19 April 2024

The Trouble With Trustees

#
Share This Story

Beneficiaries of family trusts stand to inherit stock portfolios, childhood homes and treasured heirlooms. Yet those assets come with what can be a delicate relationship with the trustees who control the purse strings. A trustee can be a valued partner and mentor. But if disagreements develop, the result can be costly problems and years of frustration.

Here are some tips for managing your relationship with a trustee.

Sources of Tension 

The relationship between beneficiary and trustee has natural sources of tension. Heirs often want to get control of the assets sooner, and trustees sometimes push back out of concern heirs will spend the money unwisely. The trustee is chosen by the person who funds a trust with cash or assets—often a parent of the beneficiary. Usually that person is a family member or confidant, or a professional such as a lawyer or financial adviser who works with the family. 

Beneficiaries who want to make a case for getting trust assets sooner should find out how much flexibility was built into the trust. Often, the trust includes guidelines for when and how the assets are to be distributed. But some trusts grant the trustee considerable leeway to adjust to changing circumstances. The trust document, for example, might direct the trustee to distribute trust income and assets for the general support and maintenance of a beneficiary but leave it up to the trustee to interpret what that means.

The trustee could decide that providing the funds for a down payment on a house fits that description, but that paying for an expensive new car does not. See if there might be a reason a trustee is resisting a request. The trust may have distributed a fair amount of money recently, for example, and the trustee may want the portfolio to have a chance to grow a bit before handing out more.

Beyond managing assets, trustees are supposed to communicate with the beneficiaries and others who are involved in the trust; handle the paperwork, such as record-keeping and tax filings; and pay out assets to the beneficiaries.

Money Problems 

Fees can be another source of conflict with a trustee. Individual trustees negotiate management fees privately, and the fees are sometimes spelled out in the trust document. Costs can vary widely, but rules governing trust fees in some states can offer guidelines. At the same time, a close family friend sometimes will act as trustee at no charge, especially if the person who set up the trust is still alive and the trustee is basically doing a personal favor. If the beneficiary thinks fees are too steep, he or she may be able to limit them by hiring someone to manage the trust and someone else to invest the assets.

Many states allow such a division of roles. The arrangement limits the potential for conflicts of interest and creates a system of checks and balances, which can provide extra comfort to a family that doesn’t know much about investing.

Large banks that act as trustees often want to play both roles and typically charge at least 1% of the assets under management. That fee covers their services for investing the assets as well as, for example, acting as custodian of the assets or handling the distribution of assets to beneficiaries.

Resolving Disputes 

If you are a beneficiary of a trust and you aren’t happy with the way the trustee is handling matters, try opening the lines of communication, perhaps by setting up a meeting to air your grievances. Lawyers often facilitate these sessions. Try to find out what might be driving an unwelcome decision by a trustee. The trustee might feel torn between making sure all beneficiaries are being treated equally and meeting the specific needs of a beneficiary who needs more money than others. 

Seek a compromise. If the relationship is beyond saving, a change may be necessary. Many trusts set up in the past decade or so include provisions allowing heirs to switch trustees. Older trusts often make it harder to change a trustee. 

Poor investment performance isn’t usually enough to get a court to remove the trustee, unless there is also some demonstrable mismanagement of the assets. If the trustee isn’t being responsive to requests for information or is slow to deliver documents and records, the beneficiary can make a stronger case for removal by keeping a record of the communications, or lack thereof.

Click here to access the full article on The Wall Street Journal. 

Join Our Online Community
Join the Better Way To Retire community and get access to applications, relevant research, groups and blogs. Let us help you Retire Better™
FamilyWealth Social News
Follow Us