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Governance implications – 2024 HYEFU and Budget Policy Statement
Financial updates from Treasury may impact not-for-profit boards.
After several years in the making, New Zealand now has a new Trusts Act.
This is the most significant trust reform in over 60 years and is relevant to many trustees. The Act includes a list of mandatory and default trustee duties. Default duties apply unless they are modified or excluded by the terms of the trust. The Act also sets out trustees’ obligations to retain records and provide information to beneficiaries.
There are an estimated 300,000 to 500,000 trusts in New Zealand including community, charitable, commercial and family trusts. The Act sets out basic trust matters relevant to settlors, trustees and beneficiaries, and replaces the Trustee Act 1956. It aims to improve accessibility to the law of trusts and help people better understand their legal rights and obligations. It also aims to improve the governance of trusts.
Many trustees, including trustees of small family trusts and charities, will be subject to provisions of the Act. It is intended that all express trusts (ie trusts generally formed deliberately as a result of a settlor’s intention to create a trust) will be governed by the Act, except to the extent that some types of trusts are governed by specific legislation. There are exemptions under the Act for certain trusts including some specified commercial trusts.
Trustee duties are central to good governance and they reflect the fiduciary nature of trustees and promote accountability. Historically, trustee duties have largely been set out in case law and many trustees may not be fully aware of their duties.
The Act now sets out mandatory and default trustee duties all in one place. Default duties apply unless they are modified or excluded by the terms of the trust. The terms of a trust may also impose additional duties on a trustee.
The Act provides that the terms of a trust must not:
The Act retains the court’s ability to relieve a trustee who is or may be personally liable for any breach of trust from personal liability for the breach. This applies if it appears to the court that the trustee has acted honestly and reasonably and the trustee ought fairly to be excused for the breach of trust.
The Act reforms the provision of information to beneficiaries with the purpose being to ensure beneficiaries have sufficient information to enable the terms of the trust and the trustees’ duties to be enforced against the trustees. There are two parts:
There is a presumption that trustees must make available to every beneficiary ‘basic trust information’ which is defined as follows:
Trustees must consider at reasonable intervals whether they should be making the basic trust information available.
Beneficiaries may also request from trustees ‘trust information’ which is defined as information:
Trust information does not include reasons for trustees’ decisions.
A procedure under which trustees can decide against providing information is set out in the Act. There are a number of factors to consider including:
Each trustee must keep (so far as is reasonable) the following:
Where there is more than one trustee, each trustee must hold copies of the trust deed and any variations and be satisfied that at least one trustee holds copies of the other documents specified above and that these will be made available to the other trustees on request. Trustees may keep other documents as well.
An alternative dispute resolution process (eg mediation) for all trusts is set out in the Act. The process also covers internal disputes between trustees. The courts have also been provided with wide powers to review acts, omissions and decisions of trustees.
The Act comes into force in January 2021 allowing trustees 18 months to ensure their trusts comply. We encourage trustees to review their trust deeds and seek professional advice if needed.
For more see: