Imagine this scenario: You are a successful business owner with two young children. Your business is becoming increasingly profitable, and the value is growing rapidly. You’d like to set aside some assets in trust for estate planning purposes and to provide your children and future grandchildren with rainy day funds. You have a good relationship with your brother, and he knows your family well; you plan to ask him to be the trustee of a trust for your children. You would gladly return the favor someday, sharing your financial knowledge and business acumen with his family members. Still, you wonder whether his career in medieval French literary research will be useful in his role as trustee.
In some states, notably Delaware, it is possible to be a trustee with limited responsibility. Your brother could select an “investment trustee” to work with him and make investment-related decisions. He could also select a “management trustee” to work with him and make decisions relating to the business interests. However, let us assume you particularly want him, a trusted sibling, to take care of your family affairs now and after you are gone.
This is a dilemma we see often. Each of the BBH Trust Companies is a professional trustee, staffed with experienced attorneys, trust officers, administrators, and tax accountants. Many of our clients ask whether it is possible for an individual – even one with little or no specialized knowledge – to be a good trustee. Our answer is yes – if the trustee keeps the following fundamentals in mind.