. 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 (Third) of Trusts §71 (2007).
Under Section 103(c)(98),
the
limitation on direction of trustees stated in paragraph (c(A) the obligation of a trustee not to
follow a direction that is manifestly contrary to the terms of the governing
instrument or that would constitute a serious breach of trust)
is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
In conjunction with Section 511,
this section facilitates the current practice in existing statutory trusts of
creating a limited purpose trustee—for example, in a mutual fund with an
investment advisor or in a securitization transaction with a
person who is responsible for distribution computations or whose consent is
required before the statutory trust can petition for bankruptcy.
SECTION 511. DELEGATION BY TRUSTEE.
(a) A trustee may delegate duties and powers. The trustee must exercise the care a person in a similar position would reasonably believe appropriate under similar circumstances 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 act or omission of the agent
to which the function was delegated. [For discussion: Question
from the floor, what about third parties?
Note addition of “or omission” based on suggestion from the floor.]
(e)
An agent submits to the jurisdiction of the courts of this state by accepting
a delegation of powers or duties from the trustee of a statutory trust that is
subject to the law of this state.
Comment
Principal Sources – Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3806; Connecticut Statutory Trust Act §34-517; Uniform Trust Code §807 .
This section is intended to facilitate
delegation to specialists. To
that end, it reverses the outmoded common law
rule against delegation by a trustee. In
reversing
the common law rule against delegation, the drafting committee followed bothauthorizing
delegation, this section follows 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 §80 (2007). See also John H. Langbein, Reversing the
Nondelegation Rule of Trust-Investment Law, 59 Mo. L. Rev. 105 (1994).
Paragraphs (a), (c), (d), and (e) are
patterned on Uniform Trust Code §807 (2000), which is derived from Uniform
Prudent Investor Act §9 (1994). This
section deviates from prior uniform acts, however, on the issue of delegation
to a co-trustee. Following the Delaware
Statutory Trust Act, paragraph (b) treats delegation to a co-trustee in the
same manner as delegation to another person.
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) (2007). The traditional rule is based on the
assumption that, if the donor named more than one trustee, the donor intended
each to be a check on the other(s). That policy does not fit commercial statutory
trust practice, in which limited purpose or function
trustees are common.
[For
discussion: the next four paragraphs, which
are derived from the comment to UPIA §9, are new.] There is an
intrinsic tension in trust law between granting trustees broad powers that
facilitate flexible and efficient trust administration, on the one hand, and
protecting trust beneficiaries from the misuse of such powers on the other
hand. Delegation, which is a species of trustee power, raises the same tension.
If the trustee delegates effectively, the beneficiaries obtain the advantage of
the agent’s specialized investment skills or whatever other
attributes induced the trustee to delegate. But if the trustee delegates to a
knave or an incompetent, the delegation can work harm upon the beneficiaries.
This section is designed to strike the appropriate balance between the advantages and the hazards of delegation. It authorizes delegation under the limitations of paragraphs (a) and (c). Paragraph (a) requires the trustee to exercise the care a person in a similar position would reasonably believe appropriate under similar circumstances in selecting the agent, in establishing the terms of the delegation, and in reviewing the agent’s compliance with the terms of the delegation.
The
trustee’s duty of care in framing the terms of the delegation should protect
the beneficial owners against overbroad delegation. For example, a trustee
could not prudently agree to a delegation agreement containing an exculpation
clause that leaves the statutory trust without recourse against reckless action
or bad faith by the agent. Leaving the trust remediless against without
a remedy for willful wrongdoing is inconsistent with the trustee’s
duty of care in formulating the terms of the delegation.
Although paragraph (d) exonerates the trustee from personal responsibility for the agent’s conduct when the delegation satisfies the standards of paragraph (a), paragraph (c) makes the agent responsible to the statutory trust. The beneficial owners can, therefore, rely upon the trustee to enforce the terms of the delegation.
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 512. 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., [and any regulations issued 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,] [and any regulations issued thereunder,] a trustee is an independent trustee for all purposes under this [act] if the trustee is not an interested person of the trust. The receipt of compensation both for service as an independent trustee of the 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. Scudder, Stevens &and
Clark, 964 F. Supp. 783 (S.D.N.Y. 1997) (applying Maryland law). In Strougo
the plaintiffs claimed that directors serving on multiple boards within a
mutual fund complex became “interested” by virtue of their close financial
relationship with the investment advisor.
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 excused the plaintiffs 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 &and
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].
Consistent with the Maryland, Massachusetts, and Delaware legislation,
this section rejects Strougo by
deeming a trustee to be independent if he or she is not an interested person
under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended.
SECTION 601. BENEFICIAL INTEREST.
(a) A beneficial interest in the
statutory trust is freely transferable.
(b) A beneficial owner’s
interest in the statutory trust is personal property regardless of the nature
of the property of the trust.
(c) A beneficial owner’s
interest is not an interest in specific property of the trust.
(db)
A beneficial owner does not have a preemptive right to subscribe to any
additional issue of beneficial interests or any other interest.
Comment
Principal Source – Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3805; Connecticut Statutory Trust Act §34-516; Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act §404 (2006).
Paragraph (a) provides as a default
rule that a beneficial owner’s interest in the statutory trust is freely
transferable. This paragraph therefore 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, 20098
Multistate Guide to Estate Planning Table 9.05, Part 1, Column 2 (collecting
authority). However, because the rule
stated in paragraph (a) is not scheduled in Section 103(c), it is subject to
override by the governing instrument. Section
104(bc)(2)
confirms that the governing instrument may limit a beneficial owner’s right to
transfer its beneficial interest. Section
606 provides for a charging order against a beneficial owner’s rights to
distributions in the event that the beneficial owner’s beneficial interest is
not freely transferable.
[Commentary for paragraph (b) to come.]
Under Section 104(b)(13), the
governing instrument may provide for the establishment of record dates for
distributions.
SECTION 602. VOTING OR CONSENT BY BENEFICIAL OWNERS.
(a) 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 number.
(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.
(b) The governing instrument may be
amended by consent of all the beneficial owners.
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 owners. The drafting committee contemplated that the governing instrument typically will address voting rules by providing a per capital or other share-based allocation of voting rights. However, the drafting committee declined the suggestion to try to incorporate such a rule as a default. Such rules are necessarily transaction-specific and hence infeasible to specify in a one-size-fits-all default. Compare Revised Uniform Partnership Act §401(f) (1997), which provides that “[e]ach partner has equal rights in the management and conduct of the partnership business.”
Paragraph (b)
provides a default rule that the governing instrument may be amended by
unanimous agreement of the beneficial owners. As with the voting rule
of paragraph (a), the drafting committee contemplated that the governing
instrument will provide for amendment. This
paragraph provides for an amendment mechanism in circumstance where the
governing instrument does not already do so. [For discussion: 1. Paragraph (b) is new, per our conference
call on dissolution. 2. Does it belong in this section? 3. Should the section
title be changed?]
The Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, specifies the percentage of vote necessary to approve certain actions related to the investment company. In other instances, 1940 Act requires the action to be approved at a shareholders’ meeting called for that purpose. In such instances, approval of the action by written consent without notice would not be valid. For example, Section 16(a) of the 1940 Act provides that “no person shall serve as a director of an investment company unless elected to that office by the holders of the outstanding voting securities of such company, at an annual or a special meeting duly called for that purpose.” In addition, investment companies seeking the vote of shareholders on specific actions must comply with rules governing the communication to, and solicitation of, their shareholders. See Rules 14a-1 to 14b-2 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. These rules are significantly more comprehensive than most state statutes and rules governing communications to shareholders and other aspects of a shareholder meeting.
Section 104(cb)(4)
confirms that the rules stated in this Section are subject to override by the
governing instrument.
SECTION 603. CONTRIBUTION BY BENEFICIAL OWNER.
(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 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 cash, property, or services, the beneficial owner is obligated, at the option of the 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 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 required 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 or series thereof;
(2) subordination of the defaulting beneficial owner’s beneficial interest to that of nondefaulting beneficial owners;
(3) forced sale or forfeiture of the defaulting beneficial owner’s beneficial interest;
(4) imposition of 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; and
(5) redemption or sale of the defaulting beneficial owner’s beneficial interest at a value fixed by appraisal or by formula.
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)104(c)(1),
the governing instrument may provide the means by which beneficial ownership is
determined and evidenced. Under Section 104(b)104(c)(10)-(11),
the governing instrument may specify the conditions under which a person
becomes a beneficial owner.
SECTION 604. DISTRIBUTION TO BENEFICIAL OWNER.
(a) 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.
(b) A beneficial owner does not have
a right to demand or to receive a distribution from the trust in any form other
than money.
(c) The trust may distribute an asset in-kind if each part of the asset is fungible with each other part and each beneficial owner receives a percentage of the asset equal in value to the beneficial owner’s share of the distribution.
Comment
Principal Source – Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3805; Connecticut Statutory Trust Act §34-516; Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act §404 (2006).
[For
comment: In the case of a statutory
trust that is a registered investment company organized as an open-end mutual
fund, a shareholder (beneficial owner) may request a redemption
of any or all of his shares (beneficial interests) and the
statutory trust is obligated to honor the redemption request and pay the redemption
proceeds within seven days (except under limited circumstances such as an
emergency). See 15 U.S.C. Sec.80(a)-22(e). The redemption proceeds
must be in the form of cash unless the open-end mutual fund has filed
with the Securities and Exchange Commission a notification of election on Form
N-18F-1. See 17 C.F.R. Sec. 270.18f-1. In such a case,
the open-end mutual fund may pay the redemption in-kind
(i.e., pay assets of the fund instead of cash) to a
shareholder who during the previous 90-day period has
redeemed $250,000 or more of shares or shares equal to one or
more percent of the net asset value of the fund. Id.]
Under Section 104(b)104(c)(13),
the governing instrument may provide for the establishment of record dates for
distributions.
SECTION 605. REDEMPTION OF BENEFICIAL INTEREST. A statutory trust may acquire, by purchase, redemption, or otherwise, any beneficial interest in the trust or series thereof. A beneficial interest so acquired 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.
(a) If a beneficial interest is not freely transferable by a beneficial owner such that the transferee has all rights of the transferor, a judgment creditor of a beneficial owner may satisfy the judgment against the beneficial owner’s beneficial interest only as provided in this section.
(b) On application by a judgment creditor of a beneficial owner, the [appropriate court] may issue a charging order against the beneficial owner’s right to distributions from the trust for the unsatisfied portion of the judgment.
(c) A charging order issued under subsection (b) constitutes a lien on the beneficial owner’s right to distributions and requires the statutory trust to pay over to the judgment creditor any distribution that would otherwise be paid to the beneficial owner until the unsatisfied amount of the judgment has been satisfied.
(d) To effectuate the collection of distributions pursuant to a charging order in effect under subsection (b), the court may:
(1) appoint a receiver of the distributions subject to the charging order, with the power to enforce the beneficial owner’s right to a distribution; and
(2) make all other orders necessary to give effect to the charging order.
(e) A statutory
trust or beneficial owner that is not subject to the charging order may pay to
the judgment creditor the full amount due under the judgment lien and thereby
succeed to the rights of a the judgment
creditor, including the charging order.
(f) This [act] does not deprive a beneficial owner or a transferee of the beneficial interest of any exemption laws applicable to the beneficial interest.
Comment
Principal Source - Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act §503 (2006).
[Comment
to come.]
Under
Section 103(c)(109), the right
of a judgment creditor of a beneficial owner to seek a charging order may not
be eliminated by the governing instrument.
SECTION 607. 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 do other business with the statutory trust and, subject to law other than this [act], 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 608. BENEFICIAL OWNER’S RIGHT TO INFORMATION. A
beneficial owner has the right to receive or to obtain by summary proceeding in
the [appropriate court] information from the statutory trust
or a trustee relating to the affairs of the statutory trust reasonably
related to the beneficial owner’s ability to enforce its rights as beneficial ownerinterest.
Comment
Principal Source – Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3819; Delaware Limited Liability Company Act §18-305.
Under Section 103(c)(10), 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 “reasonably related to the beneficial owner’s ability to enforce its rights as a beneficial owner,” and under Section 103(c)(8) the governing instrument may prescribe the standards by which reasonably related is determined if those standards are not manifestly unreasonable.
Imposing a mandatory, minimum right
to information critical to the beneficiary’s ability to enforce the trust is
familiar law. For example, Restatement
(Third) of Trusts §82, cmt. a(2) (2007), provides that “a
beneficiary is always entitled . . . to request such information as is
reasonably necessary to enable the beneficiary to prevent or redress a breach
of trust and otherwise to enforce his or her rights under the trust.” See also 3 Austin Wakeman Scott, William F. Fratcher, &and
Mark L. Ascher, 1 Scott and Ascher on Trusts §17.5, at p. 1202 (5th ed. 2006);
Restatement (Second) of Trusts §173, cmt. c
(1959); T.P. Gallanis, The Trustee’s Duty to Inform, 85 N.C. L. Rev. 1595
(2007).
The drafting committee declined the suggestion to include in this section a schedule of accessible information on the ground that such a rule-based schedule necessarily would be over- and under-inclusive. Instead, the committee contemplated that the term “reasonably related” would provide a more robust and flexible right to information by allowing the beneficiary to obtain a court order in a summary proceeding for the release of any type of information that bears on enforcement of the beneficial owner’s beneficial interest.
Section 508 provides for a trustee’s right to information.
SECTION 609. ACTION BY BENEFICIAL OWNER.
(a) A beneficial owner may maintain a direct action against a statutory trust to redress an injury sustained by, or to enforce a duty owed to, the beneficial owner if the beneficial owner can prevail without showing an injury or breach of duty to the trust.
(b) A beneficial owner may maintain a derivative action in the [appropriate court] to redress an injury sustained by, or enforce a duty owed to, a statutory trust if:
(1) the beneficial owner first makes a demand on the trustees, requesting that the trustees cause the 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.
(c) 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.
(d) 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.
(e) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (f):
(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 trust and not of the derivative plaintiff; and
(2) if the derivative
plaintiff receives any proceeds, it shall immediately remit them to the trust.
(f) 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 trust.
(g) 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); ALI Principles of Corporate Governance §7.01 (1994); Delaware Statutory Trust Act §3816; Connecticut Statutory Trust Act §34-522.
Under Section 103(c)(110),
the right of a beneficial owner to bring an action under this Section may not
be eliminated by the governing instrument.
However, Section 103(c)(110) 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 action,
provided that the additional standards and restrictions are not manifestly
unreasonable.
In preserving a mandatory right to
bring suit, but allowing that right to be subjected to additional standards and
restrictions that are not manifestly unreasonable, this section balances two
policy aims that are in tension. On the
one hand, without the right to bring an action, a beneficial owner might have
no recourse in the event of trustee misconduct.
On the other hand, without appropriate safeguards, a meritless action
might be brought with the aim of extracting a quick settlement. See, e.g., Reinier Kraakman, Hyun Park, &and Steven
Shavell, When Are Shareholder Suits in
Shareholder Interests?, 82 Georgetown L.J. 1733 (1994).
For a discussion of remedies, see the comment to Section 105.
SECTION 701. 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 702 through 705.
(4) “Converting organization” means an organization that converts into another organization pursuant to Section 702.
(5) “Converting statutory trust” means a converting organization that is a statutory trust.
(6) “Governing law” means the law that governs the organization’s internal affairs.
(7)
“Organization” means a common-law trust that does not have a
prevailingly donative purpose; general partnership, including a limited
liability partnership; limited partnership, including a limited liability
limited partnership; limited liability company; corporation; or foreign statutory
trust. 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.
Paragraph (7) includes a common-law
trust that does not have a prevailingly donative purpose within the definition
of organization. Hence, such a common-law
trust may convert to or merge with a statutory trust under this Article if such
a conversion or merger is permitted by the trust’s governing law. Unlike the formation of a new statutory trust
by filing a certificate of trust under Section 201, an option expressly
afforded to a common-law trust under Section 1005, conversion or merger under
this Article preserves continuity in the organization’s relationships with
third parties. See Sections 705 and 709
and the comments thereto.
[Discussion/cross-reference
re exclusion of prevailingly donative purpose to come].
Under Section 103(c)(12), this definitions stated in this Section are 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 703 through 705 and a plan of conversion, if:
(1) the conversion is
not prohibited by the governing law of the jurisdiction
that enacted the other organization’s governing law;
and
(2) the other organization complies with its governing law 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 organization changes its form, the jurisdiction of its governing law, 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 organization. See Section 705(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 703. 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.
(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.
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)104(c)(5)(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 trust has been converted into another organization;
(B) the name and form of the converting organization and the jurisdiction of its governing law;
(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 law of the converted organization; and
(E) if the converted organization is a foreign organization not authorized to do business in this state, the street and mailing addresses of an office that the [Secretary of State] may use for the purposes of Section 705(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 trust was converted from another organization;
(B) the name and form of the converting organization and the jurisdiction of its governing law; and
(C) a statement that the conversion was approved in a manner that complied with the organization’s governing law.
(b) A conversion becomes effective when the certificate of conversion is effective as provided in Section 204(c).
Comment
Principal Source – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §1104 (2001).
Under paragraph (b) the effective date of a conversion is determined under the governing law of the converted organization.
Under Section 103(c)(132),
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 organization that existed before the conversion.
(b) When a conversion under this [article] takes effect:
(1) all property owned by the converting organization remains vested in the converted organization;
(2) all debts, obligations, and other liabilities of the converting organization, including those existing with respect to the property of a series thereof, continue as debts, obligations, or other liabilities of the converted organization limited to the property of any series thereof as provided for by the plan of conversion;
(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 Section 701.
(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 do 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 organization’s legal type, but does not create a new organization. Unlike a merger, a conversion involves a single organization. Therefore under paragraph (b) a conversion does not transfer any of the organization’s rights or obligations. For further discussion, see Model Entity Transactions Act §406 (2006) and comment 1 thereto.
Under Section 103(c)(132),
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 707 through 709 and a plan of merger if:
(1) the governing law of
each of the other organizations authorizes the merger;
(21)
the merger is not prohibited by the governing law
of a
jurisdiction that enacted any of the governing lawany
constituent organization; and
(32)
each of the other organizations complies with its governing law 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 703, 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 707. ACTION ON PLAN OF MERGER BY CONSTITUENT STATUTORY TRUST.
(a) A plan of merger must be consented to by all trustees and all beneficial owners of a constituent statutory trust.
(b) After a merger is approved, and at any time before a filing is made under Section 708, 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)104(c)(5)(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 703, 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 law;
(2) the name and form of the surviving organization, the jurisdiction of its governing law, 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 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 law;
(6) if the surviving organization is a foreign organization not authorized to do business in this state, the street and mailing addresses of an office that the [Secretary of State] may use for the purposes of Section 709(b); and
(7) any additional information required by the governing law of any constituent organization.
(c) The articles of merger must be delivered to the office of the [Secretary of State] for filing.
(d) A merger becomes effective under this [article]:
(1) if the surviving organization is a statutory trust, upon the later of:
(A)filing of the articles of merger by the Secretary of State; or
(B) subject to Section 204(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 law of the surviving organization.
Comment
Principal Source – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §1108 (2001).
Under Section 103(c)(132),
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 with the surviving organization ceases to exist as a separate organization;
(3) all property owned by each constituent organization that ceases to exist vests in the surviving organization;
(4) all debts, obligations, and other liabilities of each constituent organization that ceases to exist, including those existing with respect to the property of a series thereof, continue as debts, obligations, or other liabilities of the surviving organization limited to the property thereof as provided for by the plan of merger;
(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 amendment provided for in the articles of merger for the organizational document that created the organization becomes 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 not authorized to do 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 provided in Section 213(c) and (d).
Comment
Principal Source – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §1109 (2001).
Under Section 103(c)(12), this Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
SECTION 710. [ARTICLE] NOT EXCLUSIVE. This [article] does not preclude an organization from being converted or merged under law other than this [act].
Comment
Principal Source – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §1113 (2001).
SECTION 801.
EVENTS CAUSING DISSOLUTION. A statutory trust may shall only
be dissolved upon the occurrence ofby an
administrative dissolution under Section 806 or by the filing of articles of
dissolution under Section 802 upon the occurrence of:
(1) an event or circumstance that the governing instrument states causes dissolution; or
(2)
consent by all the beneficial owners; or.
(3) an administrative dissolution under Section 806.
Comment
Principal Source – Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act §701 (2006).
This
Section provides that a statutory trust may be dissolved only upon the
occurrence of an event or circumstance stated in the governing instrument, by unanimous
consent of all the beneficial owners, or by administrative
dissolution under Statute 806, or by
the filing of articles of dissolution under Section 802 upon either the occurrence of an
event or circumstance stated in the governing instrument or the
unanimous consent of the beneficial owners. However, as confirmed
by Section 306, the governing instrument need not provide for an event or
circumstance that causes dissolution. [For
discussion, paragraph (2) and mandatory rules.], or may
provide that the trust is not
dissolved even with the consent of all the beneficial owners.
Under Section 103(c)(1), the provisions of this section other than paragraph (2) are not subject to override by the governing instrument.
SECTION 802.
ARTICLES OF DISSOLUTION.
(a) If dissolution of a statutory trust is authorized under paragraphs (1) or (2) of Section 801, the trust must deliver to the [Secretary of State] for filing articles of dissolution setting forth:
(1) the name of the trust; and
(2) the date of the dissolution.
(b)
Except as otherwise provided in Section 204(c), a statutory trust is dissolved
when articles of dissolution that comply with subsection (b) are filed by the
[Secretary of State].
Comment
Principal Source – Revised Model Business Corporation Act §14.03 (2005).
[For Discussion: Do we want a section here based on RMBCA
§14.04, something like—
(a) A statutory trust may revoke its
dissolution within 120 days of its effective date.
(b) Revocation of dissolution must
be authorized in the same manner as the dissolution was authorized unless that
authorization permitted revocation by the trustees alone, in which event the
trustees may revoke the dissolution.
(c) After the revocation of
dissolution is authorized, the statutory trust may revoke the dissolution by
delivering to the [Secretary of State] for filing articles of revocation of
dissolution, together with a copy of its articles of dissolution, that set
forth:
(1)
the name of the trust;
(2)
the effective date of the dissolution that was revoked;
(3)
the date that the revocation of dissolution was authorized; and
(4)
a statement of the authorization to revoke the dissolution.
(d) Revocation of dissolution is
effective upon the effective date of the articles of dissolution.
(e) When the revocation of
dissolution is effective, it relates back to and takes effect as of the
effective date of the dissolution and the statutory trust resumes carrying on
its business as if dissolution had never occurred.
(a) A dissolved statutory trust shall wind up its activities, and the trust and each series thereof continues after dissolution only for the purpose of winding up.
(b) In winding up its activities, a statutory trust shall:
(1) discharge the trust’s debts, obligations, and other liabilities, settle and close the trust’s activities, and marshal and distribute the property of the trust; and
(2) first
apply its property to discharge its obligations to creditors; and (23)
distribute any surplus property after complying with subsection (b)(12)
to the beneficial owners in proportion to their beneficial interests.
(c) In winding up its activities, a statutory trust may:
(1) preserve the trust’s activities and property as a going concern for a reasonable time;
(2) institute, maintain, and defend actions and proceedings, whether civil, criminal, or administrative;
(3) transfer the trust’s property;
(4) settle disputes;
(5)
perform other acts necessary or appropriate to the winding up.
(c) Trustees of a dissolved
statutory trust that has disposed of claims under
Sections 804 or 805 shall not be liable for breach of duty with respect to
claims against the trust that are barred or satisfied under Sections 804 or
805.
(d) The administrative
dissolution of a statutory trust does not terminate the authority of its agent
for service of process.
(ed)
On application of any person that shows good cause, the [appropriate court] may
appoint a person to be a receiver for a dissolved statutory trust with the
power to undertake any action that might have been done by the trust during its
winding up if the action is necessary for final settlement of the trust.
Comment
Principal Source – Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act §§702, 708 (2006); Revised Model Business Corporation Act §14.09 (2005); Delaware Limited Liability Company Act §18-805.
If the governing instrument of a statutory trust provides for the dissolution of the trust, then upon the event or circumstance that triggers dissolution, the statutory trust may continue only for the purpose of winding up.
In winding up the statutory trust within a reasonable time, the trustees are neither required to undertake a fire sale of the property of the statutory trust on unfavorable terms nor permitted to continue the trust endlessly under the guise of winding down. The question of what period of time is “reasonable” under paragraph (c)(1) turns on the totality of the circumstances.
Paragraph
(ed)
provides for the possibility that after dissolution additional unfinished
business of the statutory trust is discovered. [Search
RST for property that comes in after termination.]
Under
Section 103(c)(1), the provisions of this section are not subject to override
by the governing instrument.
SECTION 804.
KNOWN CLAIMS AGAINST DISSOLVED STATUTORY TRUSTACTUAL NOTICE TO CLAIMANT.
(a) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (d), a dissolved statutory trust may give notice to a known claimant under subsection (b), which has the effect provided in subsection (c).
(b)
A dissolved statutory trust may dispose of the a known
claims against it by notifying its the known claimants
in a record of the dissolution of the trust. [For discussion: this sentence has been revised to
track the RMBCA.] The notice must:
(1) specify the information required to be included in a claim;
(2)
provide a mailing address to which the claim is to be sent;
(3) state the deadline for receipt of the claim, which may not be less than 120 days after the date the notice is received by the claimant; and
(4) state that the claim will be barred if not received by the deadline.
(c) A claim against a dissolved statutory trust is barred if the requirements of subsection (b) are met and:
(1) the claim is not received by the specified deadline; or
(2) if the claim is timely received but rejected by the trust:
(A) the trust notifies the claimant in a record that the claim is rejected and will be barred unless the claimant commences an action against the trust to enforce the claim within 90 days after the claimant receives the notice; and
(B)
the claimant does not commence the required action within the 90 days.
(d) This section does not apply to a claim based:
(1) on an event occurring after the effective date of dissolution; or
(2)
a liability that on that date is unmatured or contingent.
Comment
Principal Source – Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act §703 (2006).
[To
come: Excerpt/paraphrase of the commentary from the RMBCA, on which the RULLCA
provision was based.]
Under Section 103(c)(1), the
provisions of this section are not subject to override by the governing
instrument.
SECTION 805.
OTHER CLAIMS AGAINST DISSOLVED STATUTORY TRUSTPUBLICATION
NOTICE.
(a)
A dissolved statutory trust may publish notice of its dissolution and request
persons having claims against the trust to present them in accordance with the
notice. [For discussion: removal
of “other” in line with RMBCA model.]
(b) The notice authorized by subsection (a) must:
(1) be published at least once in a newspaper of general circulation in the [county] in this state in which the dissolved statutory trust’s principal office is located or, if it has none in this state, in the [county] in which the trust’s designated office is or was last located;
(2) describe the information required to be contained in a claim and provide a mailing address to which the claim is to be sent; and
(3)
state that a claim against the trust is barred unless an action to enforce the
claim is commenced within [three] years after publication of the notice. [For discussion: note the
change to three years from five, per our conference call and RMBCA.]
(c) If a dissolved statutory trust publishes a notice in accordance with subsection (b), unless the claimant commences an action to enforce the claim against the trust within [three] years after the publication date of the notice, the claim of each of the following claimants is barred:
(1)
a claimant that did not receive notice in a record under Section 804;
(2) a claimant whose claim was timely sent to the trust but not acted on; and
(3) a claimant whose claim is contingent at, or based on an event occurring after, the effective date of dissolution.
(d) A claim not barred under this section may be enforced:
(1)
against a dissolved statutory trust, to the extent of its undistributed
property; and
(2) if property of the trust has been distributed after dissolution, against a beneficial owner to the extent of that beneficial owner’s proportionate share of the property distributed to the beneficial owner after dissolution, but a beneficial owner’s total liability for all claims under this paragraph does not exceed the total amount of property distributed to the beneficial owner after dissolution.
Comment
Principal Source – Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act §704 (2006).
[To come: Excerpt of the commentary from the RMBCA, on which the RULLCA provision was based. Commentary to include discussion of the three year bracketed limit.]
Under Section 103(c)(1), the provisions of this section are not subject to override by the governing instrument.
[For Discussion,
whether we want a court proceedings provision, like RMBCA §14.08:
(a) A dissolved corporation that has
published a notice under section 14.07 may file an application with the [name
or describe] court of the county where the dissolved corporation’s principal
office (or, if none in this state, its registered office) is located for a
determination of the amount and form of security to be provided for payment of
claims that are contingent or have not been made known to the dissolved
corporation or that are based on an event occurring after the effective date of
dissolution but that, based on the facts
known to the dissolved corporation, are reasonably estimated to arise after the
effective date of dissolution. Provision need not be made for any claim that is
or is reasonably anticipated to be barred under section 14.07(c).
(b) Within 10 days after
the filing of the application, notice of the proceeding shall be given by the
dissolved corporation to each claimant holding a contingent claim whose
contingent claim is shown on the records of the dissolved corporation.
(c) The court may appoint
a guardian ad litem to represent all claimants whose identities are unknown in
any proceeding brought under this section. The reasonable fees and expenses of
such guardian, including all reasonable expert witness fees, shall be paid by
the dissolved corporation.
(d) Provision by the
dissolved corporation for security in the amount and the form ordered by the
court under section 14.08(a) shall satisfy the dissolved corporation’s
obligations with respect to claims that are contingent, have not been made
known to the dissolved corporation or are based on an event occurring after the
effective date of dissolution, and such claims may not be enforced against a
shareholder who received assets in liquidation.]
[For Discussion,
RMBCA 14.09:
(a) Directors shall cause the
dissolved corporation to discharge or make reasonable provision for the payment
of claims and make distributions of assets to shareholders after payment or
provision for claims.
(b) Directors of a
dissolved corporation which has disposed of claims under sections 14.06, 14.07,
or 14.08 shall not be liable for breach of section 14.09(a) with respect to
claims against the dissolved corporation that are barred or satisfied under
sections 14.06, 14.07, or 14.08.]
SECTION 806.
ADMINISTRATIVE DISSOLUTION.
(a) The [Secretary of State] may dissolve a statutory trust administratively if:
(1) the trust is without an agent for service of process in this state for 30 days;
(2) the trust does not deliver
for filing a statement of change within 30 days after a change has occurred in
the name or address of the agent;
(23)
the trust does not file an annual report within 630
days after it is due; or
(34)
the trust does not pay, within 30 [60] days
after the due date, any fee, tax, or penalty due to the [Secretary of State].
[For
discussion: Whether to add a provision,
based on RMBCA 14.20(5), to the effect “the trust’s period of duration stated
in its certificate of trust expires.”]
(b) If the [Secretary of State] determines that a ground exists for administratively dissolving a statutory trust, the [Secretary of State] must file a notice of dissolution and send a copy to the trust’s agent for service of process, or if the trust does not have an agent for service of process in this state, to the trust’s designated office. The notice must state:
(1) the effective date of the dissolution, 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 statutory trust cures the failures to comply with subsection (a) stated in the notice of dissolution before the date stated in the notice, the [Secretary of State] shall dissolve the trust administratively by preparing, signing, and filing a declaration of dissolution that states the grounds for dissolution. The [Secretary of State] shall file a notice of dissolution and send a copy to the trust’s agent for service of process, or if the trust does not have an agent for service of process in this state, to the trust’s designated office.
(d) A statutory trust that has been administratively
dissolved continues in existence but, subject to Section 806, may carry on only
activities necessary to wind up its activities and liquidate its property under
Sections 802 and 808 and to notify claimants under Sections 803 and 804.
(e) The administrative dissolution of a statutory trust
does not terminate the authority of its agent for service of process.
Comment
Principal Source – Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act §705 (2006).
Under Section 103(c)(1), the provisions of this section are not subject to override by the governing instrument.
SECTION 807. REINSTATEMENT FOLLOWING ADMINISTRATIVE DISSOLUTION.
(a)
A statutory trust that has been administratively dissolved may apply to the
[Secretary of State] for reinstatement.
The application must be delivered to the [Secretary of State] for filing
and state:
(1) the name of the trust and the effective date of its dissolution;
(2) that the grounds for dissolution did not exist or have been eliminated; and
(3) that the trust’s name satisfies the requirements of Section 207.
(b) If the [Secretary of State] determines that an application under subsection (a) contains the required information and that the information is correct, the [Secretary of State] shall prepare a declaration of reinstatement that states this determination, sign and file the original of the declaration of reinstatement, and send a copy to the trust’s agent for service of process.
(c)
When a reinstatement becomes effective, it relates back to and takes effect as
of the effective date of the administrative dissolution as if the dissolution
had not occurred, except for the rights of a person arising out of
conduct in reliance on the dissolution before the person knew or had reason to
know of the reinstatement.. [For discussion: (1) whether and if so how to carve out third
parties who rely on dissolution to their detriment, (2) whether to include a
provision based on Ky Stat 271B.14-220(4), “Notwithstanding any other provision
to the contrary, any corporation which was administratively dissolved or
revoked and has taken the action necessary to wind up and liquidate its
business and affairs under ___, and notify claimants under __ and __, shall be
prohibited from reinstatement.”]
Comment
Principal Source – Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act §706 (2006); Revised Uniform Partnership Act §802 (1997).
Under Section 103(c)(1), the provisions of this section are not subject to override by the governing instrument.
SECTION 808. APPEAL FROM REJECTION OF REINSTATEMENT.
(a) If the [Secretary of State] rejects a statutory trust’s application for reinstatement following administrative dissolution, the [Secretary of State] shall send a notice that explains the reason for rejection to the trust’s agent for service of process.
(b) A statutory trust may appeal from the rejection by petitioning the [appropriate court] to set aside the dissolution. The petition must be delivered to the [Secretary of State] and contain a copy of the [Secretary of State’s] declaration of dissolution, the trust’s application for reinstatement, and the [Secretary of State’s] notice of rejection.
(c) The court may order the [Secretary of State] to reinstate a dissolved statutory trust or take other action the court considers appropriate.
Comment
Principal Source – Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act §707 (2006).
Under Section 103(c)(1), the
provisions of this section are not subject to override by the governing
instrument.
SECTION 901. 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 trust;
(2)
the liability of a beneficial owner as beneficial owner and trustee as trustee
for the debts, obligations, or other liabilities of the trust or any
series thereof; and
(3)
the enforceability of a debt, obligation, or other liability of the
foreign statutory trust or a series
thereof against the property of the trust or any any series
thereof. [For discussion: problem
solved?]
(b) The [Secretary of State] may not deny a foreign statutory trust a certificate of qualification 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 qualification 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 301_
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(c)(1), this Section is not subject to override by the governing
instrument.
(a) A foreign statutory trust may apply for a certificate of qualification to transact business in this state by delivering an application to the [Secretary of State] for filing. The application must contain:
(1) the name of the trust and, if the name does not comply with Section 207, an alternate name adopted pursuant to Section 906(a).
(2) the name of the state or other jurisdiction under whose law the trust is formed;
(3) the street and mailing addresses of the trust’s principal office and, if the laws of the jurisdiction under which the 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 trust’s initial agent for service of process in this state.
(b) A foreign statutory trust shall deliver with a completed application under subsection (a) a certificate of good standing or a record of similar import signed by the [Secretary of State] or other official having custody of the foreign statutory trust’s publicly filed records in the state or other jurisdiction under whose law the foreign statutory trust is formed.
Comment
Principal Source – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §902 (2001).
A
certificate of qualification applied for under this section is different than a
certificate of registration under Section 905.
A certificate of qualification confirms that a foreign statutory trust
may do business in the state. A
certificate of registration provides conclusive evidence that a foreign
statutory trust has a valid certificate of qualification on file as of the date
of the certificate of registration. A
certificate of registration for a foreign statutory trust is akin to a
certificate of good standing for a statutory trust under Section 206.[Further commentary to come.]
Under
Section 103(c)(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 or depositing assets in financial institutions;
(4) maintaining offices or agencies for the transfer, exchange, and registration of the 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 does not do business in the state solely by reason of being a trustee or a beneficial owner of a foreign statutory trust that does transact business in this state.
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(c)(1), this Section is not subject to override by the governing
instrument.
SECTION 904. FILING OF CERTIFICATE OF QUALIFICATION.
Unless the [Secretary of State] determines that an application for a
certificate of qualification does not comply with the filing requirements of
this [Act], the [Secretary of State], upon payment of all filing fees, shall
file the application, prepare, sign and file a certificate of qualification to
transact business in this State, and send a copy of the filed certificate,
together with a receipt for the fees, to the foreign statutory trust or its
representative.
Comment
Principal Source –Uniform Limited Partnership Act §904 (2001).
For discussion of the certificate of qualification and its differences from a certificate of registration, see the comment to Section 902.
Under
Section 103(c)(1), this Section is not subject to override by the governing
instrument.
SECTION
905. CERTIFICATE OF REGISTRATION.
(a) The [Secretary of State], upon request and payment of the requisite fee, shall furnish a certificate of registration for a qualified 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 qualification, has not revoked the certificate of qualification, and has not filed a notice of cancellation.
(b) Subject to any limitation stated in the certificate, a certificate of registration issued by the [Secretary of State] to a foreign statutory trust may be relied upon as conclusive evidence that the trust is authorized to transact business in this state as of the date of the certificate.
Comment
Principal
Source – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §209 (2001).
The provisions of this section, which concern the issuance of a certificate of registration for a qualified foreign statutory trust, are analogous to the provisions of Section 206 concerning the issuance of a certificate of good standing for a statutory trust.
Under
Section 103(c)(1), this Section is not subject to override by the governing
instrument.
(a) A foreign statutory trust whose name does not comply with Section 207 may not obtain a certificate of qualification until it adopts, for the purpose of transacting business in this state, an alternate name that complies with Section 207. A foreign statutory trust that adopts an alternate name under this subsection and obtains a certificate of qualification with the name need not comply with [fictitious or assumed name statute]. After obtaining a certificate of qualification with an alternate name, a foreign statutory trust shall transact business in this state under the name unless the 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 207, it may not thereafter transact business in this state until it complies with subsection (a) and obtains an amended certificate of qualification.
Comment
Principal Source – Uniform
Limited Partnership Act §905 (2001).
Under
Section 103(c)(1), this Section is not subject to override by the governing
instrument.
SECTION 907. REVOCATION OF CERTIFICATE OF QUALIFICATION.
(a) A certificate of qualification 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 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 pursuant to Section 213 within 60 days after it is due; 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 qualification of a foreign statutory trust, the [Secretary of State] must prepare, sign, and file a notice of revocation and send a copy to the trust’s agent for service of process in this state, or if the trust does not appoint and maintain a proper agent in this state, to the 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 stated in the notice, the authority of the trust to transact business in this state ceases on that date.
(d)
If a foreign statutory trust cures the any failures
stated in the notice of revocation under subsection (c), the [Secretary of
State] shall indicate that the trust is reinstated on the filed notice. The reinstatement of the trust relates back
for all purposes to the date of the notice of revocation.
Comment
Principal Source – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §906 (2001).
Under
Section 103(c)(1), this Section is not subject to override by the governing
instrument.
(a) To cancel its certificate of qualification 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 trust;
(2) the date of filing of its initial certificate of qualification;
(3) that the certificate of qualification is being canceled; and
(4) any other information as determined by the trustee filing the statement.
(b)
A certificate of qualification under subsection (a) is canceled when the notice
of cancellation becomes effective under Section 204.
Comment
Principal Source – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §907 (2001).
Under
Section 103(c)(1), this Section is not subject to override by the governing
instrument.
SECTION
909. EFFECT OF FAILURE TO HAVE
CERTIFICATE.
(a) 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 qualification to transact business in this state.
(b) The failure of a foreign statutory trust to have a certificate of qualification to transact business in this state does not impair the validity of a contract or act of the trust or prevent the trust from defending an action or proceeding in this state.
(c)
A trustee or beneficial owner of a statutory trust is not liable for the debts,
obligations, or other liabilities of the trust solely because the trust
transacted business in this state without a certificate of qualification.
(d) If a foreign statutory trust transacts business in this state without a certificate of qualification or cancels its certificate of qualification, the [Secretary of State] is 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(c)(1), this Section is not subject to override by the governing
instrument.
SECTION 910. 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(c)(1), this Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
SECTION 1001. 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(c)(1), this
Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
SECTION 1002. 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(c) of that act.
Comment
Principal Source – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §1203 (2001).
Under Section 103(c)(1), this
Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
SECTION 1003. 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(c)(1), this
Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
SECTION 1004. RESERVATION OF POWER TO AMEND OR REPEAL. The [name of state legislature] has power to amend or repeal all or part of this [act] at any time and all statutory trusts and foreign statutory trusts subject to this [act] are governed by the amendment or repeal.
Comment
Principal
Source – Revised Model Business Corporation Act §1.02 (2005).
This
paragraph address the concern that under the Constitution a subsequent
amendment to this act could not be applied to an existing statutory trust or
foreign statutory trust. The official comment to Revised Model Business
Corporation Act §1.02 (2005), on which this section is based, explains: [For discussion: whether to paraphrase rather than block
quote.]
Provisions similar to section 1.02 have their genesis in Trustees of Dartmouth College v. Woodward, 17
U.S. (4 Wheat) 518 (1819), which held that the United States Constitution
prohibited the application of newly enacted statutes to existing corporations
while suggesting the efficacy of a reservation of power similar to section
1.02. The purpose of section 1.02 is to avoid any possible argument that a
corporation has contractual or vested rights in any specific statutory
provision and to ensure that the state may in the future modify its corporation
statutes as it deems appropriate and require existing corporations to comply
with the statutes as modified.
All articles of incorporation or certificates of authority granted
under the Model Act are subject to the reservation of power set forth in
section 1.02. Further, corporations ‘‘governed’’ by this Act—which includes all
corporations formed or qualified under earlier, general incorporation statutes
that contain a reservation of power—are also subject to the reservation of
power of section
1.02
and bound by subsequent amendments to the Act.
Many states have constitutional provisions mandating the
reservation of power to amend or modify corporate statutes and charters. In
these states section 1.02 is also supported by specific constitutional
authorization.
Under Section 103(c)(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 arising under the law of this state 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].]
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(c)—by operation of law.
Paragraphs (a) and (b) confirm that this act does not govern a common-law trust unless the trust forms a statutory trust by filing a certificate of trust under Section 201. However, consistent with Section 302, paragraph (b) of this Section prohibits a common-law trust with a prevailingly donative purpose from becoming a statutory trust. An alternative mode for a common-law trust to become a statutory trust is provided by the conversion provisions of Article 6. Unlike the formation of a new statutory trust by filing a certificate of trust under Section 201, the conversion provisions of Article 6 allow for the conversion of another organization into the statutory trust form while preserving continuity in the converting organization’s relationships with third parties. See the Comments to Sections 701 and 705.
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 example, an enacting jurisdiction might choose to allow trusts formed under a prior statute to remain governed by the prior statute for longer than the two years suggested in paragraph (d).
Under Section 103(c)(1), this
Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
SECTION 1006. 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 and 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 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. Although
the Internal Revenue Code at one time favored the trust form for the
organization of a REIT, the code today does not regulate the form of entity. [Article
cite. Accordingly,
there is no longer any reason why a REIT must be organized as a trust, whether
statutory or common law. Indeed, data
assembled by the reporter shows that in contemporary practice most
publicly-traded REITs are organized as Maryland corporations, not as trusts. See Robert H. Sitkoff, The Rise of the
Statutory Business Trust __ [citation]. Nonetheless, prior to the liberalization of
the tax code, a number of states enacted REIT statutes that authorize the
creation of a trust entity designed to qualify as a REIT under the 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(c)(1), this Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.
SECTION 1007. EFFECTIVE DATE. This [act] takes effect . . . .
Comment
Principal Source – Uniform Limited Partnership Act §1204 (2001).
Section 1005 specifies how this Act
affects statutory trusts, with special provisions pertaining to statutory
trusts formed before the Act’s effective date.
Section ___[article 9 problem] containsThere
are 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(c)(1), this
Section is not subject to override by the governing instrument.