The Relationship of Unitholders INTER SE

Posted on May 31st, 2008 in Trust Funds | 4 Comments »

Unitholders cannot be characterized as partners. Actions done and decisions made by them through meetings can be regarded as the acts of owners of the rights constituted by the units. They are analogous to assents by beneficiaries of trusts.

Of course, as in companies, in order for actions to be taken by a large aggregate of individuals, meetings and rules for majority decisions are necessary. Voting rights simply are parts of the rights constituting units. Once the majority in a meeting is given the power to bind the minority, there emerges the tension between voting powers as property rights and the notion of fairness in the exercise of those powers. Read the rest of this entry »

Splitting Powers of Management in the Unit Trust continue…

Posted on May 28th, 2008 in Trust Funds | 6 Comments »

In respect of the manager, the following functions and duties are conferred explicitly or implicitly by the statutory provisions or trust deeds:

(1) Dealer in units.

One of the attractions of a unit trust is liquidity. The manager has since the early days of the unit trust been the provider of a ready market for the acquisition and disposal of units of schemes under its management. Under the Financial Services (Regulated Schemes) Regulations 1991, the manager must at all times during the dealing day be willing to issue units and be willing to redeem units. Similar provisions may also be found in trust deeds of non-authorized unit trusts. Read the rest of this entry »

The ‘No-Conflict’ Rule continue…

Posted on May 26th, 2008 in Trust Funds | 5 Comments »

There is no question that the distinction between this case and those cases where the retirement of trustees was with a view to purchase is a valid one. Implicit in this judgment is the recognition that there is no absolute rule against self-dealing. The willingness of his Lordship to look at the reality is consistent with the approach of the court in Holder and the recent application of the no-conflict rule in other contexts.

If the broader approach of Holder is adopted, it must be a question of fact whether a trustee in a unit trust can purchase. The court may take into account the fact the trustee does not participate in the decision to make the sale. Read the rest of this entry »

Position of the United Trust Trustee part 2

Posted on May 22nd, 2008 in Trust Funds | 5 Comments »

The power is to direct the investment of the capital in such investments as the testatrix’s son may from time to time direct. Upon the language of the power as a whole, in my judgment, provided he acts in good faith, [the son] is entitled to give directions to the trustees to realise any investments constituting the trust fund which they from time to time may hold. In my judgment, upon the language of the clause, the trustees are bound to comply with those directions save that they are to satisfy themselves, the shares not being shares in which there is a free and open market, that the price which they pay for them is a reasonable and proper price at the time they make the purchase. Read the rest of this entry »

Unit Trust Delegation Must Know part C & D

Posted on May 16th, 2008 in Trust Funds | 5 Comments »

C. Mandatory Delegation

This covers the situation where the unit trust deed directs the appointment of agents or delegates in certain circumstances and the trustee or the manager is given no discretion. In some offshore unit trusts, the appointment of a custodian or investment adviser in certain markets or abroad may be made mandatory by the trust deed. Sometimes, an investment adviser’s contract may have been entered into prior to units being offered to the public. Thus, a property manager may have been appointed for a property trust. It is also very common for advisers to be appointed for futures and options funds, country funds, and trusts of specialized sectors. Read the rest of this entry »

The Rights of a Unitholder in Underlying Assets (the first proposition) (A2)

Posted on May 11th, 2008 in Trust Funds | 6 Comments »

The question before the court was the liability of the trustee to income tax on the interest. The relevant tax legislation made no provision for the deduction of tax from payments of income out of trust estates. The trustee argued, relying on Baker, that the liability to tax of income received by trustees depended upon the position as regards liability of the beneficiary; that in this case the interest received was treated as capital as a matter of ordinary principles of accounting between trustees and income- beneficiaries; that the beneficiaries would never receive the interest as income and therefore no liability to tax was possible. It was held by the Scottish Court of Session that on construction of the statute the interest was income and the trustees were the persons receiving or entitled to the income. Read the rest of this entry »

The Rights of a Unitholder in Underlying Assets (the first proposition) (A1)

Posted on May 11th, 2008 in Trust Funds | 6 Comments »

On the question of the rights of unitholders in the underlying assets of the trust fund, there are two strands of authorities that may be relevant to our understanding. In the first place, as the vast body of trust law is derived from trusts used in family dispositions, the line of cases after Baker v. Archer-Shee will be relevant. Indeed, Baker has been applied in commercial trusts and none of the decisions finds it necessary to distinguish the commercial from the family situations. Deed of settlement companies can be regarded as the origin of modern unit trusts, both in form and substance. The approaches of cases on such companies will illuminate our analysis. Read the rest of this entry »

The Nature of the Trust Corpus and the Rights in a Unit (B)

Posted on May 10th, 2008 in Small Cap Funds, Trust Funds | 4 Comments »

B. Rights in a Unit: A Preliminary Analysis and Three Propositions

A modern trust deed invariably provides that the trustee will hold the unit trust assets for the unitholders ‘on and subject to the terms and conditions of the trust deed‘ and in the case of an authorized unit trust, the regulations made under section 81 of the Financial Services Act 1986.It is always possible for the trust deed or the relevant regulations to contain hundreds of covenants or terms that may alter or add to the rights in the beneficial interests of the trust assets. With the varieties of unit trusts and the varieties of units in the market today, the significance of the qualifying statement ‘on and subject to the terms and conditions of the trust deed‘ may easily be overlooked. Read the rest of this entry »

The Nature of the Trust Corpus and the Rights in a Unit (A)

Posted on May 10th, 2008 in Trust Funds | 6 Comments »

A. The Trust Corpus and the Cash Fund Concept

The trust is by nature a relationship fastened upon the properties of the trust. Considerable debate has been focused upon the rights of a beneficiary in the trust properties.5 In a private trust, the trust is a means of disposition of properties by way of gift. The trust corpus in the private trust, even when the settlor is one of the beneficiaries, is the subject matter of a gift. In this sense, the trust has a distributive character that makes use of equity’s recognition of a multiplicity of interests within a trust. A beneficiary’s interest is an interest in a gift. His interest is a matter of degree of ownership. If he is a beneficiary under a discretionary trust, he has nothing more than a right to be considered as a beneficiary. Read the rest of this entry »

Japan Global Mutual Funds Investment

Posted on November 16th, 2007 in Foreign Funds, General Funds, Global Funds, Mutual Funds | 6 Comments »

Japan - funds analogous to investment trusts existed in Japan in 1937 in the form of investors’ associations, which, like the UK’s Foreign & Colonial Company’s original investment trust, faced challenges of legality and were dissolved in 1940, to be replaced in 1941 by undertakings that, modelled on the UK’s unit trust, found legal support. Post-war confusion led to these funds becoming closed to new investment in August 1945 and final dissolution in February 1950. Read the rest of this entry »

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