Put your trust in trustees.CPAs should be aware of important changes in trustee accountability. The Uniform Laws Commission (see Exhibit 1) has introduced two new model statutes that change the statutory responsibilities of trustees and fiduciaries. The first is the Uniform Prudent Investor Act, which 36 states have enacted into lava and others are currently considering. (See exhibit 1) The second, a new Uniform Principal and Income Act The Uniform Principal And Income Act (UPAIA) is one of the uniform acts that has been promulgated in attempts to harmonize the law in all fifty U.S. states. It was completed by the Uniform Law Commissioners in 1997, and amended in 2000. , was approved by the commission on July 31, 1997 (UPIA-97). Several states already are considering adopting it. [TABULAR tab·u·lar adj. 1. Having a plane surface; flat. 2. Organized as a table or list. 3. Calculated by means of a table. tabular resembling a table. DATA NOT REPRODUCIBLE IN ASCII ASCII or American Standard Code for Information Interchange, a set of codes used to represent letters, numbers, a few symbols, and control characters. Originally designed for teletype operations, it has found wide application in computers. ] The Uniform Prudent Investor Act raises the standard of care for trustees and other fiduciaries by requiring them to incorporate modern portfolio theory Modern portfolio theory Principals underlying the analysis and evaluation of rational portfolio choices based on risk return trade-offs and efficient diversification. modern portfolio theory See portfolio theory. into their investment management strategies. UPIA-97 "unlinks" a trustee's investment strategy from its traditional impact on allocating principal and income. A trustee subject to the Uniform Prudent Investor Act, for example, might shift some trust investments out of the stock market during times of high volatility and invest the proceeds in bonds. While this would increase interest income, UPIA-97 allows the trustee to reallocate Verb 1. reallocate - allocate, distribute, or apportion anew; "Congressional seats are reapportioned on the basis of census data" reapportion allocate, apportion - distribute according to a plan or set apart for a special purpose; "I am allocating a loaf of some of that income to principal beneficiaries so income beneficiaries Income beneficiary One who receives income from a trust. do not enjoy a windfall windfall An unexpected profit or gain. An investor holding a stock that increases greatly in price because of an unexpected takeover offer receives a windfall. triggered solely by the trustee's compliance with the Uniform Prudent Investor Act. From the CPA's perspective, both laws have some important features, which are discussed here. CPAs themselves occasionally serve as executors and trustees, but even more frequently they provide tax, accounting and investment advice to clients who are acting as executors and trustees. CPAs can play an important role in helping clients understand and properly respond to the changes these laws have made. And still more CPAs have clients who are the beneficiaries of trusts or estates where a knowledge of these laws may prove helpful in preparing personal tax returns or doing investment planning. PRUDENT INVESTOR RULE In the past, trustees were concerned about a trust's accounting income, on one hand, and the avoidance of capital losses on the other. When trustees' investment activities were challenged by beneficiaries, those trustees traditionally were held accountable by the courts on an asset-by-asset basis. A trust's accounting income included dividend, interest and the like. Stock splits, capital gains and losses and other capital transactions were stated separately and accounted for as part of principal rather than income. The prudent investor rule--as implemented by the Uniform Prudent Investor Act--changes this protocol dramatically. Trustees now are accountable for a trust's overall performance; less consideration is given to how a specific asset performs. Net capital gains are part of the total performance return. For these reasons, the reporting needs of trustees under the Uniform Prudent Investor Act include measuring overall portfolio performance, inclusive of inclusive of prep. Taking into consideration or account; including. traditional accounting income plus net capital gains. Approved by the Uniform Laws Commission in 1994, the Uniform Prudent Investor Act also requires fiduciaries to adopt the "modern portfolio theory" concept of investment practices. Included in the prudent investor rule of the American Law Institute's 1992 Restatement Restatement A revision in a company's earlier financial statements. Notes: The need for restating financial figures can result from fraud, misrepresentation, or a simple clerical error. (Third) of Trusts [sections] 227, that concept allows for substance to rule over form in managing--and accounting for--estates and trusts. This means that in determining whether a fiduciary has met his or her duty of prudence, a beneficiary, for example, should examine the overall investment performance of the total portfolio of trust assets, not just that of specific assets. Investments should be viewed in the context of the entire portfolio, not as individual, isolated units for which the trustee is separately liable. While the rules provide trustees with some relief on individual investments, trustees are held to a higher standard in the factors and variables they must consider when making investment decisions. For example, a trustee must take into account economic conditions (including inflation and deflation deflation: see inflation. deflation Contraction in the volume of available money or credit that results in a general decline in prices. A less extreme condition is known as disinflation. ), tax consequences, the role each investment plays in the beneficiary's overall portfolio strategy, the anticipated income and capital return, liquidity and cash flow needs and the diversity of investments for risk management purposes. So, while a trustee is not necessarily in breach of the prudent investor rule if a particular investment performs poorly, he or she must be able to show how each investment meets specific risk and return objectives. UPIA-97 AND ITS PREDECESSORS In 1931, the Uniform Laws Commission approved its first Uniform Principal and income Act (UPIA-31). Originally enacted by 24 states--and still in effect in 7 of them, UPIA-31 was intended to help trustees resolve difficult technical questions that arose during the discharge of their fiduciary duties Noun 1. fiduciary duty - the legal duty of a fiduciary to act in the best interests of the beneficiary legal duty - acts which the law requires be done or forborne and to help them make decisions. The 1931 act also was intended to resolve many of the conflicting opinions about fiduciary accounting matters in the courts of various jurisdictions. As the use of trusts increased in the years after 1931--due in part to increased uniformity after UPIA-31 was enacted--the problems of allocating sums between principal and income became more acute. As business practices, corporate structures and economic conditions changed after World War II, parts of UPIA-31 began to appear inadequate. In response, a committee of the Uniform Laws Commission revised the 1931 law, resulting in the Revised Uniform Principal and Income Act (RUPIA-62), which was completed in 1962; 36 states have enacted some version of it. Its primary objective was to give more weight to the expressed intent of the settlor One who establishes a trust—a right of property, real or personal—held and administered by a trustee for the benefit of another. settlor n. (or grantor An individual who conveys or transfers ownership of property. In real property law, an individual who sells land is known as the grantor. grantor n. ) of a trust. RUPIA-62 also resolved some issues of allocation among trust beneficiaries, with an eye to administrative convenience. Years of change. Since 1962, the business of trust management has continued to change for all concerned, including CPAs. More sophisticated investment vehicles--including derivatives, options and asset-backed securities--have become available. This, in turn, influenced the prudent investor rule and the Uniform Prudent Investor Act described above. The use of revocable rev·o·ca·ble also re·vok·a·ble adj. That can be revoked: a revocable order; a revocable vote. Adj. 1. living trusts by U.S. taxpayers also increased dramatically, prompted in part by the Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981 and the tax laws that followed. Other changes affected the use of trusts, including the enactment of superfund legislation that affects trust investments in real estate, more widespread use of S corporations and limited liability companies and the increased use of buy-sell agreements buy-sell agreement n. a contract among the owners of a business which provides terms for their purchase of a withdrawing partner's or stockholder's interest in the enterprise. , including agreements funded by life insurance and the consequential con·se·quen·tial adj. 1. Following as an effect, result, or conclusion; consequent. 2. Having important consequences; significant: purchase of business interests by a trustee. In the last 36 years, the Years, The the seven decades of Eleanor Pargiter’s life. [Br. Lit.: Benét, 1109] See : Time tax laws have become more complicated and the interrelationships among fiduciary income taxation (including the tax elections a trustee must make), estate taxation and fiduciary accounting have become more intricate. Responding to change. UPIA-97 represents an effort by the Uniform Laws Commission to update state laws. The primary change in UPIA-97 is its coordination with the Uniform Prudent Investor Act and the modern portfolio approach to investment management. At the outset, UPIA-97 retains a traditional approach to allocating principal and income, providing CPAs with definitions for each that reflect the fiduciary accounting theories of the earlier uniform statutes. Trustees who find the effect of using a modern portfolio theory approach on income and principal somewhat skewed skewed curve of a usually unimodal distribution with one tail drawn out more than the other and the median will lie above or below the mean. skewed Epidemiology adjective Referring to an asymmetrical distribution of a population or of data may reallocate the portfolio return so both income and principal beneficiaries are treated fairly. This is a significant change. Under UPIA-31 and RUPIA-62, the nature of receipts determined the rights of income and principal beneficiaries to those receipts. Capital gains, for example, were typically allocated to principal and ordinary dividends, to income. Under modern portfolio theory, however, an investment's total return--yield plus growth over time--is more important than the respective yield-growth components. However, fiduciaries and their CPAs guided by UPIA-31 and RUPIA-62 were unable to maximize overall investment performance by adopting a modern portfolio theory investment strategy because of the old statutory requirement to balance a portfolio between income-oriented investments (for the sake of income beneficiaries) and growth-oriented investments (for the sake of principal beneficiaries). The result? Hampering of the aggregate return of trust investments. For example, fiduciaries did not have the flexibility to move large blocks of trust assets back and forth between equity investments (during stock market upsurges) and income-oriented investments (during times of rising interest rates). UPIA-97 grants fiduciaries the power and discretion to reallocate investment returns to income and principal, irrespective of irrespective of prep. Without consideration of; regardless of. irrespective of preposition despite whether that return was derived primarily from capital gains, ordinary dividends or interest. The goal of this provision is to allow fiduciaries to make aggregate investment decisions that maximize overall return and then to reallocate that return among principal and income beneficiaries in a reasonable manner. Exhibit 2, shows some of the other significant changes UPIA-97 makes. For example, the act draws a distinction between sole proprietorships A form of business in which one person owns all the assets of the business, in contrast to a partnership or a corporation. A person who does business for himself is engaged in the operation of a sole proprietorship. and other unincorporated Adj. 1. unincorporated - not organized and maintained as a legal corporation unorganised, unorganized - not having or belonging to a structured whole; "unorganized territories lack a formal government" businesses. For sole proprietorships, the new rules discard RUPIA-62's concept of "cashing out" book income. Instead, the fiduciary is allowed to determine a business's cash flow needs and to distribute only the excess cash to income beneficiaries. Corporations, partnerships, limited liability companies, regulated investment companies Regulated investment company An investment company allowed to pass capital gains, dividends, and interest earned on fund investments directly to its shareholders so that it is taxed only at the personal level, and double taxation is avoided. , real estate investment trusts and other estates or trusts can--under UPIA-97--use a cost method approach. Only distributions from such entities are recorded as income. Exhibit 2: Comparison of Uniform Principal and Income Acts
UPIA-31
Role of will or trust instrument Overrides statute
Impact of accounting rules in Overrides statute
will or trust instrument
Reallocation of principal and income Not authorized
per Uniform Prudent Investor Act
Rights to income beneficiaries All business income
to business income "cashed out" to income
beneficiaries
Depreciation on assets Not authorized
RUPIA-62
Role of will or trust instrument Overrides statute
Impact of accounting rules in Overrides statute
will or trust instrument
Reallocation of principal and income Not authorized
per Uniform Prudent Investor Act
Rights to income beneficiaries All business income
to business income "cashed out" to income
beneficiaries
Depreciation on assets Mandatory
UPIA-97
Role of will or trust instrument Overrides statute
Impact of accounting rules in Overrides statute
will or trust instrument
Reallocation of principal and income Authorized
per Uniform Prudent Investor Act
Rights to income beneficiaries Distribution limited by
to business income trustee's decision to
retain working capital
Depreciation on assets At the discretion of the
trustee
HOW IT ALL WORKS The following examples reflect the changes UPIA-97 and the Uniform Prudent Investor Act brought about. Example 1. Allen is the trustee of a trust that provides income to the settlor's surviving spouse for life, with the remainder to the settlor's children. Allen received a portfolio of investments from the settlor comprising 95% bonds and certificates of deposit and 5% stocks. Under UPIA-31 and RUPIA-62, Allen would account for interest and dividends as income and capital gains as principal. Under UPIA-97, however, Allen would consider whether to allocate a portion of the interest income to principal as a return of capital. In making this determination, Allen would consider the loss of principal value due to inflation and other factors. Example 2. Assume the same facts as in example 1 except trustee Allen decides to balance the trust portfolio by liquidating some of the bonds and CDs and investing the proceeds in a combination of stocks, growth mutual funds and equity mutual funds. While this results in greater diversification and more growth in the portfolio's value over time, it also reduces the overall yield of dividends and interest. Under UPIA-31 and RUPIA-62, Allen's CPA (Computer Press Association, Landing, NJ) An earlier membership organization founded in 1983 that promoted excellence in computer journalism. Its annual awards honored outstanding examples in print, broadcast and electronic media. The CPA disbanded in 2000. would continue account for interest and dividends as income and capital gains (including capital gain dividends) as principal. Under UPIA-97, however, Allen would consider whether to instruct in·struct v. in·struct·ed, in·struct·ing, in·structs v.tr. 1. To provide with knowledge, especially in a methodical way. See Synonyms at teach. 2. To give orders to; direct. v. his CPA to allocate to income a portion of the capital gains realized by stocks and stock mutual fund investments. In deciding whether and to what extent to make allocations between principal and income, trustees, according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. section 104(b) of UPIA-97, must consider the * Nature, purpose and expected duration of the trust. * Intent of the settlor. * Identity and circumstances of the beneficiaries. * Need for liquidity, regularity of income and preservation and appreciation of capital. * Assets held in the trust; the extent to which they consist of financial assets Financial assets Claims on real assets. , interests in closely held A phrase used to describe the ownership, management, and operation of a corporation by a small group of people. In a closely held corporation, the same people often act as shareholders, directors, and officers, and no outside investors exist. 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. * Net amount allocated to income under other sections of the act and the increase or decrease in the value of the principal assets, which the trustee may estimate for assets without readily available market values. * Extent--if any--to which the terms of the trust give the trustee the power to invade in·vade v. in·vad·ed, in·vad·ing, in·vades v.tr. 1. To enter by force in order to conquer or pillage. 2. principal or accumulate income or prohibit pro·hib·it tr.v. pro·hib·it·ed, pro·hib·it·ing, pro·hib·its 1. To forbid by authority: Smoking is prohibited in most theaters. See Synonyms at forbid. 2. the trustee from invading in·vade v. in·vad·ed, in·vad·ing, in·vades v.tr. 1. To enter by force in order to conquer or pillage. 2. 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. * Actual and anticipated effect of economic conditions on principal and income and the effects of inflation and deflation. * Anticipated tax consequences of an adjustment. UPIA-97 specifically prohibits a trustee from making any adjustment * That diminishes the income interest in a trust requiring all income to be paid at least annually to a spouse and for which an estate tax or gift tax marital deduction marital deduction n. when one spouse dies, the survivor may take a tax deduction of half of the value of the estate of the dying spouse. Thus, the minimum value of the estate before there is a possible federal estate tax rises from $600,000 to $1,200,000 at the death would be allowed, in whole or in part, if the trustee did not have the power to make the adjustment. * That reduces the actuarial ac·tu·ar·y n. pl. ac·tu·ar·ies A statistician who computes insurance risks and premiums. [Latin value of the income interest in a trust to which a person transfers property with the intent to qualify for a gift tax exclusion. * That changes the amount payable to a beneficiary as a fixed annuity Fixed Annuity An insurance contract in which the insurance company makes fixed dollar payments to the annuitant for the term of the contract, usually until the annuitant dies. The insurance company guarantees both earnings and principal. or a fixed fraction of the value of the trust assets. * From any amount permanently set aside for charitable purposes under a will or the terms of a trust unless both income and principal are set aside. * 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. * 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 if the trustee did not have the power to make an adjustment. * If the trustee is a beneficiary of the trust. * If the trustee is not a beneficiary but the adjustment would benefit the trustee directly or indirectly. PRIMACY pri·ma·cy n. pl. pri·ma·cies 1. The state of being first or foremost. 2. Ecclesiastical The office, rank, or province of primate. OF THE DOCUMENT Despite the changes UPIA-97 promulgated prom·ul·gate tr.v. prom·ul·gat·ed, prom·ul·gat·ing, prom·ul·gates 1. To make known (a decree, for example) by public declaration; announce officially. See Synonyms at announce. 2. , one concept has not changed: the primacy of the written instrument. The statute retains the predominance pre·dom·i·nance also pre·dom·i·nan·cy n. The state or quality of being predominant; preponderance. Noun 1. predominance - the state of being predominant over others predomination, prepotency of the trust document or will in prescribing accounting methods that are inconsistent with the statute, providing that "a fiduciary ... shall administer a trust or estate in accordance with the terms of the trust or the will, even if there is a different provision in this [act]." Each testator One who makes or has made a will; one who dies leaving a will. A testator is a person who makes a valid will. A will is the document through which a deceased person disposes of his property. A person who dies without having made a will is said to have died intestate. or settlor is therefore granted the power to override An arrangement whereby commissions are made by sales managers based upon the sales made by their subordinate sales representatives. A term found in an agreement between a real estate agent and a property owner whereby the agent keeps the right to receive a commission for the sale of any or all of the accounting rules the Uniform Law Commission developed. UPIA-97 also retains the power of the testator or settlor to grant discretion to her or his trustee in adopting accounting periods and methods, providing that a fiduciary "may administer a trust or estate by the exercise of a discretionary power of administration given the fiduciary by the terms of the trust or the will even if the fiduciary exercises that power in a manner different from a provision of this [act]." Many, if not most, trust documents include this type of discretion in the list of trustee powers. Settlors always have had the right to override statutory principal and income provisions by prescribing specific accounting and allocation methods. For example, under UPIA-31 settlors sometimes called for a charge to depreciation against rental income Noun 1. rental income - income received from rental properties income - the financial gain (earned or unearned) accruing over a given period of time , so a depreciation reserve--to be used for major repairs and improvements--is accumulated on behalf of the principal beneficiary. On the other hand, under RUPIA-62, settlors sometimes proscribed PROSCRIBED, civil law. Among the Romans, a man was said to be proscribed when a reward was offered for his head; but the term was more usually applied to those who were sentenced to some punishment which carried with it the consequences of civil death. Code, 9; 49. depreciation, so most of the net cash flow from rental property is distributed to the income beneficiaries. UPIA-97 does not change the settlor's ability to customize the document in an effort to preempt pre·empt or pre-empt v. pre·empt·ed, pre·empt·ing, pre·empts v.tr. 1. To appropriate, seize, or take for oneself before others. See Synonyms at appropriate. 2. a. state law. In jurisdictions that have enacted UPIA-97, settlors might--on the advice of their CPA--choose to override the statute and "reinstate To restore to a condition that has terminated or been lost; to reestablish. To reinstate a case, for example, means to restore it to the same position it had before dismissal. " traditional principal and income concepts. Example 3. Wanda wants income from specific assets--rental real estate property--to accrue To increase; to augment; to come to by way of increase; to be added as an increase, profit, or damage. Acquired; falling due; made or executed; matured; occurred; received; vested; was created; was incurred. to the benefit of a specific beneficiary--her surviving spouse, George. Under UPIA-97, Wanda's CPA recommends she limit the trustee's power to reallocate such income (that is, to treat a portion of the income as a return of capital) by denying the trustee the power to make an adjustment with regard to the net rental income from that property. Example 4. Morton chooses to simplify the management of the trust he creates by requiring that traditional income items, such as interest and ordinary dividends, be allocated to the income beneficiary and traditional principal items, such as capital gains, be allocated to the principal beneficiary. Under UPIA-97, Morton may deny the trustee the power of adjustment altogether. IMPACT ON FIDUCIARY TAXATION The statutes described here will affect the relationship between fiduciary accounting and fiduciary taxation in two ways: 1. Fiduciary accounting or book income (reported as accounting income on line 10 of schedule B on Form 1041, Fiduciary Tax Return) serves as a ceiling or limitation on distributable net income. With the trustee's power to make allocations (such as capital gains to income beneficiaries or interest income to principal beneficiaries) for fiduciary accounting purposes, it is likely the differences between book income and taxable income Under the federal tax law, gross income reduced by adjustments and allowable deductions. It is the income against which tax rates are applied to compute an individual or entity's tax liability. The essence of taxable income is the accrual of some gain, profit, or benefit to a taxpayer. will become more pronounced. This may require the trustee's CPA to produce more complex tax workpapers. 2. UPIA-97 allows the trustee to take into account tax costs tax costs n. a motion to contest a claim for court costs submitted by a prevailing party in a lawsuit. It is called a "Motion to Tax Costs" and asks the judge to deny or reduce claimed costs. and tax benefits when making allocations between beneficiaries. Before making such an allocation, a trustee will need tax impact information from his or her CPA, further increasing the CPA's involvement in trust management. HELPING IN NEW WAYS In addition to sometimes serving as trustees themselves, CPAs traditionally assist trustees with identifying and selecting accounting methods, producing fiduciary accounting statements for distribution to beneficiaries and preparing forms 1041 for fiduciary tax compliance purposes. In addition, more CPAs are also providing advice on selecting investments. (See exhibit 3, for a list of the traditional and expanded roles CPAs play in helping testators and settlors.) With the advent of the Uniform Prudent Investor Act and UPIA-97, CPAs may be called on to assist trustees in new ways and may be asked to produce fiduciary accounting information that helps users understand the trustees' compliance with these standards. Exhibit 3: Expanded Role of CPAs in Assisting Testators and Settlors Traditional Roles * Advice regarding the extent to which the trust document should override state law by prescribing specific accounting methods (and specific allocation of assets and income)in View of the client's goals, including * Whether the document should require that depreciation be charged against income from depreciable depreciable Of, relating to, or being a long-term tangible asset that is subject to depreciation. assets (and, if so, what methods should be used). * The extent to which capital gains, including capital gain dividends from mutual funds, should be allocated to principal. * The accounting methods to be used in accounting for business interests held by the trustee. * The extent to which part of the sales proceeds of nonproductive non·pro·duc·tive adj. 1. Not yielding or producing: nonproductive land. 2. Not engaged in the direct production of goods: nonproductive personnel. n. assets should be allocated to income beneficiaries. * Advice regarding the extent to which the trust document should override state law by granting the trustee discretion in adopting accounting methods and allocating principal and income. * Advice regarding the extent to which the document should require the trustee to put beneficiaries on notice as to the trustee's activities via the production and distribution of fiduciary accounting statements in compliance with the national fiduciary accounting standards. Expanded Role * Advice regarding whether the document should allow, prohibit or require the trustee to make allocations of income and principal for purposes of implementing * Advice regarding the extent to which the document the trustee from the trustee's noncompliance noncompliance failure of the owner to follow instructions, particularly in administering medication as prescribed; a cause of a less than expected response to treatment. noncompliance with the prudent investor rule. When clients have wills and trusts drafted or updated by their attorneys, they often ask their CPAs' advice. In this advisory role, CPAs traditionally help clients (and often clients' attorneys) prescribe pre·scribe v. To give directions, either orally or in writing, for the preparation and administration of a remedy to be used in the treatment of a disease. accounting methods, allocate assets to trusts and similar matters. (See exhibit 4, for the expanded role of CPAs in assisting trustees.) In jurisdictions where the new uniform acts Laws that are designed to be adopted generally by all the states so that the law in one jurisdiction is the same as in another jurisdiction. Uniform acts or laws are prepared and sponsored by the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws, whose members are are being legislated into law, CPAs also must be prepared to help settlors, testators and grantors decide whether to adopt the new approaches or to override the new laws New Laws: see Las Casas, Bartolomé de. with language in new or updated trusts that retains the traditional approach. For example, CPAs might suggest the trust document of a client whose estate consists primarily of a sole proprietorship provide that after his or her death the trustee can continue to use the same accounting methods--including depreciation--as were used before the client's death. Exhibit 4: Expanded Role of CPAs in Assisting Trustees Traditional Roles * Identifying and implementing accounting methods prescribed pre·scribe v. pre·scribed, pre·scrib·ing, pre·scribes v.tr. 1. To set down as a rule or guide; enjoin. See Synonyms at dictate. 2. To order the use of (a medicine or other treatment). by the trust document, such as * Whether depreciation should be charged against income from depreciable assets (and, if so, what methods should be used). * The extent to which capital gains, including capital gain dividends from mutual funds, should be allocated to principal. * The accounting methods to be used in accounting for business interests held by the trustee. * The extent to which part of the sales proceeds of nonproductive assets should be allocated to income beneficiaries. * Identifying and implementing: accounting methods to be used by the trustee in exercising the trustee's discretion as allowed by the document, including * The extent to which the trustee, in exercising such discretion, should elect to use the fiduciary accounting methods prescribed (when such discretion is lacking by state law. * The extent to which the trustee, in exercising such discretion, should document or disclose his or her election to use the fiduciary accounting methods other than those prescribed (when such discretion is lacking) by state law. * Assisting the trustee in deciding whether to produce and distribute fiduciary accosting statements in compliance with the national fiduciary accounting standards. * Preparing fiduciary accounting statements if the trustee decides to distribute them. * Preparing Form 1041, Fiduciary Income Tax Return, and, where required, other returns such as Form 706, Estate Tax Return. Expanded Roles * Assisting the trustee in understanding the concepts and relevance of modern portfolio theory in the management of, and accounting for, trust assets. * Assisting the trustee in documenting his or her compliance with the prudent investor rule. * Assisting the trustee in developing fiduciary accounting information that allows beneficiaries and other users to understand the trustee's elections and allocations in the implementation of the Uniform Prudent Investor Act and the UPIA-97. AN ADVISORY ROLE Exhibit 1 lists the version of the UPIA UPIA Uniform Principal and Income Act UPIA Unknown Phenomena Investigation Association UPIA United Press International Acquisition Corp. in effect in each state as this issue of the Journal goes to press. CPAs in all states who practice in tax, financial and estate planning Estate Planning The overall planning of a person's wealth, including the preparation of a will and the planning of taxes after the individual's death. Notes: Contrary to popular belief, estate planning involves much more than preparing a will, and it is not only for the or who work with trustees must familiarize themselves with the Uniform Prudent Investor Act. As states consider that act and begin to adopt UPIA-97, CPAs should become familiar with these provisions as well. These new statutes change the duties, and therefore the reporting needs, of trustees and the CPAs who advise them. They also expand the opportunities for CPAs to serve in an advisory role at the time clients are having trust documents drafted or updated. In particular, CPAs should carefully examine client trust documents in light of these new statutes. CPAs can then decide if the documents would be improved with the addition of detailed accounting and investment instructions. In this way, trustees would be guided by clients' wishes rather than by the trustees' interpretations of increasingly complex state laws. RELATED ARTICLE: EXECUTIVE SUMMARY THE UNIFORM LAWS COMMISSION INTRODUCED a new version of the Uniform Principal and Income Act in 1997. CPA, who often act as trustees themselves or more frequently advise clients who are trustees, should be familiar with the changes that will result from states' adoption of these laws. UPIA-97 WAS PRECEDED BY UPIA-31 AND RUPIA-62. Some states still follow these laws, These rules reflect the evolving use of trusts in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. and the increasing sophistication so·phis·ti·cate v. so·phis·ti·cat·ed, so·phis·ti·cat·ing, so·phis·ti·cates v.tr. 1. To cause to become less natural, especially to make less naive and more worldly. 2. of investment vehicles. UPIA-97 represents an effort to update state laws and coordinate them with the Uniform Prudent Investor Act and its modern portfolio approach to investments. UPIA-97 RETAINS A TRADITIONAL APPROACH to allocating principal and income. However, it allows trustees to reallocate portfolio returns so both income and principal beneficiaries are treated fairly. This represents a significant change from prior law. A WRITTEN WILL OR TRUST CAN STILL OVERRIDE statutory principal and income provisions by prescribing specific accounting and income allocation methods. This means a trustee can follow prior law even in states that have adopted UPIA-97. THE CHANGES BROUGHT ABOUT BY UPIA-97 mean there may be more opportunities for CPAs to assist trustees with identifying and selecting accounting methods, producing fiduciary accounting statements and preparing tax forms. Some CPAs also will provide advice on investment selection. Furthermore, the changes mean CPAs may be called on to produce information to help trustees comply with the new standards. RELATED ARTICLE: Uniform Laws Commission The National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws The National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws (NCCUSL) is a non-profit, unincorporated association in the United States that consists of commissioners appointed by each state and territory. , commonly known as the Uniform Laws Commission, is made up of more than 300 lawyers, judges and law professors appointed by the 50 states as well as the District of Columbia District of Columbia, federal district (2000 pop. 572,059, a 5.7% decrease in population since the 1990 census), 69 sq mi (179 sq km), on the east bank of the Potomac River, coextensive with the city of Washington, D.C. (the capital of the United States). , Puerto Rico Puerto Rico (pwār`tō rē`kō), island (2005 est. pop. 3,917,000), 3,508 sq mi (9,086 sq km), West Indies, c.1,000 mi (1,610 km) SE of Miami, Fla. and the U.S. Virgin Islands. The commission's charge is to draft proposals for uniform and model laws and work toward their enactment in state legislatures A state legislature may refer to a legislative branch or body of a political subdivision in a federal system. The following legislatures exist in the following political subdivisions: |
|
||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion