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Conflicts of Interest for Trustees

By Keith A. Davidson on May 10, 2019
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https://youtu.be/kwbUjqvqd1k

The Following is a Transcript of this Video. For More Information, CLICK HERE

Hi, this is Keith Davidson at Albertson & Davidson.  In this video, I want to talk about conflicts of interest for trustees.

A lot of times, a trustee will get themselves into trouble because they will take some action that is a conflict of interest.  Now you have to understand that a trustee is a fiduciary of the trust.  That means that they owe a duty to the trust and to the trust beneficiaries to treat them fairly, to do the right thing.

And one of the things a trustee cannot do is enter into financial transactions as between the trust and themselves personally.  So if a trustee wants to buy an asset out of the trust, it doesn’t matter if this trustee is also a trust beneficiary, the fact that they’re a trustee puts them in a conflict of interest position.  And you’ll see this a lot with individual trustees, unfortunately, where they want to buy something out of the trust and so they just do it.  They just go ahead and do the financial transaction, they buy the asset, they take it out of the trust.  That automatically is a conflict of interest.  Period.  End of story.  It’s a conflict of interest.  It doesn’t matter what the trustee says, they’ve taken an action that puts them in a compromising position because they can’t be in charge of the trust, selling an asset to themselves individually and expect that it’s going to be a fair transaction.

There are ways in which a trustee can successfully do a financial transaction with the trust, but you have to take the right steps.  And so typically you either need an order from the Court where everybody gets proper notice, everybody gets full disclosure of what the transaction is, and everybody has an opportunity to show up and object or state what their views on that transaction should be.  You can take actions outside of court, too, but that’s a little more risky because you have to fully and fairly inform all the beneficiaries and give them a chance to weigh in on this issue.  And if a beneficiary disagrees with the transaction, then the trustee simply shouldn’t do it, because it is a conflict of interest.

Conflicts of interest are probably one of the most common areas where trustees breach their duties of trust to the trust beneficiaries and it’s something that, as a trust beneficiary, you should really be on the lookout for.  Because the minute you see the trustee trying to do a financial transaction with the trust, you know that’s there’s trouble in store for you as a beneficiary.

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  • Posted in:
    Probate & Estate Planning
  • Blog:
    California Trust, Estate & Probate Litigation
  • Organization:
    Albertson & Davidson, LLP
  • Article: View Original Source

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