
CPAs as
Trust Protectors
Helping
clients build flexibility and additional
oversight into their trusts is a manageable,
meaningful new niche.
by Michael
B. Allmon
| EXECUTIVE
SUMMARY |
Clients who want
their beneficiaries to avoid
probate often place assets in trust. Many
CPAs are reluctant to take on being a
trustee, which is a time-consuming
responsibility. An alternative is to be a
third-party trust protector
alongside a professional trustee. CPAs
are highly qualified for the trust
protector role because they have the
clients confidence, the right skill
sets, a tax background and an
understanding of the clients family
dynamics. A trust protector has contractual powers (described in the
trust document) to assist in guiding both
corporate trustees and trust
beneficiaries through legal and tax
complexities to realize the
trustors original intent. Using a
trust protector provides an added
safeguard over the actions of an
appointed corporate trustee. The concept
is common in offshore asset protection
planning. A trust protector can generally remove and replace a trustee;
terminate the trust; change the situs of
administration; resolve co-trustee
deadlocks or beneficiary-trustee
disputes; veto investment decisions; and
redirect trust distributions or amend
administrative provisions and trust terms
based on unforeseen circumstances in the
beneficiaries lives or changes in
law. Few statutes define and
regulate the role of trust protector, and
only a few domestic jurisdictions
recognize it (Alaska, Delaware, Idaho,
South Dakota and Wyoming). There is
little domestic case law to address
issues such as who is checking the trust
protectors powers, the
trustees role if those powers are
broad, or terms of succession for the
role. Because the role is
not defined in most states,
there is potential legal liability.
Contentious beneficiaries could argue
that a protector acted imprudently or
improperly. Other drawbacks to be managed
include an uncertain fee structure and
the always-present issue of uncertain
timing.
Michael
B. Allmon, CPA, a
partner at Michael B. Allmon & Assoc.
LLP CPAs, is the founding chair of
the California Society of CPAs Estate
Planning Committee. His e-mail address is mike@mbacpas.com.
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lients who want their
beneficiaries to avoid the stress, expense and
delay of probate often place assets in trust.
Increasingly they are asking their CPAs in both
public practice and industry to act as trustees.
However, many CPAs are reluctant to take on the
fiduciary responsibility of being a trustee for
several reasons: They lack adequate
infrastructure and staff for trust
administration; they are inexperienced in trustee
work, especially for real estate and other
nonliquid assets; and they are uncertain about
how to bill appropriately.
An
alternative to acting as trustee is to be a
trust protector alongside a
professional trustee. This article will examine
the basic definition and duties of a trust
protector, offer reasons CPAs are an excellent
fit for the trust protector role, describe
potential pitfalls of the arrangement and their
solutions, and suggest why CPAs should want to
act in this capacity.
| Quite
a Bit of Money Out There U.S.
trust institutions held $1.1 trillion in
personal trust and agency account assets
in 2005, representing 1.1 million
accounts.
Source:
2005 FDIC Trust Report.
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FROM PLANNING
TO PROTECTION
A trust protector is a third party (neither
trustor nor trustee) who has been granted
contractual powers to protect the terms of a
trust. The conceptrelatively new for
onshore trustsis common in offshore asset
protection planning. A trust protector can assist
in guiding both corporate trustees and trust
beneficiaries through legal and tax complexities
to carry out the clients original intent.
The idea has grown in popularity in reaction to
the increasingly unpredictable nature of changing
law and tax policy.
A
trust protectors authority lies in the
powers and duties spelled out in the trust
document (the contract). When the client uses a
trust protector, the main trustee becomes an
excluded fiduciary in those areas in which the
trust protector is empowered. Generally, trust
protector powers include some or all of the
following:
The ability to
remove and replace a trustee. The
most commonoften the onlypower of
trust protectors is the ability to replace a
trustee who is unresponsive to the needs of the
beneficiaries or who is not performing to the
standard required by the trusts investment
policy statement (IPS). The IPS outlines how the
trustee is to manage the trusts investment
portfolio and addresses risk tolerance, goals and
asset allocations. It should be reviewed
periodically.
The power to
change situs of administration. The
situsthe trusts legal
home, which determines which
states laws will applyis an important
factor in its administration. Sometimes estate
planning attorneys will recommend that a trust
have a situs in a state other than the one in
which the trustor lives. For instance, trusts
sited in California having non-California
beneficiaries are subject to a complex tax
formula; using another state for the situs could
reduce the trusts state income taxes.
Consult the trusts attorney when a trust
situs differs from the trustors home state.
Changes in law occurring after the trust document
has been prepared also can make it advisable to
move the trust situs.
The power to
resolve deadlocks between co-trustees. This
is sometimes referred to as tie-break
power.
Discretion to
veto investment decisions, redirect trust
distributions or amend administrative provisions
and trust terms based on unforeseen circumstances
such as divorce, irresponsibility or changes in
law. For instance, a trust
protector might decide that distributions to a
beneficiary who is in a temporary situation such
as a divorce or credit action, or who has become
drug addicted, should be modified. Changes in
estate tax laws also might provide reasonable
grounds for the protector to act to amend the
trust document.
Ability to
terminate the trust. This might
apply when the trust is no longer large enough to
warrant ongoing administrative costs and
continuing it is not in the beneficiaries
best interests. For example, I am trustee of a
trust (formerly a protector of this trust) that
had six beneficiaries. As each beneficiary turned
21, his or her portion of the trust was
distributed. The last beneficiary is much younger
than the others, so the trust might not have
enough assets to cover its management costs until
that beneficiary turns 21. Based on cost
considerations, it would make sense to distribute
the remaining funds early.
Dispute
resolution between beneficiaries and the trustee.
A trust protector who arbitrates
disputes can reduce the trusts litigation
costs.
As
this list shows, using a trust protector lets a
trustor extend control and build flexibility into
an otherwise rigid document long past the time
when he or she is deceased. Such capacity makes
it more likely that the spirit of the trust
ultimately will be carried out, even in a
changing legal, tax and economic environment.
Another
benefit for the trustor is the trusts
ability to adapt terms to the changing
circumstances of beneficiaries. Finally, a trust
protector provides an added safeguard over the
actions of an appointed corporate trustee, who
may not know or understand the clients
family dynamics.
NOT A CURE-ALL
Many issues that arise with the choice of a
trustee also are present in choosing a trust
protector. For instance, the inherent conflict of
interest between current beneficiaries and
remaindermen (inheritors whose estate vests after
a prior estate terminates) is not eliminated by
the addition of a trust protector, no matter how
sagacious the chosen party. (This is particularly
true if the trust protector is also a beneficiary
of the trust.) Nor is there much domestic case
law to address other unresolved issues such as:
Who is checking the powers
wielded by the trust protector?
What is the trustees
ultimate role if the trust protectors
powers are broad?
What are the terms of
succession for the role?
Few
statutes define and regulate the role of trust
protector, and only a few domestic jurisdictions
recognize the concept (including Alaska,
Delaware, Idaho, South Dakota and Wyoming). To
limit potential liability, research the laws of
your state to ensure you fully understand the
applicable laws.
WHY CPAS ARE A GOOD FIT
CPAs are highly qualified for the trust protector
role because they:
Have the
clients confidence. A trust
protector should be unassailably objective,
especially given unresolved issues in the law and
the inherent conflict of interest between
beneficiary and remaindermen and between
beneficiary and trustee. Clients see their CPA as
a reliable, trusted adviser.
Have the
knowledge. CPAs have the education,
training and experience to handle the role. Their
working knowledge of a range of financial
instruments can help them judge how well the
trusts investment policy is being executed.
Understand the
clients. Clients want someone who
is intimately familiar with the familys
financial situation and long-term goals for
passing wealth to the next generation. For many
families that person is their accountant.
Sometimes a familys CPA knows their
financial situation as well or better than they
do.
Have a tax
background. CPAs knowledge of
tax law puts them in a good position to determine
whether changes in the law will necessitate
changes to a clients trust.
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Case
Study
It Works Well for MeClients
sometimes ask me to act as
trustee of their estates, but
based on my executor and trustee
experiences, I think CPAs can
best serve clients by monitoring
the actions of the primary
fiduciary rather than being the
primary fiduciary.
In
1995, I became an acting
co-trustee and executor for a
client who died and left a large
and complex estate, primarily in
trust. My duties included
everything from ensuring two
steel companies were managed
efficiently (they were
responsible for the section 6166
estate tax payment plan that I
negotiated with the IRS),
handling potential toxic
contamination claims, settling
document disputes, dealing with
numerous tax matters (income,
estate and excise taxes) and
beneficiary issues (such as a
claim not authorized in the
documents) to the more usual
activities of a
fiduciaryinvesting and
communicating to all
beneficiaries.
Once
the complex issues were settled,
my co-trustees resigned. I
remained as sole trustee. I then
found a national trust company to
accept all liability for any
actions, to handle all matters in
a trustee role, and to share the
trustees compensation with
me. By our agreement I
voluntarily created a trust
protector role for myself and
gave up all authority to
actexcept for the power to
replace that trustee with anyone
I chose, including myself. My CPA
firm continued to provide tax
services to the trust.
So
far, I have had to replace the
acting trustee twice. The first
time I changed trustees because
of a change due to a merger of
the trust company. The second
time was due to an unresponsive
and difficult trustee (they were
not providing timely accounting
information that we needed to
prepare income tax returns, nor
were they meeting our investment
objectives, as spelled out in the
trusts investment policy
statement).
I
now ask my clients to have their
trust documents name me as either
trustee or protector. When I am
named as trustee, I usually have
the ability to replace myself and
limit my responsibilities to the
role of a trust protector.
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PROTECTORS
RISKS
A trust is a contract that offers tremendous
potential flexibility. Limited only by state law,
the role of trust protector can take on almost
any characteristic clients and their estate
planning advisers can imagine. But as with nearly
all new areas of practice, there are some risks
for pioneers. A CPA who chooses to act as a trust
protector will have to manage:
Potential legal liability.
Because the functions of a protector are not
defined in most states, contentious beneficiaries
could argue that a protector acted imprudently or
improperly. Before agreeing to act as your
clients trust protector, consult an estate
planning attorney, research how your state views
trust protectors, and find out whether your
malpractice carrier will cover you in that
capacity.
Uncertain fee
structure. Still-developing laws in
your state may not address the issue of fees for
trust protectors. A protectors fees might
possibly be covered by total trustee fees where
such fees are defined as fair and
reasonable. To be safe, obtain your
clients agreement to add language to the
trust document to ensure payment of your fees for
both fiduciary and accounting services for the
estate. Clients who ask you to serve will want
you to be motivated to act on their behalf and to
be properly paid for doing so. Weigh the
potential for earnings against potential
liabilities in accepting the trust protector
role.
Uncertain
timing. Neither trustee nor trust
protector can know when his or her service to the
client will begin. During busy season a CPA would
find it almost impossible to do the job of
trustee; because being a trust protector is the
less time-consuming role, the CPA can still
satisfy the clients wish to obtain his or
her continued judgment in the disposition of the
estate even in the face of uncertain timing.
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limit potential liability:
Research
how your state views trust
protectors, and make sure you
fully understand the applicable
laws in your jurisdiction.
Consult an
estate planning attorney with
knowledge of your present and
potential area of practice.
Find out
whether your malpractice carrier
will cover you for trust
protector services.
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MANAGEABLE AND MEANINGFUL
CPAs are uniquely qualified to serve as trust
protectors, an engagement that offers an
attractive alternative to the nearly full-time
job of trustee. Performing the service in
conjunction with a corporate trustee will let you
serve your clients best interests and
solidify the relationship. It shifts
responsibility for day-to-day trust
administration to another entity, yet gives you a
degree of oversight.
When
properly drafted within the trust document, the
balance of power between the two roles can serve
to best reflect the trustors original
intent well beyond his or her lifetime. The
oversight of a trust protector in domestic trusts
is likely to become a more common feature in
years to come. CPAs are well positioned to take
on the role. 
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