The power to adjust: expanding the trustee's management tools.

AuthorGilbert, Richard E.
PositionEstate planning

When the revised Uniform Principal and Income Act took effect Jan. 1, 2000, for all trusts and estates, California's trustees gained a new tool--the so-called "power to adjust."

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Pursuant to the California Probate Code (CPC) Sec. 16336, which is part of the UPAIA, trustees now can use their discretion in making adjustments between the principal and income of trusts under limited circumstances.

Simply stated, the new power permits trustees to reallocate amounts between principal and income when the income portion of the portfolio's total return is too small or too large due to earlier investment decisions.

Balancing PIA, UPAIA

The new tool tries to balance the tension between the Uniform Prudent Investor Act (PIA) and the UPAIA. The PIA encourages investing for total return, while the UPAIA provides reasoned guidance with respect to the allocation of receipts and disbursements between income and principal.

Many trustees struggle when making investment decisions that produce an optimal total portfolio return without stifling the beneficial interest of the income beneficiary.

Income beneficiaries demand that trustees create investment portfolios biased toward fixed-income assets to produce more income. But remainder beneficiaries want portfolios consisting mostly of equity investments for long-term capital appreciation.

To address this conflict, trustees balance investment decisions from two perspectives--the intrinsic worth of the proposed investment and yields equitable to both sets of beneficiaries.

Eliminating the link between trust income and traditional accounting income rules is one way to avoid this conflict. But this has to be done at the drafting stage.

The possibilities include: a total discretionary trust, such as allowing trustees, within their discretion, to pay the income beneficiary trust income and/or trust principal; an inflation adjusted annuity trust; and a unitrust requiring fixed distribution of the trust corpus paid annually. [See Hoisington, "Modern Trust Distribution Design and Implementing Strategies, Estate Planning," 1998, Chapter 5 (Cal CEB 1998)].

The Power to Adjust

The power to adjust is another solution. Yet, most trustees are not sure when to use it since the statutes' guidelines are inadequate. It is important to note that the power to make adjustment is discretionary--not mandatory.

The UPAIA states that "[n]othing in this section or in this chapter is intended to create or imply a duty to make an adjustment, and a trustee is not liable for not considering whether to make an adjustment or for choosing not to make an adjustment." [CPC Sec. 16336(h)].

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