DRAFT
FOR DISCUSSION ONLY
UNIFORM
MANAGEMENT OF INSTITUTIONAL FUNDS
ACT
|
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
OF COMMISSIONERS ON UNIFORM STATE LAWS |
WITH
PREFATORY NOTE AND PRELIMINARY COMMENTS
Copyright
© 20054
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.
March 2, 2005
DRAFTING COMMITTEE TO REVISE
UNIFORM MANAGEMENT OF
INSTITUTIONAL FUNDS ACT
The Committee appointed by and representing the National
Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws in revising this Uniform Management
of Institutional Funds Act consists of the following individuals:
DWIGHT HAMILTON, Suite 500, 1600 Broadway, Denver, CO 80202, Chair
JOHN P. BURTON,
P.O. Box 1357, 315 Paseo de Peralta, Santa Fe, NM 87501, Enactment Plan
Coordinator
MARY JO HOWARD DIVELY, Carnegie Mellon University, 5000 Forbes Ave., Pittsburgh, PA
15213
BARRY C. HAWKINS, 300 Atlantic St., Stamford, CT 06901
SHELDON F. KURTZ, University of Iowa, College of Law, Iowa City, IA 52242
JOHN H. LANGBEIN, Yale Law School, P.O. Box 208215, New Haven, CT 06520
MATTHEW S. RAE, JR., 520 S. Grand Ave., 7th Floor, Los Angeles, CA 90071-2645
RICHARD V. WELLMAN, University of Georgia, School of Law, Athens, GA 30602
SUSAN N. GARY, University of Oregon, School of Law, 1515 Agate St., Eugene, OR 97403,
Reporter
EX OFFICIO
FRED H. MILLER, University of Oklahoma, College of
Law, 300 Timberdell Rd., Room 3056,
Norman, OK 73019, President
REX BLACKBURN, 1673 W. Shoreline Dr., Suite 200, P.O. Box 7808, Boise, ID 83707,
Division
Chair
AMERICAN BAR ASSOCIATION ADVISORS
CAROL G. KROCH, RR 1 E College Rd. E, P.O. Box 2316, Princeton, NJ 08543-2316,
American Bar Association Advisor
JOHN K. NOTZ, JR., 191 N. Wacker Dr.,
Chicago, IL 60606-1698, American Bar Association
Section Advisor
CYNTHIA ROWLAND, One Ferry Building,
Suite 200, San Francisco, CA 94111, American
Bar
Association Section Advisor
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
WILLIAM H. HENNING, University of Alabama School of Law, Box 870382, Tuscaloosa, AL 35487-0382, Executive Director
Copies of this Act may be obtained from:
NATIONAL CONFERENCE OF COMMISSIONERS
ON UNIFORM STATE LAWS
211 E. Ontario Street, Suite 1300
Chicago, Illinois 60611
312/915-0195
www.nccusl.org
REVISION OF UNIFORM MANAGEMENT OF INSTITUTIONAL FUNDS ACT
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PREFATORY NOTE............................................................................................................ 1
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE................................................................................................. 3
SECTION 2. DEFINITIONS.................................................................................................. 3
SECTION 3. STANDARD OF CONDUCT IN MANAGING AND INVESTING
INSTITUTIONAL FUNDS........................................................................................ 8
SECTION 4. EXPENDITURE OF
ENDOWMENT FUNDS; RULES
OF CONSTRUCTION 15
SECTION 5. DELEGATION OF
MANAGEMENT AND INVESTMENT FUNCTIONS...... 23
SECTION 6. RELEASE OR
MODIFICATION OF RESTRICTIONS ON USE OR
MANAGEMENT, INVESTMENT, OR PURPOSE............................................................................................................... 25
SECTION 7. REVIEWING COMPLIANCE........................................................................ 29SECTION 8. APPLICATION TO EXISTING INSTITUTIONAL FUNDS........................... 30
SECTION 9. RELATION TO ELECTRONIC SIGNATURES IN GLOBAL AND NATIONAL
COMMERCE ACT................................................................................................. 30
SECTION 10. UNIFORMITY OF APPLICATION AND CONSTRUCTION 30
SECTION 11. EFFECTIVE DATE...................................................................................... 30
SECTION 12. REPEAL...................................................................................................... 30
UNIFORM MANAGEMENT OF INSTITUTIONAL FUNDS ACT
PREFATORY NOTE
In 1972 the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws approved the Uniform Management of Institutional Funds Act [hereafter referred to as UMIFA (1972)]. At that time uncertainty existed as to the standards that governed directors of charitable corporations in managing and investing the funds of the charitable organizations. Directors of a charity organized as a nonprofit corporation had been held to the investment standards that applied to trustees of private trusts. See Lynch v. John M. Redfield Foundation, 9 Cal. App. 3d 293 (1970) (stating that directors of a charitable corporation are essentially trustees and as such are held to an investment duty similar to that of a trustee of a private trust). See also Restatement (Second) of Trusts § 389 (1959). For directors of large institutions, the then-current restrictions on trust investing made the use of modern investment strategies problematic.
UMIFA (1972) provided
guidance and authority to the governing boards of those charitable
organizations within its scope on several issues. The statute gave a governing
board broad investment authority and indicated that a governing board was not
restricted to investments authorized for trustees. The statute permitted a
board to delegate authority to independent financial advisors. With respect to
endowment funds, the statute authorized a governing board to expend unrealized
appreciation, even if the endowment fund provided only for the distribution of
“income.” This provision enabled fund managers to use modern investment techniques
such as total-return investing and unitrust-style spending. UMIFA (1972) also
permitted the governing board to release restrictions on the use or investment
of institutional funds if the donor consented and to release restrictions that
had become “obsolete, inappropriate, or impracticable” if a court approved. Thus, the statute provided a modification
mechanism for charities organized as corporations similar to the doctrine of cy
pres that applies to charitable trusts.
The investment standards adopted by UMIFA (1972) foreshadowed changes to trust investment law in the Uniform Prudent Investor Act (1994) [hereafter referred to as UPIA]. UPIA applies modern portfolio theory to trusts, including charitable trusts. The Uniform Principal and Income Act (1997) furthered the principles of UPIA, providing tools for the use of investment techniques authorized under UPIA. The Uniform Trust Code (2000) [hereafter referred to as the UTC] expanded the application of the doctrine of cy pres. These Uniform Acts have informed the work of the Drafting Committee of the Uniform Management of Institutional Funds Act (200-) [hereafter UMIFA (200-)].
Objectives of the Act. UMIFA (200-) uses
language from UPIA and the Revised Model Nonprofit Corporation Act [hereafter
referred to as the RMNCA], reflecting the fact that standards for investing and
managing institutional funds are and should be the same regardless of whether a
charitable organization is organized as a trust, as a nonprofit corporation or
in some other manner. The rules governing expenditures from endowment funds
have been modified to give a governing board more flexibility in making
expenditure decisions, so that the board can cope with fluctuations in the
value of the endowment. As under UMIFA
(1972), Tthese rules
are available to decision makers of charities organized as charitable trusts,
as nonprofit corporations, or in some other manner, but the rules do not
apply to a fund managed by a trustee that is not a charity. The Act does not apply to trusts managed by
corporate or individual trustees, but the Act does apply to a trust managed by
a charity. The provisions
governing the release and modification of restrictions have been changed to
permit more efficient management of institutional funds.
Other Legal Rules. UMIFA (200-) addresses investment issues and issues relating to endowment funds but is not a comprehensive statute addressing all legal issues that apply to charitable organizations. For matters not governed by UMIFA (200-), a charitable organization will continue to be governed by rules applicable to charitable trusts, if it is organized as a trust, or rules applicable to nonprofit corporations, if it is organized as a nonprofit corporation.
UNIFORM MANAGEMENT OF INSTITUTIONAL FUNDS ACT
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE. This [act] may be cited as the Uniform Management of
Institutional Funds Act.
SECTION 2. DEFINITIONS. In this [act]:
(1) “Charitable purpose” means
the relief of poverty, the advancement of education or religion, the promotion
of health, the promotion of governmental purposes, or another purpose the
achievement of which is beneficial to the community.
(2) “Endowment fund” means an institutional fund, or
any part thereof, not wholly expendable by the institution on a current basis
under the terms of a gift instrument. The term includes two or more endowment
funds collectively managed. The term does not include assets of an institution
designated by the institution as an endowment fund for its own use.
(3) “Gift instrument” means a record or records under
which property is granted to, transferred to, or held by an institution as an
institutional fund. The term includes an institutional solicitation in the form
of a record from which an institutional fund results if the solicitation indicates
the intent of the institution that the solicitation constitute a gift
instrument and if another record does not supersede the solicitation.
(4) “Institution” means a person, other than an
individual, nonprofit corporation, trust, unincorporated association,
or entity organized and operated exclusively for charitable
purposes. The term includes a government, or governmental subdivision, agency,
or instrumentality to the extent that it holds funds exclusively for a
charitable purpose. The term also includes a trust that has both charitable and
noncharitable interests after all noncharitable interests have terminated.
(5) “Institutional fund” means a fund held for the exclusive use,
benefit, and purposes of an institution. by an institution
exclusively for charitable purposes. The term includes two or more
institutional funds collectively managed. The term does not include:
(A)
program-related assets;
(B)
a fund held for an institution by a trustee that is not an institution; or (BC) a
fund in which a beneficiary that is not an institution has an interest, other
than a right an
interest that could arise upon
violation or failure of the purposes of the fund.
(6) “Person” means an individual, corporation, business trust, estate, trust, partnership, limited liability company, association, joint venture, government, governmental subdivision, agency, or instrumentality, public corporation, or any other legal or commercial entity.
(7)
“Program-related asset” means an asset held by an institution primarily to
accomplish a charitable purpose of the institution and not primarily for
appreciation or for producing income.
(8) “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.
Preliminary Comment
Subsection (1). Charitable Purpose. The definition of charitable purpose uses the same formulation as that in UTC § 405 and Restatement (Third) of Trusts § 28 (2003). The definition is the standard legal definition of charitable purposes, developed from the definition of charity set forth in the English Statute of Charitable Uses, enacted in 1601. Some 17 states have created statutory definitions of charitable purpose for other purposes. See, e.g., [PA]. The definition in subsection (1) applies for purposes of this Act and does not affect other definitions of charitable purpose.
Subsection (2). Endowment fund. An endowment fund is an institutional fund or a part of an institutional fund that is not wholly expendable by the institution on a current basis. A restriction on use that makes a fund an endowment fund arises from the terms of a gift instrument. An institution may manage several funds together if the funds all have the same purpose. These funds would be considered one endowment fund for purposes of this Act.
Board-restricted funds are institutional funds but not endowment funds. The rules on expenditures and modification of restrictions in this Act do not apply to restrictions placed by an institution on an otherwise unrestricted fund held by the institution for its own benefit. The institution may be able to change these restrictions itself, subject to internal rules and to the fiduciary duties that apply to those that manage an institution.
If an institution transfers assets designated as an endowment to another institution, then the second institution will hold that fund as an endowment fund.
Subsection (3). Gift instrument. The term gift instrument refers to the records that establish the terms of a gift and may consist of more than one document. As used in this definition, “record” is an expansive concept and means a writing in any form, including electronic. The term includes a will, deed, grant, conveyance, agreement, or memorandum, and also includes writings that do not have a donative purpose. For example, under some circumstances the bylaws of the institution, minutes of the board of directors, or canceled checks could be a gift instrument or be one of several records constituting a gift instrument.
Solicitation materials may constitute a gift instrument. For example, a solicitation that suggests in writing that any gifts received pursuant to the solicitation will be held as an endowment may be integrated with other writings and may be considered part of the gift instrument. Whether the terms of the solicitation become part of the gift instrument will depend upon the circumstances of the gift and whether a subsequent writing superseded the terms of the solicitation.
The term gift instrument also includes matching funds provided by an employer or some other person and includes an appropriation by a legislature or other public or governmental body for the benefit of an institution.
Subsection (4). Institution. The
Act applies generally to institutions organized and operated exclusively for
charitable purposes. By
defining institution as a person, Tthe
term includes charitable organizations created as nonprofit corporations,
trusts, unincorporated associations, governmental subdivisions or agencies, or
any form of entity, however organized, that is organized and operated
exclusively for charitable purposes. As used in this
definition, the term “trust” is intended to mean a trustee acting under a
charitable trust. The term includes a trust organized and operated
exclusively for charitable purposes, but only if a charity
acts as trustee. This approach leaves
unchanged the coverage of UMIFA (1972).
The exclusion of “individual” from the
definition of institution is not intended to exclude a corporation sole.regardless
of whether a charity or a noncharitable corporation such as a bank acts as
trustee.
UMIFA (1972) did not
apply to trusts managed by non-charitable trustees. The application of
UMIFA (200-) to charitable trusts will benefit charities operated as trusts in
two ways. The endowment spending rules
of Section 4 will allow trusts to making spending decisions based on prudence
rather than on the characterization of funds as income or principal for trust
accounting purposes. The Drafting
Committee learned that under UMIFA (1972) charitable trusts managed by
corporate trustees have sought court approval to be treated under the rules of
UMIFA (1972). Bringing trusts within the
purview of UMIFA (200-) will reduce the cost of managing charitable trusts.
UMIFA (200-) will also
benefit charities organized as trusts by making additional rules on
modification applicable to those charities.
The modification rules provide for more efficient management of
charitable funds, and should be available to charities regardless of
organizational form.
In other respects, UMIFA (200-) will not alter the rules
applicable to charitable trusts under UPIA and the Principal and Income
Act. Charities organized as trusts are
already subject to prudent investor standards, either under UPIA (enacted
uniformly in – states and in substance in – states) or under common law
standards of prudence. The prudence
rules enacted in UMIFA (200-) simply provide guidance to charities for
investment decision making and do not alter the rules already applicable to
charitable trusts.
In many respects, changes in trust law have caught up
with the provisions in UMIFA, so the exclusion of certain trusts from UMIFA
(200-) does not mean that
many of the rules of UMIFA (200-) will
not apply to those trusts. Prudent
investor standards apply to trustees of charitable trusts in states that have
adopted UPIA, trustees can use the doctrines of cy pres and deviation to modify
trust provisions, and the Uniform Principal and Income Act, where enacted,
permits allocation between principal and income to facilitate total-return
investing. Charitable trusts not
included in UMIFA (200-), primarily those
managed by corporate trustees, will lose the benefits of UMIFA’s endowment
spending rule and the provision permitting a charity to apply cy pres, without
court supervision, for modifications to a small, old fund. Enacting jurisdictions may choose to
incorporate these rules into existing trust statutes to provide the benefits to
charitable funds managed by corporate trustees.
The definition of institution
includes governmental organizations that hold funds exclusively for the
purposes listed in the definition. Some organizations created by state
government may fall outside the definition due to the way in which the state
created the organizations. Because state arrangements are so varied, creating a
definition that encompasses all charitable entities created by states is not
feasible. States should consider the core principles of UMIFA (200-) for
application to governmental institutions. For example, the control over a state
university may be held by a State Board of Regents. In that situation, the
state may have created a governing structure by statute or in the state
constitution so that the university is, in effect, privately chartered. The
Drafting Committee does not intend to exclude these universities from the
definition of institution, but additional state legislation may be necessary to
address particular situations.
Subsection (5). Institutional
Fund. The term institutional fund includes any fund held by an institution
for its own use, benefit, or purposes, whether expendable currently or subject
to restrictions. The term also does not
includes a fund held by a trustee that is not
an institution., if the fund is held
exclusively for the benefit of an institution. UMIFA (1972) excluded funds
managed by 9 corporate trustees. The Drafting Committee concluded that the
provisions of UMIFA should be available to any fund managed exclusively for
charitable purposes.
Assets held by an institution
primarily for program-related purposes are not subject to UMIFA
(200-). Assets
used to carry out a charity’s program should not be subject to the same
investment standards that apply to assets held primarily for investment
purposes. For example, a university may
purchase land adjacent to its campus for future development. The purchase might not meet prudent investor
standards, but the purchase may be appropriate because the university needs to
build a new dormitory. The classroom
buildings, administration buildings, and dormitories held by the university all
have value as property, but the university does not hold those buildings for
investment purposes. The Act excludes
from the prudent investor norms those assets that a charity uses to conduct its
charitable activities, but does not exclude assets that have a tangential tie
to the charitable purpose of the institution but are held primarily for
investment purposes.
A fund held by an institution is not
an institutional fund if any beneficiary of the fund is not an institution. For
example, a charitable remainder trust held by a charity as trustee for the
benefit of the donor during the donor’s lifetime, with the remainder interest held
by the charity, is not an institutional fund. However, this subsection treats
as an institution a charitable remainder trust that continues to operate for
charitable purposes after the termination of the noncharitable interests. The
Act will have only a limited effect on a charitable remainder trust during the
period required to complete the distribution of the trust’s property after the
noncharitable interest ends. The prudence norm will apply to the actions of the
trustee, but the trustee will make decisions about investment and management of
funds knowing that the trust will distribute its assets and not continue
indefinitely.
Subsection
(6). Person. The Act uses as the definition of person the
definition approved by the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform
State Laws. The definition of
institution uses the term
person, but to be an institution a person must be organized and operated
exclusively for charitable purposes. A
person with a commercial purpose cannot be an institution. Thus, although the definition of person
includes “business trust” and “any other . . . commercial entity,” the Act does
not apply to an entity organized for business purposes and not exclusively for
charitable purposes. Further, the definition of person includes trusts, but
only trusts managed by charities can be institutional funds. UMIFA
(200-) does not apply to trusts managed by corporate
trustees or by individual trustees.
If a governing instrument provides that a fund will revert to the donor if, and only if, the institution ceases to exist or the purposes of the fund fail, then the fund will be considered an institutional fund until such contingency occurs.
Subsection (7). Program-related asset. Although UMIFA (200-) does not apply to program-related assets, if program-related assets serve, in part, as investments for an institution, then the institution should identify categories for reporting those investments and should establish investment criteria for the investments that are reasonably related to achieving the institution’s charitable purposes. For example, a program providing below-market loans to inner-city businesses may be “primarily to accomplish a charitable purpose of the institution” but also can be considered, in part, an investment. The institution should create reasonable credit standards and other guidelines for the program to increase the likelihood that the loans would be repaid.
Subsection (8). Record. This definition was added to clarify that the definition of instrument includes electronic records as defined in Section 2(8) of the Uniform Electronic Transactions Act (1999).
SECTION 3. STANDARD OF CONDUCT IN MANAGING AND INVESTING
INSTITUTIONAL FUNDS.
(a) In managing and
investing an institutional fund, an institution must
shall consider the terms of the gift instrument, the charitable
purposes of the institution, and the purposes of the institutional fund.
(b)
In addition to the duty of loyalty imposed by law other than this [act], each
person responsible for managing and investing an institutional fund must
shall manage and invest the fund: in good
faith and with the care an ordinarily prudent person in a like position would
exercise under similar circumstances.
(c)
In managing and investing an institutional fund, an institution may incur only costs
that are appropriate and reasonable in relation to the assets, the purposes of
the institution, and the skills available to the institution.
(d) An
institution shall make a reasonable effort to verify facts relevant to the management
and investment of an institutional fund.
(e) Subsections
(f) through (k) are default rules and may be expanded, restricted, eliminated,
or otherwise altered by the terms of a gift instrument.
(f) In managing
and investing an institutional fund, the
following factors, if relevant, must be considered:
(1) general economic conditions;
(2) the possible effect of inflation or deflation;
(3) the expected tax consequences, if any, of
investment decisions or strategies;
(4) the role that each investment or course of action
plays within the overall investment portfolio of the institutional
fund;
(5) the expected total return from income and the
appreciation of investments;
(6) other resources of the institution;
(7) the needs of the institution and the
institutional fund to make distributions and to preserve capital;
and
(8) an asset’s special relationship or special value,
if any, to the charitable purposes of the institution.
(g) Management
and investment decisions about an individual asset must be made not in
isolation but rather in the context of the
institutional fund’s portfolio of investments as a whole and as a part of an
overall investment strategy having risk and return objectives reasonably suited
to the fund and to the institution.
(h) In addition to an
investment otherwise authorized by law or by a gift instrument, and without
restriction to investments a fiduciary may make, aAn
institution, subject to any specific limitations set forth in the gift
instrument or in other law applicable to the institution,
may invest in any kind of property or type of investment consistent with the
standards of this section.
(i) An institution shall diversify the
investments of an institutional fund unless the institution reasonably
determines that, because of special circumstances, the purposes of the fund are
better served without diversifying.
(j) Within a reasonable time after receiving
property, an institution shall make and implement decisions concerning the
retention or disposition of the property, or to
rebalance a portfolio, in order to bring the institutional fund into compliance
with the purposes, terms, distribution requirements, and other circumstances of
the institution and the requirements of this [act].
(k) An individual who has special skills or
expertise, or is named in reliance upon the individual’s representation that
the individual has special skills or expertise, has a duty to use those special skills or that expertise
in managing and investing institutional funds.
Preliminary
Comment
Purpose
and Scope of Revisions. This section adopts the prudence standard for
investment decision making. The section directs directors, trustees
or others responsible for managing and investing the funds of an
institution to act as a prudent investor would, using a portfolio approach in
making investments and considering the risk and return objectives of the fund.
The section lists the factors that commonly bear on decisions in fiduciary
investing and incorporates the duty to diversify investments absent a
conclusion that special circumstances make a decision not to diversify
reasonable. Thus, the section follows modern portfolio theory for investment
decision making. Section 3 applies to all funds held by an institution,
regardless of whether the institution obtained the funds by gift or otherwise
and regardless of whether or not the funds are restricted.
The Drafting Committee discussed at great length the standard that should govern nonprofit managers. UMIFA (1972) states the standard as “ordinary business care and prudence under the facts and circumstances prevailing at the time of the action or decision.” Since the decision in Stern v. Lucy Webb Hayes National Training School for Deaconesses, 381 F. Supp. 1003 (1974), the trend has been to hold directors of nonprofit corporations to a standard similar to the corporate standard but with the recognition that the facts and circumstances considered include the fact that the entity is a charity and not a business corporation.
The language of the prudence standard adopted in UMIFA (200-) is derived from the RMNCA and from the prudent investor rule of UPIA. The standard is consistent with the business judgment standard under corporate law, as applied to charitable institutions. That is, a manager operating a charitable organization under the business judgment rule would look to the same factors as those identified by the prudent investor rule. The standard for prudent investment set forth in Section 3 first states the duty of care as articulated in the RMNCA. The standard then provides more specific guidance for those managing and investing institutional funds by incorporating language from UPIA. The factors and rules derived from UPIA are consistent with good practice under current law applicable to nonprofit corporations.
Trust
law norms already inform managers of nonprofit corporations. The Preamble to UPIA explains: “Although the Uniform Prudent Investor Act by
its terms applies to trusts and not to charitable corporations, the standards
of the Act can be expected to inform the investment responsibilities of
directors and officers of charitable corporations.” See
also, Restatement (Third) of Trusts:
Prudent Investor Rule § 379, Comment b, at 190 (1992) (stating “absent a
contrary statute or other provision, the prudent
investor rule applies to investment of funds held for charitable
corporations.”). Trust precedents have
always been helpful but not binding authority in a corporate
cases.
The
Drafting Committee decided that by adopting language of from both the
RMNCA and UPIA, UMIFA (200-) could clarify that the same standards of prudent
investing apply to all charitable institutions.
Although principal trust authorities, UPIA § (2)(a), Restatement (Third)
of Trusts §337, UTC § 804, and Restatement (Second) of Trusts § 174 (prudent
administration) use the phrase “care, skill and caution,” the
Drafting Committee decided to use the more familiar corporate formulation as
found in RMNCA. The Drafting
Committee found no material difference between the trust standard and the RMNCA
standard of “care” which necessarily imports skill and caution. The standard also appears in Sections 3, 4 and
5 of UMIFA (200-). The Drafting Committee
does not intend any substantive change to the UPIA standard and believes that
“reasonable care, skill, and caution” are implicit in the term “care” as used
in the RMNCA. The
Drafting Committee included the detailed provisions from UPIA, because the
Committee believed that the greater precision of the prudence norms of the
Restatement and UPIA, as compared with UMIFA (1972), could
helpfully inform managers of charitable institutions. For an explanation of the Prudent Investor
Act, see John H. Langbein, The Uniform
Prudent Investor Act and the Future of Trust Investing, 81 Iowa L. Rev. 641
(1996).
Subsection (b) of Section 3 reminds those managing and investing institutional funds that the duty of loyalty will apply to their actions, but Section 3 does not state the loyalty standard that applies. The Drafting Committee was concerned that different standards of loyalty may apply to directors of nonprofit corporations and trustees of charitable trusts. The RMNCA provides that under the duty of loyalty a director of a nonprofit corporation should act “in a manner the director reasonably believes to be in the best interests of the corporation.” RMNCA § 8.30. The trust law articulation of the loyalty standard uses “sole interests” rather than “best interests.” As the Restatement of Trusts explains, “[t]he trustee is under a duty to the beneficiary to administer the trust solely in the interest of the beneficiary.” Restatement (Second) of Trusts § 170 (1). Although the standards for loyalty, like the standard of care, are merging, see Evelyn Brody, Charitable Governance: What’s Trust Law Got to do With It? Chi.-Kent L. Rev. (2005); John H. Langbein [cite to new article], the Drafting Committee concluded that incorporating the duty of loyalty into UMIFA (200-) was unnecessary. Thus the duty of loyalty under nonprofit corporation law will apply to charities organized as nonprofit corporations, and the duty of loyalty under trust law will apply to charitable trusts.
Section 3 has incorporated the provisions of UPIA with only a few exceptions. UPIA applies to private trusts and thus is entirely default law. A settlor of a private trust has complete control over trust provisions. Because UMIFA (200-) applies to charitable organizations, UMIFA (200-) makes the duty of care, the duty to minimize costs, and the duty to investigate mandatory. The duty of loyalty is mandatory under other law. Other than these duties, the provisions of Section 3 are default rules. A gift instrument or the governing instruments of an institution can modify these duties, but the charitable purpose doctrine limits the extent to which an institution or a donor can restrict these duties. In addition, subsection (a) of Section 3 requires a decision maker to consider the terms of the gift instrument, the charitable purposes of the institution and the purposes of the institutional fund for which decisions are being made. These factors are specific to charitable organizations, but UPIA § 2(a) states the duty to consider similar factors in the private trust context.
As explained above, in
stating the standard of care, UMIFA (200-) uses language from the RMNCA rather
than UPIA. The change from UPIA’s
“reasonable care, skill and caution” to “in good faith and with the care an
ordinarily prudent person in a like position would exercise under similar circumstances”
occurs in Sections 3, 4 and 5 of UMIFA (200-).
The Drafting Committee does not intend any substantive change to the
UPIA standard and believes that “reasonable care, skill, and caution” are
implicit in the term “care” as used in the RMNCA. The standard expressed in UPIA § 2(a) appears
in subsections (a) and (b) of Section 3.
UMIFA (200-) does not include the duty of impartiality, stated in UPIA § 6, because a charitable institution will not have more than one beneficiary.
In other respects, the Drafting Committee made changes to language from UPIA only where necessary to make the language appropriate for charitable institutions. No material differences are intended. Subsection (f)(4) of UMIFA (200-) does not include a clause that appears at the end of UPIA § 2(c)(4) (“which may include financial assets, interest in closely held enterprises, tangible and intangible personal property, and real property.”). The Drafting Committee deemed this clause unnecessary for charitable institutions. The language of subsection (f)(7) reflects a modification of the language of UPIA § (2)(c)(7). In subsection (h) a reminder that terms of the gift instrument control was added to the formulation of UPIA § 2(e). Other minor modifications to the UPIA provisions make the language more appropriate for charitable institutions.
The duties imposed by this section apply to those who govern an institution, including directors and trustees, and to those to whom the directors or managers delegate responsibility for investment and management of institutional funds. The standard applies to officers and employees of an institution and to agents who invest and manage institutional funds.
Other
than, the duty of care, the duty to minimize costs, and
the duty to investigate act in good faith, the provisions of
Section 3 are default rules. A gift instrument or the governing instruments of
an institution can modify these duties, but the charitable purpose doctrine
limits the extent to which an institution or a donor can restrict these duties.
Subsection (a). Donor Intent and Charitable Purposes. Subsection (a) states the overarching direction to consider the donor’s intent as expressed in the terms of the gift instrument and to consider the charitable purposes of the institution and of the institutional fund. A donor’s intent is always important guidance for the charity, but the direction to consider the terms of the gift instrument does not mean that the donor can or should control the management of the institution. The UPIA counterpart of subsection (a) is UPIA § 2(a).
Subsection
(b). Duty of Care. This subsection applies the duty of care to performance
of investment duties. The language derives from § 8.30 of the RMNCA. Subsections (a)(1) and (2)
(b)
states the duty to act in good faith, “with
the care an ordinarily prudent person in a like position would exercise under
similar circumstances.” Although the
language in the RMNCA and in UMIFA (200-) is similar to that of § 8.30 of the
Model Business Corporation Act (3d ed. 2002), the standard as applied to
persons making decisions for charities is informed by the fact that the
institution is a charity and not a business corporation. Thus, in UMIFA (200-) the references to “like
position” and “similar circumstances” mean that the charitable nature of the
institution affects the decision making of a prudent person acting under the
standard set forth in subsection (b).
The duty of care involves considering the factors set forth in
subsection (f).
Subsection (c). Duty to Minimize Costs. Subsection (c) tracks the language of UPIA § 7 and requires an institution to minimize costs. An institution may prudently incur costs by hiring an investment advisor, but the costs incurred should be appropriate under the circumstances. See UPIA § 7 cmt.; Restatement (Third) of Trusts: Prudent Investor Rule § 227, cmt. M, at 58 (1992); Restatement (Second) of Trusts § 188 (1959). The duty is consistent with the duty to act prudently under § 8.30 of the RMNCA.
Subsection
(d). Duty to Investigate. This subsection incorporates the traditional
fiduciary duty to investigate, using language from UPIA § 2(d). The subsection
requires persons who exercise authority to make investment
and management decisions to investigate the accuracy of the information used in
making decisions.
Subsection (f). Prudent Decision Making. Subsection (f) takes much of its language from UPIA § 2(c). In making decisions about whether to acquire or retain an asset, the institution should consider the institution’s mission, its current programs, and the desire to cultivate additional donations from a donor, in addition to factors related more directly to the asset’s potential as an investment.
Subsection (f)(3) reflects the fact that some organizations will invest in taxable investments that may generate unrelated business taxable income for income tax purposes.
Assets held primarily for program-related purposes are not
subject to UMIFA (200-). The management of those assets will continue to be
governed by other laws applicable to the institution. Other assets may not be
held primarily for program-related purposes but may have both investment
purposes and program-related purposes. Subsections (a) and (fe)(8)
indicate that a prudent decision maker can take into consideration the
relationship between an investment and the purposes of the institution and of
the institutional fund in making an investment that may have a program-related
purpose but not be primarily program-related. The degree to which an
institution uses an asset to accomplish a charitable purpose will affect the
weight given that factor in a decision to acquire or retain the asset.
Subsection (g). Portfolio Approach. This subsection reflects the spread of portfolio theory in modern investment practice. The language comes from UPIA § 2(b), which follows the articulation of the prudent investor standard in Restatement (Third) of Trusts: Prudent Investor Rule § 227(a) (1992).
Subsection (h). Broad Investment Authority.
Consistent with the portfolio theory of investment, this subsection permits a
broad range of investments. The reference to investments “authorized by law
other than this [act]” includes state statutes creating legal lists for
investments. This provision does not contravene any other state statute that
authorizes specific investments. The language derives from UPIA § 2(e).
Section 4 of UMIFA (1972) indicated that an institution
could invest “without restriction to investments a fiduciary may make.” The committee removed this language from subsection
(h) as unnecessary because states no longer have legal lists restricting
fiduciary investing to the specific types of investments identified in
statutory lists.
[Legislative
Note: A state may want to delete
the clause “in addition to an investment authorized by law other than this
[act]” as unnecessary or may want to add a specific reference to other law.
Legislative counsel should review existing law to determine whether the
legislature should repeal existing rules on investments or should add a
specific reference to those rules here.]
Subsection (h) also provides that terms of a gift instrument or other law applicable to institutions may limit the authority under this subsection. For example, the gift instrument for a particular institutional fund might preclude the institution from investing the assets of the fund in companies that produce tobacco products.
Subsection (i). Duty to Diversify. This subsection
assumes that prudence requires diversification but permits an institution to
determine that nondiversification is appropriate under the circumstances
applicable to a fund. A decision to
retain property due to “special circumstances” must be made based on the needs
of the charity and not solely for the benefit of a donor. A decision to retain property in the hope of
obtaining additional contributions from the same donor will may
be considered made for the benefit of the charity., but
the appropriateness of that decision will depend on the circumstances. This subsection derives its language from
UPIA § 3. See UPIA § 3 cmt. (discussing the rationale for
diversification); Restatement (Third) of Trusts:
Prudent Investor Rule § 227 (1992).
Subsection (j). Disposing of Unsuitable Assets. This subsection imposes a duty on an institution to review the suitability of retaining property contributed to the institution within a reasonable period of time after the institution receives the property. Subsection (j) requires the institution to make a decision but does not require a particular outcome. The institution may consider a variety of factors in making its decision, and a decision to retain the property either for a period of time or indefinitely may be a prudent decision.
Section 4(2) of UMIFA (1972) specifically authorized an institution to retain property contributed by a donor. The comment explained that an institution might retain property in the hope of obtaining additional contributions from the donor. This concept continues under UMIFA (200-), because the potential for developing additional contributions by retaining property contributed to the institution is one of the “other circumstances” the institution may consider in deciding whether to retain or dispose of the property. The institution must weigh the potential for obtaining additional contributions with all other factors that affect the suitability of retaining the property in the investment portfolio.
The language of subsection (j) comes from UPIA § 4, which restates Restatement (Third) of Trusts: Prudent Investor Rule § 229 (1992), which itself took language from Restatement (Second) of Trusts § 231 (1959). See UPIA § 4 cmt.
Subsection
(k). Special Skills or Expertise. Subsection (k) states the rule provided
in UPIA § 2(f) requiring a trustee to use the trustee’s own skills and
expertise in carrying out the trustee’s fiduciary duties. The comment to RMNCA
§ 8.30 describes the existence of a similar rule under the law of nonprofit
corporations. [E. Brody will provide additional material for this
comment] A
person managing or investing institutional funds must use the person’s own
judgment and experience, including any particular skills or expertise, in
carrying out the management or investment duties. For example, if a charity names a person as a
director in part because the person is a lawyer, the lawyer’s background may
allow the lawyer to recognize legal issues in connection with funds held by the
charity. The lawyer should identify the
issues for the board, but the lawyer is not expected to provide legal
advice. See ALI Principles of Corporate Governance, Council Draft No. 2
(Nov. 18, 2004) § 315 (Duty of Care), cmt. b.
UMIFA (1972) contained two provisions that authorized investments in pooled or common investment funds. UMIFA (1972) §§ 4(3), 4(4). The Drafting Committee concluded that Section 3(h) of UMIFA (200-) authorizes these investments. The decision not to include the two provisions in UMIFA (200-) implies no disapproval of such investments.
SECTION 4.
EXPENDITURE OF ENDOWMENT FUNDS; RULES OF
CONSTRUCTION.
(a) Subject to the terms of the gift instrument, an institution may expend or accumulate so much of an endowment fund as the institution determines to be prudent for the uses, benefits, purposes, and duration for which the endowment fund is established. In making its determinations on expenditures and accumulations, the institution shall act in good faith, with the care that an ordinarily prudent person in a like position would exercise under similar circumstances, and shall consider, if relevant, the following factors:
(1) the duration and preservation of the endowment fund;
(2) the purposes of the institution and the endowment fund;
(3) general economic conditions;
(4) the possible effect of inflation or deflation;
(5) the expected total return from income and the appreciation of investments;
(6) other resources of the institution; and
(7) the investment policy of the institution.
(b) The expenditure in
any one year of an amount greater than seven percent of the fair market value
of the endowment fund, calculated on the basis of market values determined at
least quarterly and averaged over a period of three or more years, shall
create a rebuttable presumption of imprudence. This subsection does not limit the authority
to expend funds as
permitted under law other than this
[act] or the terms of the gift instrument.
This subsection does not create a presumption of prudence for
expenditure of an amount less than seven percent of the fair market value of
the endowment fund. The presumption of
imprudence leaves to the institution the determination of the amount that will
be prudent to expend from an endowment fund.
(cb)
The following rules of construction apply to gift instruments existing on or
created after the effective date of this [act]:
(1) To limit the authority to expend or accumulate funds under subsection (a), a gift instrument must specifically state the limitation.
(2) Terms in a gift instrument designating a gift as an endowment, or a direction or authorization in the gift instrument to use only “income”, “interest”, “dividends”, or “rents, issues, or profits”, or “to preserve the principal intact”, or similar words, create an endowment fund of indefinite duration but do not otherwise limit the authority to expend or accumulate under subsection (a).
Preliminary
Comment
Purpose and Scope of Revisions. This section revises the provision in UMIFA (1972) that permitted the expenditure of appreciation of an endowment fund to the extent the fund had appreciated in value above the fund’s historic dollar value. UMIFA (1972) defined historic dollar value to mean the value of all contributions to the fund. The new approach abandons the use of historic dollar value as a floor for expenditures and provides more flexibility to the institution in making decisions about whether to expend any part of an endowment fund. As under UMIFA (1972), a prudence standard applies to the process of making decisions about expenditures from an endowment fund.
Subsection
(a). Expenditure of Endowment Funds. Subsection
(a) uses the RMNCA articulation of the standard of care for decision making
under Section 4. The change in language
does not reflect a substantive change.
The comment to Section 3 more fully describes this standard of care.
Section 4 permits expenditures from an endowment fund to the extent the institution determines that the expenditures are prudent after considering the factors listed in subsection (a). These factors emphasize the importance of keeping in mind the intent of the donor and the purposes of the institution and of the endowment fund, while also considering economic conditions. As under UMIFA (1972), determinations under Section 4 do not depend on the characterization of assets as income or principal and are not limited to the amount of income and unrealized appreciation. The rule in Section 4 is permissive, however, and an institution may continue to make spending decisions under trust accounting principles if it prefers.
Institutions have operated effectively under UMIFA (1972) and have operated more conservatively than the historic dollar value rule would have permitted. Institutions have no incentive to spend everything the law permits them to spend, and good practice has been to provide for modest expenditures while maintaining the purchasing power of a fund. Institutions have followed this approach even though UMIFA (1972) does not require an institution to maintain a fund’s purchasing power and allows an institution to spend any amounts in a fund above historic dollar value, subject to the prudence standard. The Drafting Committee concluded that eliminating historic dollar value and providing institutions with more discretion would not lead to depletion of endowment funds. Instead, UMIFA (200-) should encourage institutions to establish a spending approach that will be responsive to short-term fluctuations in the value of the fund. Section 4 allows an institution to maintain appropriate levels of expenditures in times of economic downturn or economic strength. In some years, accumulation rather than spending will be prudent, and in other years an institution may appropriately make expenditures even if a fund has generated no investment return that year.
Several levels of safeguards exist to prevent institutions from depleting endowment funds or diverting funds from the purposes for which they were created. Donors can restrict gifts and can provide specific instructions to donee institutions as to appropriate uses for assets contributed. Within institutions, fiduciary duties govern the persons making decisions on expenditures. Those persons must operate with the best interests of the institution in mind and in keeping with the intent of donors. If an institution diverts an institutional fund from the charitable purposes of the institution, the state attorney general can enforce the charitable interests of the public. By relying on these safeguards while providing institutions with adequate discretion to make decisions on appropriate expenditures, the Act creates a standard that takes into consideration the diversity of the charitable sector. The committee expects that industry standards will continue to evolve and inform institutions as the institutions apply this standard.
Section 4 provides guidance on factors to consider in
exercising discretion but does not take away discretion by providing a safe
harbor for spending within a range based on percentages of the assets of the
fund. The Committee concluded that specifying a range for appropriate
distributions was unwise because a fixed range could not take into account the
factors listed in subsection (a) or changes in market conditions. A fixed range
that might be appropriate for some charities under current economic conditions
would be unlikely to remain appropriate over time. Institutions have done a
good job of developing spending policies under UMIFA (1972) and should be able
to continue to develop spending policies that take into consideration the
specific needs of a particular fund. Prudent decision making after considering
all the factors is the standard under UMIFA (200-). A safe-harbor would simply
create a new standard that could not take into account the needs of individual
institutions and funds.
The changes from UMIFA (1972), and in particular the
deletion of historic dollar value, are not intended to make any portion of an
endowment fund unrestricted assets. All
assets in an endowment fund are permanently restricted funds and should not be
treated as unrestricted funds for accounting purposes or otherwise. The Drafting Committee discussed the fact
that Financial Accounting Standards 117 and 124 have treated endowment funds as
at least partially unrestricted. The
Drafting Committee concluded that UMIFA (200-) could not address an accounting
issue and that the Financial Accounting Standards Board should reconsider the
accounting standards applicable to charitable institutions. The power over expenditures held by a board
of directors or others managing an institution must be exercised in a fiduciary
capacity, and the fiduciary duties of
loyalty and purpose and the prudence standard restrict the power to make
spending decisions. Until the managers
exercise the power, the funds in an endowment account remain restricted.
The term “endowment fund” includes
funds that may last in perpetuity but also funds that are
created to last for a fixed term of years or until the institution
achieves a specified objective. Section 4 requires the institution to consider
the intended duration of the fund in making determinations about spending. For
example, if a donor directs that a fund be spent over 20 years, Section 4 will
guide the institution in making distribution decisions. The institution would
amortize the fund over 20 years rather than try to maintain the fund in
perpetuity. For an endowment fund of
limited duration, spending at a rate higher than rates typically used for
endowment spending will be both necessary and prudent.
Decision Not to
Include a Presumption. The Drafting
Committee considered including in UMIFA (200-) a presumption of imprudence for
spending above seven percent of the asset value of the fund. The Drafting Committee considered several
potential benefits of including such a provision. A presumption might curb the temptation to
spend endowment assets too rapidly. Although the presumption would be rebuttable,
and spending above the identified percentage might, in some years and for some
charities, be prudent, institutions would likely be reluctant to authorize
spending above seven percent. The
presumption would give the attorney general guidance in enforcing the prudence
standard.
The Drafting Committee
also heard arguments against including a presumption of imprudence in the
statute. A
fixed percentage in the statute might be perceived as a
safe harbor and could lead institutions to spend more than is
prudent. Although the provision should
not imply that spending below seven percent is prudent, some charities might
interpret the statute in that way.
Decision makers might be pressured to spend more than is prudent, or
might be willing to make spending decisions without adequate analysis.
Perhaps the biggest
problem with including a presumption in the statute is the difficulty of
picking a number that will be appropriate given the range of institutions and
charitable purposes and the fact that economic conditions will change over
time. Under current economic conditions,
a spending rate of seven percent is too high for most funds, but in a period of
high inflation, seven percent might be too low.
In making a prudent decision as to how much to spend from an endowment
fund, each institution must consider a variety of factors,
including the particular purposes of the fund, the wishes of
the donors, changing economic factors, and whether the fund will receive future
donations.
A presumption also
could make spending on major projects more difficult. For example, a charity might spend only one
percent for three years as it saved its endowment for a new building and then
spend 20 percent in the fourth year for construction costs. Such a spending decision might be prudent for
the charity, but its board might be reluctant to authorize spending that a
statute presumes to be imprudent.
The Drafting Committee
concluded that the best approach was to draft the Act without the presumption
but to include statutory language for the presumption in the Comments. Each enacting state can then make its own
determination as to whether to include the presumption when the state enacts
UMIFA (200-). And whether or not a
statute includes the presumption, governing boards mush remember that prudence
controls decision making and that each governing board must make decisions on
expenditures based on the circumstances of the particular charity.
The recommended
statutory language for a presumption of imprudence follows. It would be inserted as subsection (b).
Optional
Presumption of Imprudence.
Subsection (b).
Presumption of Imprudence.
[(b) The expenditure in
any one year of an amount greater than seven percent of the fair market value
of the endowment fund, calculated on the basis of market values determined at
least quarterly and averaged over a period of three or more years, creates a
rebuttable presumption of imprudence.
This subsection does not limit the authority to make expenditures as
permitted under law other than this [act] or the terms of the gift
instrument. This subsection does not
create a presumption of prudence for expenditure of an amount less than or
equal to seven percent of the fair market value of the endowment fund.]
Although prudence will dictate
the amount an institution should spend, optional subsection
(b) creates a rebuttable presumption of imprudence if expenditures in one year
exceed seven percent of the assets of an endowment fund. The statute subsection
applies a three-year rolling average in determining the value of
the fund for purposes of calculating the seven-percent amount. Endowment spending will rarely exceed seven
percent, but the an
institution can rebut the presumption of imprudence if circumstances in a
particular year make expenditures above that amount prudent. The concept and the language for
subsection (b) the presumption of imprudence comes
from Mass. Gen. L. ch. 180A, § 2 (2004).
Massachusetts enacted this rule in 1975 as part of its UMIFA
statute. New Mexico adopted the same
presumption in 1978.
N.M.S.A. § 46-9-2 (C) (2004).
The Drafting Committee discussed the fact that
expenditures from an endowment fund may include distributions for charitable
purposes, amounts used for management of the fund, and the costs of fundraising
for the fund. Amounts used to pay fund
expenses will be deducted from the fund before the institution computes seven
percent of the fund’s value. Thus the
seven percent will be applied to the net value of the fund and administrative
expenses will not be included in computing the expenditures from the fund. However, the costs of administration and
fundraising are factors that prudent decision makers consider. Thus, high costs or fees could be considered
imprudent, regardless of whether total spending exceeds seven percent of the
fund’s value.
The Drafting Committee
decided to include the presumption to respond to concerns that the statute
should include a bright-line rule, albeit a rebuttable one, to curb the
temptation to spend endowment assets too rapidly.
The subsection does not
imply that spending below 7 percent is prudent, and charitable institutions
must carefully consider the factors in subsection (a) before making a
determination on the prudent amount to spend.
The section does not require an institution to spend a minimum amount
each year because the prudence standard and the needs of the institution will
be sufficient guidance as to whether accumulation rather than spending might be
appropriate in a particular year.
As the optional
subsection (b) indicates, spending less than
seven percent of the value of an endowment fund will not necessarily be
considered prudent. Indeed, under many
circumstances expenditures at
six or seven percent would be imprudently high.
Evidence discussed by the Drafting Committee suggests that few funds can
sustain spending at a rate above five percent. See Roger
G. Ibbotson & Rex A. Sinquefield, Stocks, Bonds, Bills, and Inflation :
Historical Returns (1926-1987) (Research Foundation of the Institute of Chartered
Financial Analysts, 1989). Further,
spending at a lower rate, particularly in the early years of an endowment, may
result in greater distributions over time.
See DeMarche Associates, Inc,
Spending Policies and Investment Planning for Foundations: A Structure for
Determining a Foundation’s Asset Mix (Council on Foundations: 3d ed.
1999). Subsection (b) servesA
presumption of imprudence can serve as a reminder that spending at
too high a rate will jeopardize the long-term nature of an endowment fund. If an endowment fund is intended to continue
indefinitely, the institution should take special care to limit annual spending
to a level that protects the purchasing power of the fund.
For a discussion of spending approaches,
see Joel C. Dobris, New Forms of Private Trusts for the Twenty-First
Century—Principal and Income, 31 Real. Prop., Prob. & Tr. J. 1 (1996).
For example, Dobris suggests spending 5% or 4% of a five-year moving average of
11 market values might be appropriate. Id., at 39.
The optional presumption of imprudence indicates that the
terms of the gift instrument can provide additional spending authority. For example, if a gift instrument directs
that an institution expend a fund over a ten-year period, exhausting the fund
after ten years, spending at a rate higher than seven percent will be
necessary. The section does not
require an institution to spend a minimum amount each year because the prudence
standard and the needs of the institution will be sufficient guidance as to
whether accumulation rather than spending might be appropriate in a particular
year.
The term “endowment fund” includes funds that may last in
perpetuity but also funds that should continue for a fixed term of years or until
the institution achieves a specified objective. Section 4 requires the
institution to consider the intended duration of the fund in making
determinations about spending. For example, if a donor directs that a fund be
spent over 20 years, Section 4 will guide the institution in making
distribution decisions. The institution would amortize the fund over 20 years
rather than try to maintain the fund in perpetuity. For an endowment fund of limited duration,
spending at a rate above seven percent will
be both necessary and prudent.
Subsection
(bc). Rule of Construction. Donor’s intent must be respected in the
process of making decisions to expend endowment funds. Section 4 does not allow
an institution to convert an endowment fund into a non-endowment fund nor does
the section allow the institution to ignore a donor’s intent that a fund be
maintained as an endowment. Rather, subsection (bc)
provides rules of construction to assist institutions in interpreting donor’s
intent. Subsection (bc) assumes
that if a donor wants an institution to spend “only the income” from a fund,
the donor intends that the fund both support current expenditures and be
preserved indefinitely. The donor is
unlikely to be concerned about designation of returns as “income” or “principal”
under accounting principles. Rather the donor likely assumes that the
institution will use modern investing strategies like total-return investing to
generate enough funds to distribute while maintaining the long-term viability
of the fund. Subsection (bc) is an
intent effectuating provision that provides default rules to construe donor’s
intent.
A donor who wants to specify spending guidelines can do so, but must do so specifically. For example, a donor might require that a charity spend between three and five percent of an endowed gift each year, regardless of investment performance or other factors. If the charity agrees to the restriction in accepting the gift, the restriction will, subject to public policy, govern spending decisions by the charity. Another donor might want to limit expenditures from an endowment gift to accounting income and not want the institution to be able to expend appreciation. An instruction to “pay only the income” will not be specific enough, but an instruction to “pay only interest and dividend income earned by the fund and not to make other distributions of the kind authorized by Section 4 of UMIFA” should be sufficient. If a donor indicates that the rules on investing or expenditures under Section 4 do not apply to a particular fund, then as a practical matter the institution will probably invest the fund separately. Thus, a decision by a donor to require specific expenditure rules will likely also have consequences in the way the institution invests the fund.
As a rule of construction, subsection
(bc)
applies retroactively. Retroactive application is appropriate because
subsection (b) does not alter the substance of an existing contract, but rather
serves as a default rule that implements donor’s intent. The Colorado Supreme
Court recently considered the question of retroactive application of a default
statute involving the donative aspect of an insurance contract. See In
re Estate of DeWitt, 54 P. 3d 849 (Colo. 2002). In holding that the statute did
not violate the Contracts Clause, the court cited approvingly from a statement
prepared by the Joint Editorial Board for Uniform Trusts and Estates Acts (the
“JEB”). JEB Statement Regarding the Constitutionality of Changes in Default
Rules as Applied to PreExisting Documents, 17 Am. Coll. Tr. & Est. Couns.
Notes 184 app. II (1991). The JEB
Statement explains why retroactive application of default statutes is
appropriate and is not unconstitutional and states, “The JEB is aware of no
authority for the application of the Contracts Clause to state legislation
applying altered rules of construction or other default rules to pre-existing
documents in any field of law, and especially not in the field of estates,
trusts, and donative transfers.” Id. at 4 (citing J. Nowak & R. Rotunda,
Constitutional Law § 11.8, at 394 et seq. (4th ed. 1991)).
The Drafting Committee considered concerns that retroactive application of the construction provision might alter the intent of a donor who contributed money to an endowment fund with the understanding that the institution could never spend the actual amount contributed (the historic dollar value). Although the Committee agreed that in some cases a donor might have specifically considered the concept of historic dollar value, the Committee concluded that the construction provision in UMIFA (200-) would effectively carry out the intent of most donors.
The Drafting Committee was also concerned that retaining the historic dollar value concept for endowment funds in existence before the enactment of UMIFA (200-) would require institutions to manage endowment funds separately. For example, an institution with an endowment fund for scholarships would have to create a new fund for post-enactment contributions. Managing two funds would result in economic inefficiencies and greater administration cost for the institution. Further, an institution with a fund created under UMIFA (1972) with a value below historic dollar value might choose to invest in assets that produce trust accounting income rather than appreciation. Choosing investments based on the characterization of the income could reduce the long-term yield of the fund.
[SECTION 5. DELEGATION OF MANAGEMENT AND INVESTMENT FUNCTIONS.
(a) Subject to any specific limitation set forth in a gift instrument or in law other than this [act], an institution may delegate to an external agent the management and investment of an institutional fund to the extent that an institution could prudently delegate under the circumstances. An institution shall act in good faith, with the care that an ordinarily prudent person in a like position would exercise under similar circumstances, in:
(1) selecting an agent;
(2) establishing the scope and terms of the delegation, consistent with the purposes of the institution and the institutional fund; and
(3) periodically reviewing the agent’s actions in order to monitor the agent’s performance and compliance with the scope and terms of the delegation.
(b) In performing a delegated function, an agent owes a duty to the institution to exercise reasonable care to comply with the scope and terms of the delegation.
(c) An institution that complies with subsection (a) is not liable for the decisions or actions of an agent to which the function was delegated.
(d) By accepting delegation of a management or investment function from an institution that is subject to the laws of this state, an agent submits to the jurisdiction of the courts of this state in all proceedings arising from the delegation.
(e) An institution may delegate to committees, officers, or employees of the institution as authorized by law other than this [act].]
Preliminary Comment
The prudent investor standard in Section 4 depends on the
power to delegate. For many investment
forms, prudence dictates diversification and diversification may best be
accomplished through pooling investment vehicles which require delegation. The Drafting Committee decided to put Section
5 in brackets because many states may already provide delegation authority
through other statutes. If other
delegation authority exists, then an enacting state should enact UMIFA (200-)
without Section 5. Enacting delegation
rules that duplicate existing rules could be confusing and could potentially
create conflicts. For charitable trusts,
UPIA provides the same delegation rules as those in Section 5. For nonprofit corporations, nonprofit
corporation statutes may provide these rules.
A state enacting UMIFA (200-) must be certain that its laws authorize
delegation, either through other statutes or by enacting Section 5.
This sSection 5
incorporates into UMIFA (200-) the delegation rule
found in UPIA § 9, updating the delegation rules in UMIFA (1972) § 5. Section 5
permits the decision makers in an institution to delegate management and
investment functions to external agents if the decision makers exercise
reasonable skill, care, and caution in selecting the agent, defining the scope
of the delegation and reviewing the performance of the agent. Decision makers
cannot delegate the authority to make decisions concerning expenditures and can
only delegate management and investment functions. Subsection (c) protects
decision makers who comply with the requirement for proper delegation from
liability for actions or decisions of the agents.
Section 5 does not address issues of internal delegation and potential liability for internal delegation, and subsection (c) does not affect laws that govern personal liability of directors or trustees for matters outside the scope of Section 5. Directors will look to nonprofit corporation laws for these rules, while trustees will look to trust law. See, e.g., RMNCA, § 8.30(b) (permitting directors to rely on information prepared by an officer or employee of the institution if the director reasonably believes the officer or employee to be reliable and competent in the matters presented).
The language of subsection (c) is similar to that of UPIA § 9(c) and RMNCA § 8.30(d). The decision not to include the terms “beneficiaries” or “members” in subsection (c) does not indicate a decision that this section does not create immunity from claims brought by beneficiaries or members. Instead, a decision maker who complies with section 5 will be protected from any liability resulting from actions or decisions made by an external agent.
Subsection (d) creates personal jurisdiction over the agent. This subsection is not a choice of law rule.
Subsection (e) notes that law other than this Act governs internal delegation. Section 5 of UMIFA (1972) included internal delegation as well as external delegation, due to a concern at that time that trust law concepts might govern internal delegation in nonprofit corporations. With the widespread adoption of nonprofit corporation statutes, that concern no longer exists. The decision not to address internal delegation in UMIFA (200-) does not suggest that a governing board of a nonprofit corporation cannot delegate to committees, officers, or employees. Rather, a nonprofit corporation must look to other law, typically a nonprofit corporation statute, for the rules governing internal delegation.
SECTION 6. RELEASE OR MODIFICATION OF
RESTRICTIONS ON MANAGEMENT, USE OR INVESTMENT OR
PURPOSE.
(a) For purposes of In this
section, “institutional fund” includes each fund a fund
that is one of two or more institutional funds collectively
managed.
(b) With the donor’s
consent of the donor in a record, an
institution may release, in whole or in part, a restriction imposed by
contained in a gift instrument on the use or management, investment, or
purpose of an institutional fund. A release may not allow a fund
to be used for a purpose other than a charitable purpose of the institution.
(c) If an institution
cannot obtain consent of a donor in a record by reason of the donor’s death,
disability, unavailability, or impossibility of identification, the institution
may apply to the [appropriate court] for release of a restriction imposed by a
gift instrument on the use or investment of an institutional fund. The institution shall notify the [Attorney
General], who must be given an opportunity to be heard. If the court finds that
the restriction is [obsolete, inappropriate or impracticable] [unlawful,
impracticable, impossible to achieve, or wasteful,] the court may release the
restriction, in whole or in part.
(d) This section does
not limit the application of the doctrine of cy pres, except that in applying
the doctrine of cy pres, the [appropriate court] may apply cy pres if a
restriction becomes unlawful, impracticable, impossible to achieve, or
wasteful.
(e) This section does
not limit the application of the doctrine of equitable deviation.
(c) An [appropriate] court, upon application
of an institution, may apply deviation to modify a restriction contained in a
gift instrument on the management or investment of an institutional fund if
because of circumstances not anticipated by the donor, a modification will
further the purposes of the institutional fund, or if the restriction becomes
impracticable or wasteful and impairs the management or investment of the
fund. The institution shall notify the
[Attorney General], who must be given an opportunity to be heard. To the extent practicable, any modification
must be made in accordance with the donor’s probable intention.
(d) If
a particular charitable purpose or a restriction contained in a gift instrument
on the use of an institutional fund becomes unlawful, impracticable, impossible
to achieve, or wasteful, an [appropriate] court, upon application of an
institution, may apply cy pres to modify the purpose of the fund or the
restriction on the use of the fund in a manner consistent with the charitable
purposes expressed in the gift instrument.
The institution shall notify the [Attorney General], who must be given
an opportunity to be heard.
(ef)
If an institution determines that a restriction imposed by
contained in a gift instrument on the use
management, or investment
or
purpose of an institutional fund is unlawful, impracticable,
impossible to achieve, or wasteful, the institution, then
[60 days] after notification to the [Attorney General], the
institution may release the restriction or modify it, in whole or
part, if:
(1) the institutional fund subject to
the restriction has a total value of less than [$25,000]; and
(2) more than [20] years have elapsed
since the fund was established;. and
(g3)
If
a restriction is released or modified, in whole or part, under subsection (f), the institution
must
uses the property in a manner the
institution determines, in good faith, to be consistent with the charitable
purposes expressed in the gift instrument.
Preliminary Comment
Section 6 expands the
rules on releasing or modifying restrictions that are found in Section 7 of
UMIFA (1972). Subsection (b) restates the rule from UMIFA (1972) allowing the
release of a restriction with donor consent. Subsection (c) explains that if the consent of
the donor cannot be obtained because the donor is deceased or cannot be found,
the institution can seek court approval to release the restriction. Subsections (cd)
and (de) make
clear that an institution can always ask a court to apply equitable deviation
or
cy pres or equitable deviation to modify or
release a restriction., under certain
circumstances. Subsection (ef),
a new provision, permits an institution to apply cy pres on
its own for small funds that have existed for a substantial period of time,
after giving notice to the state attorney general.
Subsection
(a). Individual Funds. The rules on modification require that the
institution, or a court applying a court-ordered doctrine, review each
institutional fund separately. Although
the term institutional fund can mean more than one fund for other purposes of
the Act, for purposes of this Section, each fund must be considered individually.
Subsection (b).
Donor Release. Subsection
(ba)
permits the release of a restriction if the donor consents. A release with
donor consent cannot change the charitable beneficiary of the fund. Although
the donor has the power to consent to a release of a restriction, this section
does not create a power in the donor that will cause a federal tax problem for
the donor. The gift to the institution is a completed gift for tax purposes,
the property cannot be diverted from the charitable beneficiary, and the donor
cannot redirect the property to another use by the charity. The donor has no retained interest in the
fund.
Subsection
(c). Equitable Deviation. Subsection (c) applies the rule of equitable
deviation, modifying the language from UTC § 412 for application in this
section. See also
Restatement (Third) of Trusts § 66 (2003).
Under deviation, a court modifies restrictions on
the way an institution manages or administers a fund, doing so in a manner that
furthers the purposes of the fund. Deviation
implements the donor’s intent. A donor
may have a predominate purpose for a gift and, secondarily, an intent that the
purpose be carried out in a particular manner.
Deviation does not alter the purpose but rather modifies the means of
carrying out the purpose.
Sometimes deviation is needed due to circumstances
unanticipated when the donor created a restriction on a gift. In other situations a restriction may impair
the management or investment of the fund.
Modification of the restriction may permit the institution to carry out
the donor’s purposes in a more effective manner. A court applying deviation should
attempt to follow the donor’s probable intention in deciding how to modify the
restriction.
Subsection
(d). Cy Pres. A court can modify the purpose of an
institutional fund using the doctrine of cy pres. Under subsection (d) the focus is on the
purpose of the fund rather than on the means of carrying out the purpose. The term modify encompasses the release of a
restriction as well as an alteration of a restriction and also permits a court
to order that the fund be paid to another institution. A court can apply the doctrine of cy pres
only if the restriction in question has become unlawful, impracticable,
impossible to achieve, or wasteful. This
standard, which comes from UTC § 413, updates the circumstances under which cy
pres may be applied by adding “wasteful” to the usual common law articulation
of the doctrine. Any change must be made
in a manner consistent with the charitable purposes expressed in the gift
instrument. See also
Restatement (Third) of Trusts § 67 (2003).
Subsection (d) is intended make the case law under cy
pres applicable to institutions covered by UMIFA (200-) and does not limit the
doctrine of cy pres. In addition to
requesting that a court apply cy pres to modify a restriction, an institution
may seek court assistance otherwise, for example by requesting the dissolution
of the institution.
Subsection (c) restates
the rule in UMIFA (1972) that indicates that if a donor is dead or disabled, or
cannot be found, then an institution can apply to a court for the release of a
restriction. [A court can approve
a release under subsection (b) even if the restriction does not fall within the
circumstances required for the application of cy pres.] The institution must give notice to the state
attorney general, who represents the interests of the public in ensuring that
the donor’s charitable wishes as expressed in the gift instrument are followed.
Subsection (d) states
that the doctrine of cy pres will continue to apply to institutions, but
updates the circumstances under which cy pres will apply by adopting the rule
set forth in UTC § 413. Under subsection
(d) a court may use cy pres to modify or release a restriction that has become unlawful,
impracticable, impossible to achieve, or wasteful. A restriction that may have
made sense when a donor made a gift, may no longer be appropriate due to
unanticipated changes. Under the
doctrine of cy pres the institution can
apply for modification of the restriction, in keeping with the original intent
of the donor. The institution must give
notice to the state attorney general, In
determining the appropriate modification, the court will consider what the
donor would likely have preferred if the donor had been aware of the
unanticipated circumstances. Subsection (e) clarifies that the doctrine of
equitable deviation applies to institutions.
Under the doctrine of equitable deviation a court can modify an
administrative restriction under which an institution manages or invests a
fund. A court can order equitable
deviation if unanticipated circumstances have caused a restriction to impede
rather than facilitate the donor’s intent.
Equitable deviation can be used to modify an administrative restriction
but not a purpose restriction. See UTC §§ 412, 413; Restatement
(Second) of Trusts § 167.
Subsection (ef)
permits an institution to release or modify a restriction using a cy pres
approach but without court approval if the amount of the institutional fund
involved is small and if the institutional fund has been in existence for more
than 20 years. The Drafting Committee determined that under some circumstances
a restriction may no longer make sense but the cost of a judicial cy pres
proceeding will be too great to warrant a change in the restriction. The
Committee discussed at length the parameters for allowing an institution to
apply cy pres itself, without court supervision. The Committee drafted
subsection (ef) to
balance the needs of an institution to operate efficiently for its charitable
purposes and the need to protect donors’ wishes. The subsection assumes that an
institutional fund with a value of $25,000 or less is sufficiently small that
the cost of a judicial proceeding will be out of proportion with the need to
change the restriction. The Committee included a requirement that the
institutional fund be in existence at least 20 years because it seemed
reasonable to require additional safeguards for donors’ intent for some period
of time after the creation of the institutional fund. The 20 year period begins
to run from the date of inception of the fund and not from the date of each
gift to the fund. The amount and the number of years have been placed in
brackets to signal to enacting jurisdictions that they may wish to designate a
higher or lower figure.
As under judicial cy
pres, an institution acting under subsection (ef)
must change the restriction in a manner that is in keeping with the intent of
the donor and the purpose of the fund. For example, if the value of a fund is
too small to justify the cost of administration of the fund as a separate fund,
the term “wasteful” would allow the institution to combine the fund with
another fund with similar purposes. If a fund had been created for nursing
scholarships and the institution closed its nursing school, the institution
might appropriately decide to use the fund for other scholarships at the
institution. In using the authority granted under subsection (ef),
the institution must make a good faith determination of which alternative use
for the fund reasonably approximates the original intent of the donor. The
institution cannot divert the fund to an entirely different use. For example,
the fund for nursing scholarships could not be used to build a football
stadium.
The Drafting Committee decided not to require an
institution acting under subsection (ef) to give
notice to the donors who had contributed to the fund. Subsection (ef)
can only be used for an old and small fund.
For such a fund, locating multiple donors may be prohibitively expensive, and
notice by publication is not likely to be effective in providing actual notice
to the donors. Good practice dictates
notifying known donors of any change considered by the institution. The Drafting Committee concluded that an
institution’s concern for donor relations would serve as a sufficient incentive
for following that practice when donors can be located. In other circumstances, the attorney general
can protect the interests of the donors and the public.
SECTION 7. REVIEWING COMPLIANCE. Compliance with this [act] is determined in light of the facts and circumstances existing at the time a decision is made or action is taken, and not by hindsight.
SECTION 8. APPLICATION TO EXISTING INSTITUTIONAL FUNDS. This [act] applies to institutional funds existing on or established after the effective date of this [act]. As applied to institutional funds existing on its effective date, this [act] governs only decisions made or actions taken after that date.
SECTION 9. RELATION TO ELECTRONIC SIGNATURES IN GLOBAL AND NATIONAL COMMERCE ACT. This [act] modifies, limits, and supersedes the federal Electronic Signatures in Global and National Commerce Act (15 U.S.C. Section 7001 et seq.) but does not modify, limit, or supersede Section 101 of that act (15 U.S.C. Section 7001(a)) or authorize electronic delivery of any of the notices described in Section 103 of that act (15 U.S.C. Section 7003(b)).
SECTION 10. 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.
SECTION 11. EFFECTIVE DATE. This [act] takes effect . . . .
SECTION 12. REPEAL. The following acts and parts of acts are repealed: