Section 11-2.3. Prudent investor act  


Latest version.
  • (a) Prudent investor rule.
        A trustee has a duty to invest and manage property held in a fiduciary
      capacity  in  accordance  with  the prudent investor standard defined by
      this section, except as otherwise provided  by  the  express  terms  and
      provisions of a governing instrument within the limitations set forth by
      section  11-1.7  of  this  chapter.  This  section  shall  apply  to any
      investment made or held on or  after  January  first,  nineteen  hundred
      ninety-five by a trustee.
        (b) Prudent investor standard.
        (1)  The  prudent  investor  rule  requires a standard of conduct, not
      outcome or performance. Compliance with the  prudent  investor  rule  is
      determined in light of facts and circumstances prevailing at the time of
      the  decision  or  action  of  a  trustee.  A trustee is not liable to a
      beneficiary  to  the  extent  that  the  trustee  acted  in  substantial
      compliance  with the prudent investor standard or in reasonable reliance
      on the express terms and provisions of the governing instrument.
        (2) A trustee shall exercise reasonable care,  skill  and  caution  to
      make  and  implement  investment  and  management decisions as a prudent
      investor would  for  the  entire  portfolio,  taking  into  account  the
      purposes and terms and provisions of the governing instrument.
        (3) The prudent investor standard requires a trustee:
        (A)  to pursue an overall investment strategy to enable the trustee to
      make appropriate present and future distributions to or for the  benefit
      of  the beneficiaries under the governing instrument, in accordance with
      risk and return objectives reasonably suited to the entire portfolio;
        (B) to consider, to the extent relevant to the decision or action, the
      size of  the  portfolio,  the  nature  and  estimated  duration  of  the
      fiduciary  relationship,  the liquidity and distribution requirements of
      the governing instrument,  general  economic  conditions,  the  possible
      effect  of  inflation  or  deflation,  the  expected tax consequences of
      investment decisions or strategies and of distributions  of  income  and
      principal,  the  role  that  each  investment  or course of action plays
      within the overall portfolio, the expected total return of the portfolio
      (including both income and appreciation of capital), and  the  needs  of
      beneficiaries  (to  the  extent  reasonably  known  to  the trustee) for
      present and future distributions authorized or required by the governing
      instrument;
        (C) to diversify assets unless the trustee reasonably determines  that
      it  is  in  the  interests of the beneficiaries not to diversify, taking
      into account the purposes and terms  and  provisions  of  the  governing
      instrument; and
        (D)  within  a  reasonable  time  after  the creation of the fiduciary
      relationship, to determine whether  to  retain  or  dispose  of  initial
      assets.
        (4) The prudent investor standard authorizes a trustee:
        (A)   to  invest  in  any  type  of  investment  consistent  with  the
      requirements of  this  paragraph,  since  no  particular  investment  is
      inherently  prudent  or  imprudent  for purposes of the prudent investor
      standard;
        (B)  to  consider  related  trusts,  the  income  and   resources   of
      beneficiaries to the extent reasonably known to the trustee, and also an
      asset's   special   relationship   or  value  to  some  or  all  of  the
      beneficiaries if consistent with the trustee's duty of impartiality;
        (C) to delegate investment and management functions if consistent with
      the duty to exercise skill, including special investment skills; and
    
        (D) to incur costs  only  to  the  extent  they  are  appropriate  and
      reasonable  in relation to the purposes of the governing instrument, the
      assets held by the trustee and the skills of the trustee.
        (5) Trustee's power to adjust.
        (A)  Where the rules in article 11-A apply to a trust and the terms of
      the trust describe the amount that may  or  must  be  distributed  to  a
      beneficiary  by  referring  to  the trust's income, the prudent investor
      standard also authorizes the trustee to  adjust  between  principal  and
      income  to  the  extent  the  trustee  considers advisable to enable the
      trustee  to  make  appropriate  present  and  future  distributions   in
      accordance  with clause (b)(3)(A) if the trustee determines, in light of
      its investment decisions,  the  consideration  factors  incorporated  in
      clause  (b)(5)(B),  and the accounting income expected to be produced by
      applying the rules in article 11-A, that such  an  adjustment  would  be
      fair and reasonable to all of the beneficiaries.
        (B)  In  deciding  whether  and  to  what extent to exercise the power
      conferred by clause (b)(5)(A), a trustee may consider,  in  addition  to
      the  factors  stated  in  clauses (b)(3)(B) and (b)(4)(B), the following
      factors to the extent relevant:
        (i)  the  intent  of  the  settlor,  as  expressed  in  the  governing
      instrument;  the  assets  held  in  the  trust; the extent to which they
      consist of financial assets,  interests  in  closely  held  enterprises,
      tangible  and intangible personal property, or real property; the extent
      to which an asset is used by a beneficiary; and  whether  an  asset  was
      purchased by the trustee or received from the settlor;
        (ii)  the  net  amount  allocated to income under article 11-A and the
      increase or decrease in the value of the  principal  assets,  which  the
      trustee  may  estimate  as  to  assets  for  which market values are not
      readily available; and
        (iii) whether and to what extent the  terms  of  the  trust  give  the
      trustee  the  power to invade principal or accumulate income or prohibit
      the trustee from invading principal  or  accumulating  income,  and  the
      extent  to  which the trustee has exercised a power from time to time to
      invade principal or accumulate income.
        (C) A trustee may not make an adjustment:
        (i) with respect to  a  charitable  remainder  unitrust  described  in
      section 664 of the United States internal revenue code of 1986;
        (ii)  that  changes  the  amount  payable  to a beneficiary as a fixed
      annuity or a fixed fraction of the value of the trust's assets;
        (iii) from any amount that is permanently  set  aside  for  charitable
      purposes  under  a  will  or  the  terms  of  a  trust unless the income
      therefrom is also permanently devoted to charitable purposes;
        (iv) if possessing or exercising  the  power  to  make  an  adjustment
      causes  an  individual  to be treated as the owner of all or part of the
      trust for income tax purposes, and the individual would not  be  treated
      as  the  owner  if  the  trustee  did  not  possess the power to make an
      adjustment;
        (v) if possessing or exercising the power to make an adjustment causes
      all or part of the trust assets to be included for estate  tax  purposes
      in  the estate of an individual who has the power to remove a trustee or
      appoint a trustee, or both, and the assets would not be included in  the
      estate  of  the  individual  if the trustee did not possess the power to
      make an adjustment;
        (vi) if  the  trustee  is  a  current  beneficiary  or  a  presumptive
      remainderman of the trust;
        (vii)  if  the  trustee  is not a current beneficiary or a presumptive
      remainderman, but the adjustment would benefit the trustee  directly  or
    
      indirectly  (which,  however, shall not include the possible effect on a
      trustee's commission); or
        (viii)  if  the  trust is an irrevocable lifetime trust which provides
      income to be paid for life to the grantor, and possessing or  exercising
      the  power  to make an adjustment would cause any public benefit program
      to consider the adjusted principal or income to be an available resource
      or available income and the principal or income or both  would  in  each
      case not be considered as an available resource or income if the trustee
      did not possess the power to make an adjustment;
        (D)  An  adjustment otherwise prohibited by items (b)(5)(C)(i) through
      (viii) may be made if the terms of the trust, by  express  reference  to
      this  section,  provide  otherwise. If item (b)(5)(C) (iv), (v), (vi) or
      (vii) applies to a trustee and there  is  more  than  one  trustee,  the
      trustee  or  trustees  to whom the provision does not apply may make the
      adjustment unless the exercise of the power by the remaining trustee  or
      trustees is prohibited by the terms of the trust. If there is no trustee
      qualified  to  make the adjustment, it may be made if so directed by the
      court upon application of the trustee or of an interested party.
        (E) A trustee  may  release  the  entire  power  conferred  by  clause
      (b)(5)(A)  or  may  release  only  the  power  to  adjust from income to
      principal or the power to adjust from principal to income if the trustee
      is uncertain about whether possessing or exercising the power will cause
      a result described in items (b)(5)(C)(i) through (vi) or (b)(5)(C)(viii)
      or if the trustee determines that possessing  or  exercising  the  power
      will  or  may  deprive the trust of a tax benefit or impose a tax burden
      not described in clause (b)(5)(C). The release may be permanent or for a
      specified period,  including  a  period  measured  by  the  life  of  an
      individual.
        (F)  Terms  of  a  trust  that limit the power of a trustee to make an
      adjustment between principal and income are not contrary to this section
      unless it is clear from the terms  of  the  trust  that  the  terms  are
      intended to deny the trustee the power of adjustment conferred by clause
      (b)(5)(A).
        (6) Special investment skills.
        For  a  bank,  trust  company  or paid professional investment advisor
      (whether or not registered under any federal  securities  or  investment
      law)  which serves as a trustee, and any other trustee representing that
      such trustee has  special  investment  skills,  the  exercise  of  skill
      contemplated  by the prudent investor standard shall require the trustee
      to exercise such diligence in investing and  managing  assets  as  would
      customarily   be  exercised  by  prudent  investors  of  discretion  and
      intelligence having special investment skills.
        (c) Delegation of investment or management functions.
        (1) Delegation of an investment  or  management  function  requires  a
      trustee to exercise care, skill and caution in:
        (A)  selecting  a delegee suitable to exercise the delegated function,
      taking into account the nature and value of the assets subject  to  such
      delegation and the expertise of the delegee;
        (B) establishing the scope and terms of the delegation consistent with
      the purposes of the governing instrument;
        (C)  periodically  reviewing  the  delegee's exercise of the delegated
      function and compliance with the scope and terms of the delegation; and
        (D) controlling the overall cost by reason of the delegation.
        (2) The delegee has a duty to the trustee and to the trust  to  comply
      with the scope and terms of the delegation and to exercise the delegated
      function   with   reasonable  care,  skill  and  caution.  An  attempted
      exoneration of the delegee from liability for failure to meet such  duty
      is contrary to public policy and void.
    
        (3)  By  accepting  the  delegation  of  a trustee's function from the
      trustee of a trust that is subject to the law of New York,  the  delegee
      submits  to  the  jurisdiction  of  the  courts  of  New  York even if a
      delegation agreement provides otherwise, and the delegee may be  made  a
      party  to  any  proceeding  in  such  courts  that  places  in issue the
      decisions or actions of the delegee.
        (d) Investment in securities of related investment companies.
        A trustee  holding  funds  for  investment  may  invest  the  same  in
      securities of any management type investment company or trust registered
      pursuant  to  the  federal  investment  company  act of nineteen hundred
      forty, as amended, notwithstanding that the trustee or an  affiliate  of
      the  trustee  acts  as  investment  advisor,  custodian, transfer agent,
      registrar, sponsor, distributor, manager or provides other  services  to
      the  investment  company  or  trust.  Unless the will, lifetime trust or
      order appointing the trustee provides otherwise, the trustee shall elect
      annually  either  (i)  to  receive  or  have   its   affiliate   receive
      compensation  for  providing such services to such investment company or
      trust for the portion of the trust invested in such  investment  company
      or  trust  or  (ii)  to take annual corporate trustees' commissions with
      respect to such portion.
        (e) As used in this section:
        (1) the term "trustee" includes a  personal  representative,  trustee,
      guardian,  donee  of  a  power  during  minority, guardian under article
      eighty-one of the mental hygiene law, committee of the  property  of  an
      incompetent person, and conservator of the property of a conservatee;
        (2) the term "trust" includes any fiduciary entity with property owned
      by a trustee as defined in this section;
        (3) the term "governing instrument" includes a court order; and
        (4)  the  term  "portfolio"  includes  all  property of every kind and
      character held by a trustee as defined in this section.