The Trusts Act 2019 was passed on 30 July 2019 and replaces the Trustee Act 1956. The Act came into effect on 30 January 2021.
The 2019 Act modernises existing
trust law, provides better guidance for trustees and beneficiaries, and makes
it easier to resolve disputes.
the key changes
1
A description of the key features of a
trust to help trustees and beneficiaries understand their rights and obligations. This includes:
·
Defining a trust as: a structure where a trustee holds and deals
with trust property for the benefit of people who are described as
beneficiaries for a permitted purpose and the trustees are required to act in
the best interests of the beneficiaries;
·
Stating that a sole trustee cannot be a sole beneficiary of a trust;
·
Increasing the maximum life of a trust from 80 years to 125
years; and
·
Setting the minimum age you have to be in order to hold a formal
trust role as 18 years of age.
·
Setting the minimum age that a beneficiary has to be in order to
receive a distribution as 18 years of age.
2
A list of mandatory and
default trustee duties to help trustees
understand their obligations.
Mandatory duties
Mandatory trustee duties cannot
be modified or excluded by the terms of a trust and include:
· The duty
to know the terms of a trust;
· The duty
to act in accordance with the terms of a trust;
· The duty
to act honestly and in good faith;
· The duty
to act for the benefit of beneficiaries or to further the permitted purpose of
a Trust; and
· The duty to exercise powers for a proper purpose.
Default duties
Default trustee duties can be
modified or excluded by the terms of a trust and these duties include:
· The
general duty of care;
· The duty
to invest prudently;
· The duty
not to exercise a power for a trustee’s own benefit;
· The duty
to consider the exercise of a power;
· The duty
not to bind or commit trustees to future exercise of discretion;
· The duty
to avoid a conflict of interest;
· The duty
of impartiality;
· The duty
not to profit;
· The duty
of a trustee to act for no reward; and
· The duty
to act unanimously.
We expect that many
trusts will be subject to these duties on 30 January 2021 if they do not make
changes and this may become an issue if they do not reflect current
circumstances and the trust objectives. For example, if the only asset of a
trust is a house or holiday home the trust may be open to criticism for not
having spread investments across a diverse mix of assets if the obligation to
invest prudently is not modified or excluded.
3
Requirements for
managing trust information and disclosing it to beneficiaries.
Information for
trustees to keep
Trustees must keep the core trust
documents for the duration of the trusteeship and these documents must
be passed on when a trusteeship changes.
A trustee will either have to keep
their own copies of the core trust documents or ensure that at least one of the
other trustees holds all of the core trust documents and will make them
available on request.
Core trust documents are:
·
Copies of the trust deed
and any variations to it;
·
Records of the trust
property that identify the assets, liabilities, income and expenses of the
trust;
·
Records of decisions made;
·
Any written contracts
entered into;
·
Any accounting records and
financial statements prepared;
·
Documents of appointment,
removal and discharge of trustees; and
·
Any letter or memorandum
of wishes from the settlor of the trust.
Disclosure
The 2019 Act
clearly sets out a presumption that beneficiaries should be informed of basic
trust information, unless there is a good reason not to. This is to ensure they
are able to hold trustees to account. Basic trust information is:
·
The fact that a person is
a beneficiary of a trust;
·
The name and contact
details of the trustee;
·
Details of changes in
trustees; and
·
The right of the
beneficiary to request a copy of the terms of the trust or trust information.
The same presumption
applies when beneficiaries make a request for trust information. Trust
information is:
·
any information regarding
the terms of the trust, the administration of the trust or the trust property;
and
·
That is reasonably
necessary for the beneficiary to have to enable the trust to be enforced; but
·
Does not include reasons
for trustees’ decisions.
The Act
outlines a number of factors trustees must consider when deciding whether it is
reasonable to withhold basic trust information or decline a request for trust information.
These factors include:
·
The nature and interests
of the beneficiary (including whether the beneficiary is likely to receive
trust property in the future);
·
The nature and interests
of other beneficiaries;
·
The intentions of the settlor
when the trust was established;
·
The age and circumstances
of the beneficiary in question and the other beneficiaries of the trust;
·
The effect of giving the
beneficiary the information;
·
The nature and context of
any request for further information; and
·
Any other factor a trustee
reasonably considers is relevant. Trustees will have to carefully consider any
decision not to disclose information.
4
Further key changes include:
Practical and flexible trustee powers, allowing
trustees to manage and invest trust property in the most appropriate way.
Provisions to support cost-effective establishment
and administration of trusts (such as clear rules on the variation and
termination of trusts).
Options for removing and appointing trustees without
having to go to Court to do so.
Modern dispute resolution procedures with the goal
of keeping trust related disputes out of Court. This includes the Act providing
alternatives, such mediation or arbitration.
1 Consider your current circumstances
and how they may have changed since the Trust was established.
Consider
whether:
·
The
trust continues to meet objectives.
·
Trustees
are willing and able to undertake the increased obligations.
·
Trustees
are comfortable with managing the trust property going forward.
·
The
Trust will be cost effective with the extra compliance requirements.
2 Consider whether there is any need for
the trust to continue.
It may
be that there is no longer any need for you to have a trust or the trust may no
longer be fit for purpose.
The
trust could be wound up and its assets distributed to you or other
beneficiaries.
If the
trust is to continue, we will need to meet with you to discuss how we can make
the trust fit for purpose going forward.