Current through Register Vol. 49, No. 18, September 16, 2024
PURPOSE: By virtue of section 403 of the Depository
Institutions Deregulation and Monetary Control Act of 1980, federal savings and
loan associations were granted general trust powers. This regulation allows
state-chartered savings and loan associations to engage in general trust powers
in parity with federal savings and loan associations and also prescribes
procedures for the acquisition, exercise and termination of trust powers for
state-chartered associations.
(1) As used in this regulation, unless the
context clearly requires otherwise, the following terms shall have the meanings
prescribed:
(A) Account means the trust,
estate or other fiduciary relationship which has been established with an
association;
(B) Fiduciary means an
association undertaking to act alone, or jointly with others, primarily for the
benefit of another in all matters connected with its undertaking and includes
trustee, executor, administrator, guardian, receiver, managing agent, registrar
of stocks and bonds, escrow, transfer or paying agent, trustee of employee
pension, welfare and profit-sharing trusts and any other similar
capacity;
(C) Fiduciary records
means all matters which are written, transcribed, recorded, received or
otherwise come into the possession of an association and are necessary to
preserve information concerning the actions and events relevant to the
fiduciary activities of an association;
(D) Guardian means the guardian, conservator
or committee, by whatever name employed by local law, of the estate of an
infant or an individual over whose estate a court has taken jurisdiction, other
than under bankruptcy or insolvency laws;
(E) Investment authority means the
responsibility conferred by action of law or a provision of an appropriate
governing instrument to make, select or change investments, review investment
decisions made by others or to provide investment advice or counsel to
others;
(F) Local law means the law
of Missouri or other jurisdiction governing the fiduciary
relationship;
(G) Managing agent
means the fiduciary relationship assumed by an association upon the creation of
an account which names the association as agent and confers investment
discretion upon the association;
(H) State-chartered corporate fiduciary means
any bank or corporation or other legal entity authorized to exercise trust
powers pursuant to Chapter 362, RSMo;
(I) Trust department means that group or
groups of officers and employees of an association to whom are assigned the
performance of fiduciary services by the association; and
(J) Trust powers means the power to act in
any fiduciary capacity authorized to federal associations by section 403 of the
Depository Institutions Deregulation and Monetary Control Act of 1980, P.L. No.
96-221, 94 Stat. 132, 12 U.S.C. section 1464(n). Powers under that Act include
the authority to Act as trustee, executor, administrator, guardian, receiver,
managing agent, registrar of stocks and bonds, escrow, transfer and paying
agent, trustee of employee pension, welfare and profit-sharing trusts or in
other fiduciary capacity which state-chartered corporate fiduciaries exercise
under local law.
(2)
Trust Powers.
(A) An association may exercise
trust powers through a trust department provided the director first approves an
application which indicates which trust services it wishes to offer and
provides information which the director deems necessary to make determinations
under subsection (2)(B).
(B) In
addition to any other facts or circumstances deemed proper, the director, in
passing upon an application to exercise trust powers, will give consideration
to the following:
1. The financial condition
of the association;
2. The need for
fiduciary services in the communities served by the association and the
probable volume of such fiduciary business available to the
association;
3. The general
character and ability of the management of the association;
4. The nature of the supervision to be given
to the fiduciary activities, including the qualifications, experience and
character of the proposed officer or officers of the trust department;
and
5. Whether the association has
available legal counsel to advise and pass upon fiduciary matters whenever
necessary.
(3) Consolidation or Merger of Two (2) or
More Associations. Where two (2) or more associations consolidate or merge, and
any one (1) of such associations, prior to such consolidation or merger, has
received a permit from the director to exercise trust powers which permit is in
force at the time of the consolidation or merger, the rights existing under
such permit pass to the resulting association, and the resulting association
may exercise such trust powers in the same manner and to the same extent as the
association to which such permit was originally issued; and no new application
to continue to exercise such powers is necessary. However, when the name or
charter number of the resulting association differs from that of the
association to which the right to exercise trust powers was originally granted,
the director will issue a certificate to that association showing its right to
exercise the trust powers theretofore granted to any of the associations
participating in the consolidation or merger.
(4) Administration of Trust Powers.
(A) Sets forth-
1. Responsibility of the board of directors.
The board of directors is responsible for the proper exercise of fiduciary
powers by the association. All matters pertinent thereto, including the
determination of policies, the investment and disposition of property held in a
fiduciary capacity and the direction and review of the actions of all officers,
employees and committees utilized by the association in the exercise of its
fiduciary powers, are the responsibility of the board. In discharging this
responsibility, the board of directors may assign, by action duly entered in
the minutes, the administration of such of the association's trust powers as it
may consider proper to assign to such director(s), officer(s), employee(s) or
committee(s) as it may designate; and
2. Administration of accounts. No fiduciary
account shall be accepted without the prior approval of the board or of the
director(s), officer(s) or committee(s) to whom the board may have assigned the
performance of that responsibility. A written record shall be made of such
acceptances and of the relinquishment or closing out of all fiduciary accounts.
Upon the acceptance of an account for which the association has investment
responsibilities, a prompt review of the assets shall be made. The board shall
also ensure that at least once during every calendar year thereafter, and
within fifteen (15) months of the last review, all of the assets held in or
held for each fiduciary account for which the association has investment
responsibilities are reviewed to determine the advisability of retaining or
disposing of such assets. The board of directors should act to ensure that all
investments have been made in accordance with the terms and purposes of the
governing instrument.
(B) Use of Other Association Personnel. The
trust department may utilize personnel and facilities of other departments of
the association, and other departments of the association may utilize personnel
and facilities of the trust department only to the extent not prohibited by
law.
(C) Compliance with Federal
and State Securities Laws. Every association exercising trust powers shall
adopt written policies and procedures to ensure that federal and state
securities laws are complied with in connection with any decision or
recommendation to purchase or sell any security. Such policies and procedures,
in particular, shall ensure that the association's trust departments shall not
use material inside information in connection with any decision or
recommendation to purchase or sell any security.
(D) Legal Counsel. Every association
exercising fiduciary powers shall designate, employ or retain legal counsel who
shall be readily available to pass upon fiduciary matters and to advise the
association and its trust department.
(E) Bonding. In addition to the minimum bond
coverage required by section
369.114,
RSMo, directors, officers and employees of an association engaged in the
operation of a trust department shall acquire such additional bond coverage as
the director may require.
(5) Books and Accounts.
(A) General. Every association exercising
trust powers shall keep its fiduciary records separate and distinct from other
records of the association. All fiduciary records shall be so kept and retained
for such time as to enable the association to furnish such information or
reports with respect thereto as may be required by the director. The fiduciary
records shall contain full information relative to each account.
(B) Record of Pending Litigation. Every
association shall keep an adequate record of all pending litigation to which it
is a party in connection with its exercise of trust powers.
(6) Audit of Trust Department. At
least once during each calendar year, the association's trust department shall
be audited in a manner consistent with section
369.334,
RSMo. A copy of the report of the audit shall be filed promptly with the
director. Trust department audits may be made as a part of the annual audits
required by section
369.334,
RSMo.
(7) Funds Awaiting Investment
or Distribution.
(A) General. Funds held in a
fiduciary capacity by an association awaiting investment or distribution shall
not be held uninvested or undistributed any longer than is reasonable for the
proper management of the account.
(B) Use by Association in Regular Business.
1. Funds held in trust by an association,
including managing agency accounts, awaiting investment or distribution may,
unless prohibited by the instrument creating the trust or by local law, be
deposited in other departments of the association, provided that the
association shall first set aside under control of the trust department as
collateral security-
A. Direct obligations of
the United States or other obligations fully guaranteed by the United States as
to principal and interest;
B.
Readily marketable securities of the classes in which state chartered corporate
fiduciaries are authorized or permitted to invest trust funds under the laws of
this state; or
C. Other readily
marketable securities as the director may determine.
2. Collateral securities or securities
substituted therefore as collateral shall at all times be at least equal in
face value to the amount of trust funds so deposited, but such security shall
not be required to the extent that the funds so deposited are insured by the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
3. Any funds held by an association as
fiduciary awaiting investment or distribution and deposited in other
departments of the association shall be made productive.
(8) Investment of Funds Held as
Fiduciary.
(A) Private Trusts. Funds held by
an association in a fiduciary capacity shall be invested in accordance with the
instrument establishing the fiduciary relationship and local law. When such
instrument does not specify the character or class of investments to be made
and does not vest in the association, its directors, or its officers investment
discretion in the matter, funds held pursuant to such instrument shall be
invested in any investment in which state chartered corporate fiduciaries may
invest under local law.
(B) Court
Trusts. An association acting as fiduciary under appointment by a court must
make all investments of funds of such accounts under an order of that court,
except where greater discretion in investments is permitted by the laws of this
state or by the order of that court. Such orders in either case shall be
preserved with the fiduciary records of the association.
(C) Collective Investment of Trust Funds. The
collective investment of funds received or held by an association as fiduciary
is governed by section (12) of this regulation.
(9) Self-Dealing.
(A) Purchase of Obligations, etc., from
Association. Unless lawfully authorized by the instrument creating the
relationship or by court order or local law, funds held by an association as
fiduciary shall not be invested in obligations of, or property acquired from,
the association or its directors, officers or employees or individuals with
whom there exists such an interest, as might affect the exercise of the best
judgment of the association in acquiring the property, or in stock or
obligations of, or property acquired from, affiliates of the association or
their directors, officers or employees.
(B) Sale or Transfer of Trust Assets to
Association. Property held by such an association as fiduciary shall not be
sold or transferred, by loan or otherwise, to the association or its directors,
officers or employees, or to individuals with whom there exists such a
connection, or organizations in which there exists such an interest, as might
affect the exercise of the best judgment of the association in selling or
transferring such property, or to affiliates of the association or their
directors, officers or employees, except-
1.
When lawfully authorized by the instrument creating the relationship or by
court order or by local law;
2. In
cases in which the association has been advised by its counsel in writing that
it has incurred as fiduciary a contingent or potential liability and desires to
relieve itself from such liability, in which case such a sale or transfer may
be made with the approval of the board of directors and the director, provided
that in all such cases the association, upon the consummation of the sale or
transfer, shall make reimbursement in cash at no loss to the account;
3. As provided in the laws and regulations
governing collective investments; and/or
4. When required by the director.
(C) Transactions Between Accounts.
1. An association may sell assets held by it
as fiduciary in one (1) account to itself as fiduciary in another account if
the transaction is fair to both accounts and if such transaction is not
prohibited by the terms of any governing instrument or by local law.
2. An association may make a loan to an
account from the funds belonging to another such account, when the making of
such loans to a designated account is authorized by the instrument creating the
account from which such loans are made, and is not prohibited by local law and
the terms of the transaction are fair to all accounts.
3. An association may make a loan to an
account and may take as security therefor assets of the account, provided such
transaction is fair to such account and is not prohibited by local
law.
(D) Investment in
Stock of Association. Except as provided in subsection (7)(B) of this
regulation, funds held by an association as fiduciary shall not be invested by
the purchase of stock or obligations of the association or its affiliates
unless authorized by the instrument creating the relationship or by court
order, provided, that if the retention of stock or obligations of the
association or its affiliates is authorized by the instrument creating the
relationship or by court order, it may exercise rights to purchase its own
stock or securities convertible into its own stock when offered pro
rata to stockholders. When the exercise of rights or receipt of a
stock dividend results in fractional share holdings, additional fractional
shares may be purchased to complement the fractional shares so acquired. In
elections of directors, an association's share held by the association as sole
trustee, whether in its own name as trustee or in the name of its nominee, may
not be voted by the registered owner unless, under the terms of the trust, the
manner in which such shares shall be voted may be determined by a donor or
beneficiary of the trust and the donor or beneficiary actually directs how the
shares will be voted.
(10) Custody of Investments.
(A) Segregation of Trust Assets and Joint
Custody. The investments of each account shall be kept separate from the assets
of the association, shall be placed in the joint custody or control of not
fewer than two (2) of the officers or employees of the association designated
for that purpose either by the board of directors of the association or by one
(1) or more officers designated by the board of directors of the association,
and all such officers and employees shall be adequately bonded. To the extent
permitted by law, an association may permit the investments of a fiduciary
account to be deposited elsewhere.
(B) Segregation of Accounts. The investments
of each account shall be either-
1. Kept
separate from those of all accounts, except as provided in section (12) of this
regulation; or
2. Adequately
identified as the property of the relevant accounts.
(11) Compensation of Association.
(A) General. If the amount of the
compensation for acting in a fiduciary capacity is not provided for in the
instrument creating the fidicuary relationship or otherwise agreed to by the
parties, an association acting in such capacity may charge or deduct a
reasonable compensation for its services. When the association is acting in a
fiduciary capacity under appointment by a court, it shall receive such
compensation as may be allowed or approved by that court.
(B) Officer or Employee of Association as
Co-Fiduciary. No association shall permit, except with the specific approval of
its board of directors, any of its officers or employees, while serving as
such, to retain any compensation for acting as a co-fiduciary with the
association in the administration of any account undertaken by it.
(C) Bequests or Gifts to Trust Officers and
Employees. No association shall permit an officer or employee engaged in the
operation of its trust department to accept a bequest or gift of trust assets
unless the bequest or gift is directed or made by a relative or is approved by
the board of directors of the association.
(12) Collective Investment. Funds held by an
association as fiduciary may be held in-
(A)
A common trust fund maintained by the association exclusively for the
collective investment and reinvestment of moneys contributed thereto by the
association in its capacity as trustee, executor, administrator, guardian or
custodian under the Uniform Gifts to Minors Law, Chapter 404, RSMo;
or
(B) A fund consisting solely of
assets of retirement, pension, profit sharing, stock bonus or other trusts
which are exempt from federal income taxation under the Internal
Revenue Code.
(13) Surrender of Trust Powers.
(A) Any association which has been granted
the right to exercise trust powers and which desires to surrender such rights
shall file with the director a certified copy of the resolution of its board of
directors signifying such desire.
(B) Upon receipt of such resolution, the
director shall make an investigation and if it is satisfied that the
association has been discharged from all fiduciary duties which it has
undertaken, it shall issue a certificate to such association certifying that is
it is no longer authorized to exercise fiduciary powers.
(C) Upon issuance of such a certificate by
the director, an association shall no longer be subject to the provisions of
these regulations, and shall not exercise thereafter any of the powers granted
by these regulations without first applying for and obtaining new authorization
to exercise such powers.
(14) Effect on Trust Accounts in Event of
Takeover of Association by Director.
(A)
Takeover of Association by Director. Whenever the director, pursuant to
sections
369.339
and
369.344,
RSMo, takes over an association s/he, pursuant to the order of the circuit
court of the county in which the principal office of the association is
located, shall proceed to close such of the association's trust accounts as can
be closed promptly and transfer all other such accounts to substitute
fiduciaries.
(B) Voluntary
Dissolution. Whenever an association exercising trust powers is placed in
voluntary dissolution, the director shall, pursuant to Chapter 369, RSMo,
proceed at once to liquidate the affairs of the trust department as follows;
1. All trusts and estates over which a court
is exercising jurisdiction shall be closed or disposed of as soon as
practicable in accordance with the order or instructions of such court;
and
2. All other accounts which can
be closed promptly shall be closed as soon as practicable and final accounting
made therefor, and all remaining accounts shall be transferred by appropriate
legal proceedings to substitute fiduciaries.
(15) Revocation of Trust Powers.
(A) In addition to the other sanctions
available, if, in the opinion of the director, an association is unlawfully or
unsoundly exercising, has unlawfully or unsoundly exercised, or has failed to
exercise for a period of five (5) consecutive years, the powers granted by this
regulation or otherwise fails or has failed to comply with the requirements of
this rule, the director may issue and serve upon the association a notice of
intent to revoke the authority of the association to exercise the powers
granted by this regulation. The notice shall contain a statement of the facts
constituting the alleged unlawful or unsound exercise of powers, failure to
exercise powers or failure to comply and shall fix a time and place at which a
hearing will be held to determine whether an order revoking authority to
exercise such powers should issue against the association.
(B) Such hearing shall be conducted in
accordance with the provisions of 4 CSR 140-18.010 and shall be fixed for a
date not earlier than thirty (30) days and not later than sixty (60) days after
service of such notice unless an earlier or later date is set by the director
at the request of an association so served.
(C) Unless the association so served shall
appear at the hearing by a duly authorized representative, it shall be deemed
to have consented to the issuance of the revocation order. In the event of such
consent or if, upon the record made at any such hearing, the director shall
find that any allegation specified in the notice of charges has been
established, the director may issue and serve upon the association an order
prohibiting it from accepting any new or additional trust accounts and revoking
authority to exercise any and all powers granted by this regulation except that
such order shall permit the association to continue to service all previously
accepted trust accounts pending their expeditious divestiture or
termination.
(D) A revocation order
shall become effective not earlier than the expiration of thirty (30) days
after service of such order upon the association so served (except in the case
of a revocation order issued upon consent, which shall become effective at the
time specified therein), and shall remain effective and enforceable, except to
such extent as it is stayed, modified, terminated or set aside by action of the
director or the Missouri Savings and Loan Commission or reviewing
court.
*Original authority: 369.144, RSMo 1971, amended 1982,
1983, 1984, 1989, 1994 and 369.299, RSMo 1971, amended
1994.