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Fiji Legislation |
LAWS OF FIJI
CHAPTER 65
TRUSTEE
ARRANGEMENT OF SECTIONS
PART I-PRELIMINARY
SECTION
1.
Short
title.
2.
Interpretation.
3.
Application.
PART II-APPOINTMENT AND DISCHARGE OF TRUSTEES
4.
Power of appointing new
trustees.
5.
Evidence as to a vacancy in a
trust.
6.
Retirement of trustee without a new
appointment.
7.
Vesting of trust property in new or continuing
trustees.
8.
Corporations acting as
trustees.
9.
Disclaimer of trusts on renunciation of
probate.
10.
Trustee corporation obtaining grant to become
trustee.
11.
Custodian trustees.
PART III - INVESTMENTS
12.
Authorised
investments.
13.
Power to purchase dwelling
house.
14.
Purchase of redeemable stocks at a premium or
discount.
15.
Discretion of
trustees.
16.
Power to retain investment which has ceased to be
authorised.
17.
Investment in bearer
securities.
18.
Loans and investments by trustees not chargeable as breaches of
trust.
19.
Liability for loss by reason of improper
investment.
20.
Release of part of
security.
21.
Powers supplementary to powers of
investment.
22.
Power to pay calls.
PART IV-GENERAL POWERS OF TRUSTEES
23.
Powers to sell, exchange, partition, postpone, lease,
etc.
24.
Duration of trust or power to
sell.
25.
Rule against
perpetuities.
26.
Miscellaneous powers in respect of
property.
27.
Power of trustee for sale to sell by auction, etc. or before date
specified.
28.
Power to sell subject to depreciatory
conditions.
29.
Mortgage on sale of
land.
30.
Deferred payment on sale of
property.
31.
Surrender of onerous
leases.
32.
Power to renew
leases.
33.
Power to purchase equity of redemption in lieu of
foreclosure.
34.
Sale after right of redemption
barred.
35.
Release of equity of redemption in discharge of mortgage
debt.
36.
Application of income by trustee - mortgagee in
possession.
37.
Power of trustees to give
receipts.
38.
Power to compound
liabilities.
39.
Power to raise money by sale or
mortgage.
40.
Protection to purchasers and mortgagees dealing with
trustees.
41.
Devolution of powers or
trusts.
42.
Power to
insure.
43.
Application of insurance money where policy kept up under any trust, power or
obligation.
44.
Deposit of documents for safe
custody.
45.
Reversionary
interests.
46.
Valuations.
47.
Audit.
48.
Power to concur with
others.
49.
Power to employ
agents.
50.
Power to delegate
trusts.
51.
Power to carry on
business.
52.
Power to convert business into a
company.
53.
Trustee may sue himself in a different capacity.
PART V-MAINTENANCE, ADVANCEMENT AND PROTECTIVE TRUSTS
54.
Power to apply income for maintenance, etc. and to accumulate surplus income
during a
minority.
55.
Power to apply capital for maintenance,
etc.
56.
Conditional advances for maintenance,
etc.
57.
Protective trusts.
PART VI-INDEMNITIES AND PROTECTION OF TRUSTEES, ETC.
58.
Protection against liability in respect of rents and
covenants.
59.
Protection against creditors and others by means of
advertisement.
60.
Barring of
claims.
61.
Following of assets,
etc.
62.
Distribution of shares of missing
beneficiaries.
63.
Service of notices,
etc.
64.
Protection in regard to
notice.
65.
Exoneration of trustees in respect of powers of
attorney.
66.
Implied indemnity of
trustees.
67.
Reimbursement of trustee out of trust
property.
68.
Protection of trustee in handling over chattels to life
tenant.
69.
Protection of trustee in handing over chattels to
infant.
70.
Personal representatives relieved from personal liability in respect of calls
made after transfer of
shares.
71.
Power of Court to relieve trustee from personal
liability.
72.
Power of Court to make beneficiary indemnify for breach of trust.
PART VII-FURTHER POWERS OF THE COURT
DIVISION I-APPOINTMENT OF NEW TRUSTEES
73.
Power of Court to appoint new trustees.
DIVISION 2-VESTING ORDERS
74.
Vesting
orders.
75.
In whom property to be vested,
etc.
76.
Orders as to contingent rights of unborn
persons.
77.
Vesting order in place or conveyance by mortgagee under a
disability.
78.
Vesting orders, etc., in relation to infant's beneficial
interests.
79.
Vesting order consequential on order for sale or mortgage of
land.
80.
Vesting order consequential on judgment for specific
performance
81.
Effect of vesting
order.
82.
Directions, etc., as to manner of transferring stock,
etc.
83.
Power to appoint persons to
convey
84.
Vesting orders of charity property
DIVISION 3-JURISDICTION TO MAKE OTHER ORDERS
85.
Power of Court to authorise dealings with trust
property.
86.
Power of Court to authorise variations of
trust.
87.
Power to vary amount of periodic
payments.
88.
Right of trustee to apply to Court for
directions.
89.
Persons entitled to apply to
Court.
90.
Applications to Court to review acts and decisions of
trustee.
91.
Protection of trustee while acting under direction of
Court.
92.
Powers of Court to make orders in absence of
parties.
93.
Power of Court to charge costs on trust
estate.
94.
Remuneration of
trustee.
95.
Payment into Court by trustees.
PART VIII-MISCELLANEOUS
96.
Indemnity to banks and
others.
97.
Protection of bankers dealing with trustees in certain
cases.
98.
Inclusion of non-charitable and invalid purposes not to invalidate a
trust.
99.
Special rules as to apportionment on purchase, sale or transfer in certain
cases.
100.
Costs and testamentary expenses to be payable out of capital of settled
residuary estate of
deceased.
101.
Application of income of settled property pending
conversion.
102.
Certain periodic payments to be applied as
income.
103.
Fees and commission deemed a testamentary
expense.
104.
Costs of inquiries regarding
beneficiaries.
105.
Life tenant, etc., to have powers of a trustee in certain
cases.
106.
Clarification.
-----------------------------------------------------
Ordinances
Nos. 34 of 1966, 57 of 1966, 5 of
1969,
Act
55 of 1971
AN ACT TO CONSOLIDATE AND AMEND THE LAW RELATING TO TRUSTEES
[31st December, 1966.]
PART I-PRELIMINARY
Short title
1.
This Act may be cited as the Trustee Act.
Interpretation
2.-(1)
In this Act, unless the context otherwise requires-
"authorised investments" means investments authorised for the investment of money subject to the trust by the instrument (if any) creating the trust or by this or any other Act;
"benefit" in relation to any person, includes insurance on the life of that person;
"contingent right" in relation to land, includes a contingent or executory interest and a possibility coupled with an interest, whether the object of the gift or limitation of the interest or possibility is or is not ascertained; and also a right of entry, whether immediate or future, and whether vested or contingent;
"bankrupt" includes "insolvent";
"conveyance" as applied to any person, includes the execution or doing by that person of every necessary or suitable assurance, act and thing for conveying, transferring, assigning, appointing, surrendering or otherwise disposing of property; and "to convey" has a corresponding meaning;
"Court" means the Supreme Court or a judge thereof;
"execute" includes the doing of all acts and things necessary for a conveyance, and with reference to an instrument not under seal means sign; and derivatives of "execute" have corresponding meanings;
"income" includes rents and profits other than profits that under any rule of law are in the nature of capital;
"instrument" includes an Act;
"land" includes-
(a) land of any tenure;
(b) mines and minerals, whether or not severed from the surface;
(c) buildings or parts of buildings, whether the division is horizontal, vertical or made in any other way;
(d) any other corporeal hereditament;
(e) rent and other incorporeal hereditaments; and
(f) an easement, right, privilege, share, interest or benefit in, over or derived from land;
and, in this definition, "mines and minerals" includes any strata or seams or minerals or substances in or under any land, and powers of working or getting them, and "hereditament" means real property that under an intestacy might at common law have devolved on an heir;
"lease" includes a bailment;
"mortgagee" includes every person having an estate or interest regarded at law or in equity as merely a security for money and every person deriving title to the mortgage under the original mortgagee; and "mortgage" has a corresponding meaning;
"payment" in relation to stocks and securities, includes the deposit or transfer of them; and "to pay" has a corresponding meaning;
"personal representative" means the executor original or by representation, or an administrator for the time being of the estate of a deceased person;
"possession" includes receipt of income or the right to receive the income, if any; and "possessed" applies to receipt of income of and to any vested estate less than a life interest, at law or in equity, in possession or in expectancy in any land;
"property" includes real and personal property and any estate, share and interest in any property, real or personal, and any debt, and any thing in action, and any other right or interest, whether in possession or not;
"rent" includes a duty, royalty or annual or periodic payment in money or money's worth reserved or issuing out of or charged upon land, but does not include mortgage interest;
"right" includes an estate or interest;
"sale" includes an exchange; and "to sell" has a corresponding meaning;
"securities" includes stock, funds and shares; and "securities payable to bearer" includes securities transferable by delivery or by delivery and endorsement;
"stock" includes shares, and, so far as relates to vesting orders made by the Court under the provisions of this Act, includes any fund, annuity or security transferable in books kept by any corporation, or by instrument of transfer either alone or accompanied by other formalities, and any share or interest therein;
"transfer" in relation to stock or securities, includes the performance and execution of every deed, power of attorney, act and thing on the part of the transferor to effect and complete the title in the transferee;
"trust" does not include the duties incidental to an estate conveyed by way of mortgage, but with that exception "trust" extends to implied and constructive trusts and to cases where the trustee has a beneficial interest in the trust property and to the duties incidental to the office of a personal representative; and "trustee" has a corresponding meaning and includes a trustee corporation and every other corporation in which property subject to a trust is vested and every person who was a trustee immediately before the commencement of this Act and, where the context so admits, includes a personal representative; and "new trustee" includes an additional trustee;
"trustee corporation" means the Public Trustee or any corporation authorised by the provisions of any Act to administer the estates of deceased persons and other trust estates;
"trust for sale" in relation to land, means an immediate binding trust for sale, whether or not exercisable at the request or with the consent of any person and with or without power at discretion to postpone the sale; and "trustee for sale" means the person (including a personal representative) holding land on trust for sale.
(2)
Any reference to the investment, loan or advance of trust money by a trustee on
the security of property shall be construed to
include a reference to such
investment, loan or advance on the transfer of an existing security as well as
on a new
security.
(3)
For the purposes of this Act, a person shall be deemed to be under a disability
while he is not of full age or of full mental
capacity.
Application
3.-(1)
Except where otherwise expressly provided, this Act applies to every trust,
whether constituted or created before or after the
commencement of this
Act.
(2)
The powers conferred by or under this Act on a trustee are in addition to the
powers given by the provisions of any other Act
and by the instrument (if any)
creating the trust; but the powers conferred on a trustee by the provisions of
this Act, unless otherwise
stated, apply if and so far only as a contrary
intention is not expressed in the instrument (if any) creating the trust and
have
effect subject to the terms of that
instrument.
(3)
This Act does not affect the legality or validity of anything done before the
commencement of this Act, except as is in this Act
expressly
provided.
(4)
This Act binds the Crown.
PART II-APPOINTMENT AND DISCHARGE OF TRUSTEES
Power of appointing new trustees
4.-(1)
Where a trustee, whether original or substituted, and whether appointed by the
Court or otherwise-
(a) is dead; or
(b) remains out of Fiji for more than one year without having properly delegated the execution of the trust; or
(c) seeks to be discharged from all or any of the trusts or powers reposed in or conferred on him; or
(d) refuses to act therein; or
(e) is unfit to act therein; or
(f) is incapable of acting therein; or
(g) is an infant; or
(h) is bankrupt; or
(i) being a corporation, has ceased to carry on business, is in liquidation or is dissolved,
then
the person nominated for the purpose of appointing new trustees by the
instrument (if any) creating the trust, or if there is
no such person or no such
person able and willing to act, then the surviving or continuing trustee or
trustees for the time being,
or the personal representative of the last
surviving or continuing trustee, may by writing appoint a person or persons,
whether or
not being the person or persons exercising the power, to be a trustee
or trustees in the place of the trustee first in this sub-section
mentioned.
(2)
On the appointment of a trustee or trustees for the whole or any part of the
trust property-
(a) where the number of trustees originally appointed was less than four, two or more trustees may be appointed in place of a trustee being replaced under the provisions of this section, but so that after any appointment the number of trustees shall not exceed four;
(b) a separate set of trustees may be appointed for any part of the trust property held on trusts distinct from those relating to any other part, and whether or not new trustees are or are to be appointed for any other part of the trust property; and any existing trustee may be appointed or remain one of the separate set of trustees; or if only one trustee was originally appointed, then one separate trustee may be so appointed for the part of the trust first in this paragraph mentioned;
(c) it shall not be obligatory to appoint more than one new trustee where only one trustee was originally appointed, or to fill up the original number of trustees where more than two trustees were originally appointed; but, except where only one trustee was originally appointed, a trustee shall not be discharged under the provisions of this section unless there remain either a trustee corporation or at least two individuals to act as trustees to perform the trust; and
(d) any assurance or thing requisite for vesting the trust property, or any part thereof, jointly in the persons who are the trustees shall be executed or done.
(3)
Where a trustee has been removed under a power contained in the instrument
creating the trust, a new trustee or new trustees may
be appointed in the place
of the trustee who is removed, as if he were dead, or, in the case of a
corporation, as if the corporation
has been dissolved, and the provisions of
this section shall apply
accordingly.
(4)
The power of appointment given by the provisions of subsection (1) or any
similar previous enactment to the personal representative
of the last surviving
or continuing trustee is and shall be deemed always to have been exercisable by
the executor for the time being,
whether original or by representation, of that
surviving or continuing trustee who has proved the will of his testator, or by
the
administrator for the time being of that trustee without the concurrence of
any executor who has renounced or has not proved; but
a sole or last surviving
executor intending to renounce has, or all the executors where they all intend
to renounce have, and shall
be deemed always to have had power, at any time
before renouncing probate, to exercise the power of appointment given by the
provisions
of this section or by any similar previous enactment if willing to
act for that purpose and without thereby accepting the office
of
executor.
(5)
Where, in the case of any trust, there are not more than three trustees (none of
them being a trustee corporation), then-
(a) the person or persons nominated for the purpose of appointing new trustees by the instrument (if any) creating the trust; or
(b) where there is no person nominated for the purpose of appointing new trustees by the instrument creating the trust, or no such person able and willing to act, then the trustee or trustees for the time being,
may,
by writing, appoint a person or persons (whether or not being the person or
persons exercising the power) to be an additional
trustee or additional
trustees, but it shall not be obligatory to appoint any additional trustee
unless the instrument (if any) creating
the trust, or any statutory enactment,
provides to the contrary; but, on any appointment of additional trustees under
the provisions
of this subsection, the number of trustees shall not be increased
beyond four where four or fewer trustees were originally appointed,
or beyond
the original number of trustees where more than four were originally
appointed.
(6)
Every new trustee appointed under the provisions of this section has the same
powers, authorities and discretions, and may in
every respect act, as if he had
originally been appointed a trustee by the instrument (if any) creating the
trust, both before and
after all the trust property becomes, by law or by
assurance or otherwise, vested in
him.
(7)
The provisions of this section which are to take effect on the death of any
person nominated as a trustee (whether sole or otherwise)
in any will, are to
take effect whether the death of that person occurred before or after the death
of the testator; and the provisions
of this section relating to a continuing
trustee relate also to a refusing or retiring trustee, if willing to act in the
execution
of the provisions of this
section.
(8)
The provisions of this section relating to a person nominated for the purpose of
appointing new trustees apply equally whether
the appointment is made in any of
the circumstances specified in this section or in the instrument (if any)
creating the
trust:
Provided
that where a new trustee is appointed under the provisions of this section in
any of the circumstances specified in the instrument
creating the trust, the
appointment shall be subject to the terms applicable to an appointment, made in
these circumstances, under
the provisions of that
instrument.
(9)
In this section, the term "trustee" does not include a personal representative
as such.
Evidence as to a vacancy in a trust
5.-(1)
Where any instrument appointing a new trustee contains a statement as to how a
vacancy in the office of trustee occurred, that
statement shall be conclusive
evidence, in favour of a subsequent purchaser in good faith, of the
circumstances under which the vacancy
occurred.
(2)
Any appointment of a new trustee depending on such a statement as is mentioned
in subsection (1) and any vesting, express or implied,
consequent on that
appointment, in favour of any subsequent purchaser in good faith, shall be
valid.
(3)
The protection afforded to a purchaser by this section extends to the Registrar
of Titles or other person registering or certifying
title.
(4)
This section applies to instruments of appointment executed either before or
after the commencement of this Act.
Retirement of trustee without a new appointment
6.-(1)
This section applies where a trustee declares by instrument in writing that he
is desirous of being discharged from all or any
of the trusts reposed in him and
that after his discharge there will be a trustee corporation or at least two
individuals to act
as trustees to perform the trust from which that trustee
desires to be
discharged.
(2)
If the co-trustees and such other person (if any) as is empowered to appoint
trustees consent by instrument in writing to the
discharge of a trustee and to
the vesting in the co-trustees alone of the trust property, the trustee desirous
of being discharged-
(a) shall be deemed to have retired from the trusts from which he has declared he desires to be discharged; and
(b) subject to the provisions of subsection (3), shall, by the writing by which consent is given to his discharge, be discharged from the trusts under the provisions of this Act,
without
any new trustee being appointed in his
place.
(3)
Any conveyance requisite for vesting, in the continuing trustees alone, the
property subject to the trusts from which the retiring
trustee is to be
discharged shall be executed or done; and, in respect of any part of the trust
property for the vesting of which,
in the continuing trustees, a conveyance is
necessary, the retiring trustee shall not be discharged until that part is duly
conveyed.
(4)
This section shall apply only if, and so far as, a contrary intention is not
expressed in the instrument (if any) creating the
trust and shall have effect
subject to the provisions of such instrument.
Vesting of trust property in new or continuing trustees
7.-(1)
Where a new trustee is appointed, the execution of the instrument of appointment
vests, subject to the provisions of this section,
all the trust property for
which the new trustee is appointed, in the persons who become and are the
trustees, as joint tenants for
the purposes of the trust, without any
conveyance.
(2)
In any case to which the provisions of section
6
apply, the execution of the instrument of discharge vests, subject to the
provisions of this section, all the property subject to
the trusts from which
the retiring trustee has declared that he is desirous of being discharged, in
the continuing trustees alone,
as joint tenants for the purposes of the trust,
without any
conveyance.
(3)
The provisions of subsections (1) and (2) shall not apply to-
(a) any land conveyed by way of mortgage for securing money subject to a trust, except land conveyed on trust for securing debentures or debenture stock; or
(b) any property which is transferable only in books kept by a company or other body or in manner directed by or under the provisions of any Act.
(4)
In the case of any property referred to in subsection (3), the execution of the
instrument of appointment of a new trustee or
of the instrument of discharge, as
the case may be, for the purposes of the trust, vests in the persons who become
and are the trustees
or in the continuing trustee, as the case may be, the right
to call for a conveyance of the property and to sue for and recover the
property.
(5)
For the purposes of registration-
(a) in the case of an instrument of appointment of a new trustee, the appointor shall be deemed to be the conveying party, and the conveyance shall be deemed to be made by him under a power conferred by this Act; and
(b) in the case and of an instrument of discharge, the retiring trustee and any person consenting in such instrument to his discharge shall be deemed to be the conveying parties and the conveyance shall be deemed to be made by them under a power conferred by this Act.
(6)
In this section-
"continuing trustees" and "retiring trustees" have the same meaning as in subsection (3) of section 6; and
"instrument of discharge" means an instrument containing the consent or consents referred to in subsection (2) of section 6 and executed in a case to which the provisions of that section apply.
(7)
For the purposes of a covenant, condition or agreement against assignment or
disposal or against assignment or disposal without
licence or consent, contained
in any lease, underlease or agreement for a lease or underlease, a vesting under
the provision of this
section shall be deemed not to be an
assignment.
Corporations acting as trustees
8.-(1)
Subject to the provisions of the instrument (if any) creating the trust, any
trustee corporation may be appointed and may lawfully
act as the sole trustee in
respect of any trust, notwithstanding that the instrument creating the trust or
any other of the provisions
of this Act may provide for or direct the
appointment of two or more trustees; and nothing in this subsection shall
prevent any other
corporation from acting as a trustee in accordance with any
authority vested in it in that behalf, whether by its memorandum of association
or otherwise, but a corporation shall not administer the estate of any deceased
person unless expressly authorised to do so by the
provisions of any
Act.
(2)
This section extends to any trust or instrument and to any appointment of
trustees, whether created or made before or after the
commencement of this
Act.
Disclaimer of trusts on renunciation of probate
9.-(1)
Where a person appointed by will to be both executor and trustee thereof,
renounces probate, or after being duly cited or summoned
fails to apply for
probate, the renunciation or failure shall be deemed to be a disclaimer of the
trust contained in the
will.
(2)
Where any person appointed by will to be both executor and trustee
thereof-
(a) renounces probate;
(b) after being duly cited or summoned fails to apply for probate; or
(c) dies before probate is granted to him,
and
letters of administration with the will annexed are granted to any other person,
the person who obtains the grant shall, by virtue
of the grant and without
further appointment, be deemed to be appointed trustee of the will in the place
of the person who was appointed
by the will.
Trustee corporation obtaining grant to become trustee
10.-(1)
Where a trustee corporation has, pursuant to the provisions of any Act, obtained
a grant of probate of a will or letters of
administration with the will annexed,
upon the authority of any person or the majority of persons appointed by the
will of any deceased
person to be both executor and trustee thereof, then, by
virtue of the grant and without further appointment, the trustee corporation
shall be deemed to be appointed both executor and trustee of the will in the
place of the person or persons by whose authority the
trustee corporation
applied for the grant.
(2) Where the Court appoints a trustee corporation to be administrator in the place of a person who, by the will, was appointed to be both executor and trustee thereof, or in the place of a person who has obtained letters of administration with the will annexed and who is both administrator and trustee of that will, then the trustee corporation shall, by virtue of such appointment and without further appointment, be deemed to be appointed trustee of the will in the place of that executor or administrator.
(3)
Where, pursuant to subsection (4) of section
9
of the Public Trustee Act, the Court, upon the application of any executor or
administrator, by order transfers to the Public Trustee the estate of the
deceased
person for administration, then the Public Trustee shall, by virtue of
that order and without further appointment, be deemed to be
appointed to be
trustee of the will in the place of that executor or administrator, either
solely or jointly with any other
person.
(Cap.
64.)
Custodian trustees
11.-(1)
Subject to the provisions of this section and to the instrument (if any)
creating the trust, any corporation may be appointed
to be custodian trustee of
any trust in any case where, and in the same manner as, it could be appointed to
be
trustee.
(2)
Subject to the provisions of the instrument (if any) creating the trust, where a
custodian trustee of any trust is appointed-
(a) the trust property shall be vested in the custodian trustee as if the custodian trustee were the sole trustee, and for that purpose vesting orders may, where necessary, be made under the provisions of this Act;
(b) the management of the trust property and the exercise of all powers and discretions exercisable by the trustees under the trust shall be and remain vested in such trustees, other than the custodian trustee, as managing trustees, as fully and effectually as if there were no custodian trustee;
(c) the sole function of the custodian trustee shall be to get in and hold the trust property and invest its funds and dispose of the assets as the managing trustees in writing direct, for which purpose the custodian trustee shall execute all such documents and perform all such acts as the managing trustees in writing direct, and for the purposes of this paragraph a direction given by the majority of the managing trustees, where there are more than one, shall be deemed to be given by all the managing trustees;
(d) the custodian trustee shall not be liable for acting on any direction to which paragraph (c) refers:
Provided that if the custodian trustee is of opinion that any such direction conflicts with the trusts or the law, or exposes the custodian trustee to any liability, or is otherwise objectionable, the custodian trustee may apply to the Court for directions in the matter; and any order giving directions shall bind both the custodian trustee and the managing trustees, and the Court may make such order as it thinks proper;
(e) the custodian trustee shall not be liable for any act or default on the part of any of the managing trustees;
(f) all actions and proceedings touching or concerning the trust property shall be brought or defended in the name of the custodian trustee at the written direction of the managing trustees, and the custodian trustee shall not be liable for the costs thereof apart from any payable out of the trust property;
(g) a person dealing with the custodian trustee shall not be concerned to inquire as to the concurrence or otherwise of the managing trustees or be affected by notice of the fact that the managing trustees have not concurred; and
(h) the power of appointing new trustees, when exercisable by the trustee, shall be exercisable by the managing trustees alone, but the custodian trustee shall have the same power as any other trustee of applying to the Court for the appointment of a new trustee.
(3)
On the application of the custodian trustee or of any of the managing trustees
or of any beneficiary and on satisfactory proof
that it is the general wish of
the beneficiaries or that on other grounds it is expedient to terminate the
custodian trusteeship,
the Court may make an order for that purpose and may also
make such vesting orders and give such directions as in the circumstances
seem
to the Court to be necessary or
expedient.
(4)
Subject to the provisions of the instrument (if any) creating the trust and to
any order made by the Court, where remuneration
or commission is payable to the
trustee of any trust property, remuneration may be paid to both the custodian
trustee and the managing
trustees, and subject as aforesaid the amount thereof
shall be-
(a) as regards the custodian trustee, where the custodian trustee is the Public Trustee, as prescribed by the Public Trustee Act; and
(Cap. 64.)
(b) in any other case, as may be determined by the managing trustees if they are entitled to fix their own remuneration, or by the Court.
PART III-INVESTMENTS
Authorised investments
12.-(1) A trustee may invest any trust funds in his hands, whether at the time in a state of investment or not, in any investments authorised by the instrument (if any) creating the trust for the investment of money subject to the trust, or in manner following, that is to say:-
(a) in any of the Parliamentary stocks, public funds or government securities of Fiji, the United Kingdom, the Commonwealth of Australia, the Dominion of Canada, the Dominion of New Zealand, or any of the States of the Commonwealth of Australia or Provinces of the Dominion of Canada;
(b) on first legal mortgage or charge of an estate in fee simple in land in Fiji or of an estate in leasehold from the Crown or the Native Land Trust Board for an unexpired term of not less than fifty years at the time when such mortgage or charge is made;
(Amended by 14 of 1975, s. 60.)
(c) in debentures or other securities charged on the funds or property of any city or town in Fiji;
(d) in any one or more of the following namely:-
(i) on fixed deposit in any bank licensed under the provisions of the Banking Act;
(Cap. 212.)
(ii) on deposit in any savings bank licensed under the provisions of the Banking Act;
(iii) on deposit in the National Bank of Fiji;
(e) in any security in respect of which repayment of the amount secured and payment of interest thereon is guaranteed by the Government of Fiji, of the United Kingdom or of any other country in the Parliamentary stocks, public funds or government securities of which investment is authorised under any of the provisions of this subsection;
(f) in any of the stocks, funds or securities for the time being authorised for the investment of money under the control or subject to the order of the Court;
(g) in any security or in any manner authorised by or under the provisions of any other Act;
(h) subject to the provisions of subsections (3), (4), (5), (6), (7) and (8), in the purchase of the preference of ordinary stock or shares issued in Fiji, the United Kingdom, the Commonwealth of Australia or the Dominion of New Zealand by a company incorporated in any of such countries, being stock or shares registered therein;
(i) subject to the provisions of subsections (3), (4), (5), (6), (7) and (8), in debentures, including debenture stock and bonds, and whether constituting a charge on assets or not, issued by any company in which at the time of investment it would have been proper to invest in the purchase of ordinary stock or shares;
(j) subject to the provisions of subsections (4), (5), (6), (7) and (8), on deposit or notes, whether secured or unsecured, at interest either for a fixed term, not exceeding seven years or at call, with any company in which at the time of investment it would have been proper to invest in the purchase of ordinary stock or shares; and
(k) in any other stock, fund, security or other investments declared by the Minister by order to be an investment in which a trustee may invest trust funds.
(2)
Any investments made under the powers conferred by this section may be varied
from time to
time.
(3)
The stock, shares and debentures mentioned in paragraphs (h) and (i) of
subsection (1) do not include-
(a) any stock, shares or debentures the price of which is not quoted on a Stock Exchange in any of the countries mentioned in paragraph (h) of subsection (1); or
(b) shares or debenture stock not fully paid up, except shares or debenture stock that, by the terms of issue, are required to be fully paid up within nine months of the date of issue.
(4)
An investment under paragraphs (h), (i) and (j) of subsection (1) shall not,
except with the prior approval of the Minister to
be signified by notice in the
Gazette, be made in any company that-
(a) has a paid up share capital of less than two million dollars;
(b) has not paid a dividend in each of the five years immediately preceding the calendar year in which the investment is made on all the ordinary stock or shares issued by the company, excluding any shares issued after the dividend was declared; but for the purposes of this paragraph a company formed to take over the business of another company or other companies is deemed to have paid the requisite dividend in any year in which such a dividend was paid by the other company or all the other companies, as the case may be.
(5)
A trustee who proposes to make any investment under the power conferred by
paragraphs (h), (i) and (j) of subsection (1) shall
first obtain and consider
proper advice in writing on the question whether the investment is satisfactory
having regard-
(a) to the need for ensuring that investments of the trust are, so far as circumstances allow, sufficiently diversified in respect of the descriptions of investment and, where diversification within a particular description would be prudent, in respect of investments within that description;
(b) to the suitability to the trust of investments of the description of investments proposed and of the investment proposed as an investment of that description.
(6)
A trustee who retains any investment made under the powers conferred by
paragraphs (h), (i) and (j) of subsection (1) shall determine
at what intervals,
the circumstances, and in particular the nature of the investment, make it
desirable to obtain the advice mentioned
in subsection (5), and shall obtain and
consider that advice
accordingly.
(7)
For the purposes of subsections (5) and (6), proper advice means the advice of a
person who is reasonably believed by the trustee
to be qualified by his ability
in and practical experience of financial matters; and that advice may be given
notwithstanding that
the person gives it in the course of his employment as an
officer or
servant.
(8)
Subsections (5) and (6) shall not apply to one of two or more trustees where he
is the person giving the advice required by this
section to his co-trustee or
co-trustees, and shall not apply where the powers of a trustee are lawfully
exercised by an officer
or servant competent under the provisions of subsection
(7) to give proper advice.
Power to purchase dwelling houses
13.-(1)
Where a trustee is of opinion that it is desirable to purchase land for a
dwelling house for the use of any beneficiary under
the trust, the trustee may
invest any trust funds in his hands, whether at the time in a state of
investment or not, in the purchase,
or leasing from the Crown or the Native Land
Trust Board for a term of not less than fifty years, of land in Fiji used or to
be used
for the purpose of a dwelling house only, and may permit the beneficiary
to reside on the land upon such terms and conditions consistent
with the trust
and the extent of the interest of the beneficiary as the trustee thinks
fit.
(2)
A trustee purchasing land in exercise of the power conferred by this section
shall not be chargeable with breach of trust by reason
only of the relation
borne by the purchase price to the value of the land at the time when the
purchase was made if it appears to
the Court that-
(a) in making the purchase the trustee was acting upon a report as to the value of the land made by a person whom he reasonably believed to be competent to value the land, instructed and employed independently of any owner of the land, whether that valuer carries on business in the locality where the land is situate or elsewhere;
(b) the purchase price did not exceed the value of the land as stated in the report;
(c) the valuer has stated in his report the net annual rental which the land produced or was capable of producing at the time of valuation; and
(d) that the purchase was made under the advice of the valuer expressed in the report.
(3)
Land purchased under the provisions of this section shall be held upon trust for
sale.
(4)
A trustee may retain as an asset of the trust any land purchased under the
provisions of this section, notwithstanding that no
beneficiary under the trust
is residing on the
land.
(5)
Where a trustee is of opinion that it is desirable that a dwelling house that
forms part of the trust shall be retained for the
use of any beneficiary, he
may, notwithstanding any trust for conversion contained in the instrument
creating the trust, retain the
dwelling house and permit the beneficiary to
reside therein upon such terms and conditions consistent with the trust and the
extent
of the interest of the beneficiary as the trustee thinks
fit.
Purchase of redeemable stock at a premium or discount
14.-(1)
A trustee having authority to invest in any of the securities mentioned in
section
12
may invest in any of those securities notwithstanding that the securities may be
redeemable, and that the price is greater or less
than the redemption
value.
(2)
A trustee may retain until redemption any redeemable security that may have been
purchased in accordance with the powers conferred
by the provisions of this Act
or by the provisions of the Trustee Ordinance repealed by this
Act.
(Cap.
46. 1955
Edition)
(3)
Where any security to which subsection (1) applies is purchased by a trustee,
after the commencement of this Act, at a price greater
or less than its
redemption value, and in terms of the trust the beneficial interest in the
income from the security is not vested
in the same persons as the beneficial
interests in the capital thereof, then, subject to the provisions of section
99-
(a) if the purchase price exceeds the redemption value, the amount of the difference shall be recouped, by the trustee, to the capital out of which the purchase was made, by rateable instalments from the income derived from the security over the period between the date of purchase and the earliest date on which the security can be repaid or redeemed; and the amount so recouped to capital from time to time shall be deemed to be received as capital repaid;
(b) if the redemption value exceeds the purchase price, the amount of the difference shall be distributable as if it were income accruing from day to day over the period between the date of the purchase and the latest date on which the security can be repaid or redeemed; and the trustee may, by rateable instalments over the period, appropriate or raise out of the capital of the security, or out of the capital of other assets subject to the same trusts, the amounts required from time to time to be distributed as income; and, if the security is repaid or redeemed before the latest date on which the same can be repaid or redeemed, any remaining balance of the difference shall, on the repayment or redemption, immediately become distributable as if it were income then due and payable.
(4)
Where the amount to be recouped to or deducted from capital in any year in
accordance with the provisions of subsection (3) is
less than two dollars, it
shall not be necessary for the trustee to comply with the provisions of that
subsection.
Discretion of trustees
15.
Every power conferred by the foregoing provisions of this Part shall be
exercised according to the discretion of the trustee, but
subject to any consent
or direction required by the instrument (if any) creating the trust or by the
provisions of this or any other
Act.
Power to retain investment which has ceased to be authorised
16.
A trustee shall not be liable for breach of trust by reason only of his
continuing to hold an investment that has ceased to be an
investment authorised
by the trust instrument or by or under the provisions of this or any other
Act.
Investment in bearer securities
17.-(1)
A trustee may, unless expressly prohibited by the instrument creating the trust,
retain or invest in securities payable to bearer
that, if not so payable, would
have been authorised investments; but any such securities retained or taken as
an investment by a
trustee (not being a trustee corporation) shall, until sold,
be deposited by him for safe custody and collection of income with a
bank.
(2)
A direction that investments shall be retained or made in the name of a trustee
shall, for the purposes of subsection (1), be
deemed not to be such an express
prohibition as is therein
mentioned.
(3)
A trustee shall not be responsible for any loss incurred by reason of any
deposit made pursuant to the provisions of subsection
(1), and any sum payable
in respect of any such deposit or the collection of income shall be paid out of
the income of the trust
property.
Loans and investments by trustees not chargeable as breaches of trust
18.-(1)
A trustee lending money on the security of any property on which he may properly
lend, or extending the term of any mortgage
on which he has lent money, shall
not be chargeable with breach of trust by reason only of the proportion borne by
the amount of
the loan to the value of the property at the time when the loan
was made, if it appears to the Court that-
(a) in making the loan the trustee was acting upon a report as to the value of the property made by a person whom he reasonably believed to be competent to value such property, being a person instructed and employed independently of any owner of the property, whether that valuer resided or carried on business in the locality where the property is situate or elsewhere;
(b) the amount of the loan does not exceed two-thirds of the value of the property as stated in the report; and
(c) the loan was made under the advice of the valuer expressed in the report.
(2)
A trustee lending money on the security of any leasehold property shall not be
chargeable with breach of trust only upon the ground
that, in making the loan,
he dispensed either wholly or partly with the production or investigation of the
lessor's
title.
(3)
A trustee shall not be chargeable with breach of trust upon the ground only that
in effecting the purchase of, or in lending money
upon the security of, any
property he has accepted a shorter title than the title which a purchaser is, in
the absence of a special
contract, entitled to require, if in the opinion of the
Court the title accepted be such as a person acting with prudence and caution
would have
accepted.
(4)
This section shall apply to transfers of existing securities as well as to new
securities and to investments made before or after
the commencement of this
Act.
Liability for loss by reason of improper investment
19.-(1)
Where a trustee improperly advances trust money on a mortgage security that
would at the time of investment be a proper investment
in all respects for a
smaller sum than is actually advanced thereon, the security shall be deemed and
authorised investment for the
smaller sum, and the trustee shall be liable to
make good only the sum advanced in excess of the smaller sum with
interest.
(2)
This section shall apply to investments made before or after the commencement of
this Act.
Release of part of security
20.-(1)
Where any property is held by a trustee by way of security and the trustee has
power to invest on mortgage and to vary investments,
the trustee-
(a) may release part of the property from the mortgage, whether any part of the mortgage debt is repaid or not, provided that the unreleased part of the property would, at the time, be a proper investment in all respects for the amount remaining unpaid; and
(b) may, on a sale by the mortgagor of part of the mortgaged property and on receipt by the trustee of the whole of the purchase money thereof after deduction of the expenses of the sale, release that part from the mortgage.
(2)
A subsequent purchaser of the released part of any property, or the Registrar of
Titles or other person registering or certifying
title, shall not be concerned
to inquire whether the release was authorised under the provisions of this
section.
Powers supplementary to powers of investment
21.-(1)
A trustee lending money on the security of any mortgage of an estate or interest
in land on which he may lawfully lend-
(a) may lend for any period not exceeding seven years from the time when the loan was made; or
(b) may contract that money so lent shall not be called in during any period, not exceeding seven years, from the time when the loan was made:
Provided
that the Minister may, by notice in the Gazette, in respect of any trustee
specified in such notice, extend the period specified
in paragraphs (a) and (b)
to such longer period as he may consider appropriate in the
circumstances.
(Subsection
amended by 57 of 1966, s. 8.)
(2)
The terms upon which a loan referred to in subsection (1) is made shall, in
addition to such other provisions as the trustee may
think proper, include
provisions giving effect to the following-
(a) that interest shall be paid within a specified time, not exceeding thirty days after every half-yearly or other day on which it becomes due;
(b) that the borrower shall maintain and protect the property, and keep all buildings, if any, erected thereon insured against loss or damage by fire to the full insurable value thereof; and
(c) that if the borrower fails to comply with any term of the mortgage, the whole of the moneys secured by the mortgage shall, at the option of the mortgagee, immediately become due and payable.
(3)
Where any securities of a company are subject to a trust, the trustees
may-
(a) concur in any scheme or arrangement-
(i) for, or arising out of, the reconstruction, reduction of capital or liquidation of, or the issue of shares by the company;
(ii) for the sale of all or any part of the property and undertaking of the company to another company;
(iii) for the amalgamation of the company with another company; or
(iv) for the release, modification or variation of any rights, privileges or liabilities attached to the securities or any of them; and
(b) accept or carry out any proposal made in writing by or on behalf of another company for the purchase by that other company of any securities in the first-mentioned company, in consideration of the allotment of securities in that other company, whether with or without any other consideration, where-
(i) the proposal is conditional upon the holders of a proportion (being not less than seventy-five per cent in value) of such of the securities in the first-mentioned company as have not already been acquired by that other company agreeing to deal with those securities in accordance with the proposal; and
(ii) a sufficient number of the holders of the securities in question (including the trustees) agree in writing to deal with the shares in accordance with the proposal,
in
like manner as if they were entitled to such securities beneficially. with power
to accept any securities or other property of
any denomination or description in
addition to, or in lieu of, or in exchange for, all or any of the
first-mentioned securities;
and the trustees shall not be responsible for any
loss occasioned by any act or thing so done in good faith; and may retain any
such
securities or other property for any period for which they could have
properly retained the original
securities.
(4)
If any conditional or preferential right to subscribe for any securities in any
company is offered to trustees in respect of any
holding in that company or any
other company, the trustees may, as to all or any of those
securities-
(a) exercise the right and apply capital moneys subject to the trust in payment of the consideration, and retain the securities subscribed for during any period during which they could properly retain the holding in respect of which the right to subscribe was offered; or
(b) renounce the right; or
(c) assign for the best consideration that can reasonably be obtained (which consideration shall be held as capital money of the trust) the benefit of the right, or the title thereto, to any person, including any beneficiary under the trust,
without
being responsible for any loss occasioned by any act or thing so done by them in
good
faith.
(5)
The powers conferred by this section shall be exercisable subject to the consent
of any person whose consent to a change of investment
is required by law or by
the instrument (if any) creating the
trust.
(6)
Where the loan referred to in subsections (1) and (2) is made under an order of
the Court, the powers conferred by those subsections
shall apply only if and so
far as the Court may by order direct.
Power to pay calls
22.
A trustee may apply capital money subject to a trust in payment of calls on any
shares subject to the same trust.
PART
IV-GENERAL POWERS OF
TRUSTEES
Powers
to sell, exchange, partition, postpone, lease, etc.
23.-(1)
Subject to the provisions of this section, every trustee, in respect of any
property for the time being vested in him, may-
(a) sell the property;
(b) dispose of the property by way of exchange for other property in Fiji of a like nature and a like or better tenure, or, where the property vested in him consists of an undivided share, concur in the partition of the property in which the share is held. and give or take any property by way of equality of exchange or partition;
(c) postpone the sale, calling in and conversion of any property that he has a duty to sell, whether or not it is of a wasting, speculative or reversionary nature; but, in the case of property of a wasting or speculative nature, for no longer than is reasonably necessary to permit its prudent realization;
(d) let or sublet the property at a reasonable rent for any term not exceeding one year, or from year to year, or for a weekly, monthly or other like tenancy or at will;
(e) grant a lease or sublease of the property for any term not exceeding-
(i) in the case of a building lease, thirty years; or
(ii) in the case of any other lease (including a mining lease), ten years;
to take effect in possession within one year next after the date of the grant of the lease or sublease, at a reasonable rent, with or without a fine or premium either of which if taken shall be deemed to be part of and an accretion to the rental, and shall, as between the persons beneficially entitled to the rental, be considered as accruing from day to day and be apportioned over the term of the lease or sublease; or
(f) at any time during the currency of a lease of the property, reduce the rent or otherwise vary or modify the terms thereof, or accept, or concur or join with any other person in accepting, the surrender of any lease.
(2)
Any trustee may, on such conditions as he thinks proper, rescind, cancel, modify
or vary any contract or agreement for the sale
and purchase of any land, or
agree to do so, or compromise with or make allowances to any person with whom
such a contract or agreement
has been made, or who is the assignee thereof in
respect of any unpaid purchase money secured on mortgage or otherwise; and
without
prejudice to the generality of the foregoing, a trustee may, by writing,
waive or vary any right exercisable by him that arises from
a failure to comply
at or within the proper time with any term of any agreement for sale, mortgage,
lease, or other
contract.
(3)
In exercising any power of leasing or subleasing conferred by this section or by
the instrument (if any) creating the trust, a
trustee may-
(a) grant to the lessee or sublessee a right of renewal for one or more terms at a rent to be fixed or made ascertainable in a manner specified in the original lease or the original sublease, but so that the aggregate duration of the original and of the renewal terms shall not exceed the maximum single term that could be granted in the exercise of the power;
(b) grant a lease with an optional or compulsory purchasing clause; or
(c) grant to the lessee or sublessee a right to claim compensation for improvements made or to be made by him in, upon or about the property which is leased or subleased.
(4)
Where the property subject to a trust includes land, the trustee shall exercise
the power conferred by the provisions of this
section to sell the land, if so
required in writing by the person or all of the persons at the time beneficially
entitled to an interest
in possession under the trust of the land.
(5) Where there is a power (statutory or otherwise) to postpone the sale of any land or authorised investment that a trustee has a duty to sell by reason only of a trust or direction for sale, then, subject to any express direction to the contrary in the instrument (if any) creating the trust, the trustee shall not be liable in any way merely for postponing the sale in the exercise of his discretion for an indefinite and unlimited period, whether or not that period exceeds the period during which the trust or direction for sale remains valid; nor shall a purchaser of the land or authorised investment be concerned in any case with any directions respecting the postponement of a sale; but nothing in this subsection applies to any property of a wasting or speculative nature.
Duration of trust or power to sell
24.-(1)
Where the instrument creating a trust to sell property or a power to sell
property does not expressly limit the duration of
the trust or power, then,
notwithstanding any lapse of time or that all of the beneficiaries are
absolutely entitled to the property
in fee simple or full ownership in
possession and are not under any disability, the trustee may sell the property;
but in all other
respects the authority conferred by the provisions of this
section is subject to any restrictions to which the trust or power created
by
the instrument is subject to an order of any court restraining any such
sale.
(2)
A purchaser of any property sold under a trust for sale or a power to sell, or
the Registrar of Titles or other person registering
or certifying title, shall
not be concerned to inquire whether the property was sold under the authority
conferred by the provisions
of this
section.
(3)
Nothing in this section shall affect a trust for sale or a power to sell that is
for the time being in existence under the instrument
creating the trust or
power.
Rule against perpetuities
25.-(1)
The rule of law known as the rule against perpetuities shall not apply and shall
be deemed never to have applied so as to render
void-
(a) a trust or power to sell property, where a trust of the proceeds of sale is valid;
(b) a trust or power to lease or exchange property, where the lease or exchange directed or authorised by the trust or power is ancillary to the carrying out of a valid trust;
(c) any other power that is ancillary to the carrying out of a valid trust or the giving effect to a valid disposition of property; or
(d) any provision for the remuneration of trustees.
(2)
This section shall not-
(a) render any trustee liable for any acts done prior to the commencement of this Act for which that trustee would not have been liable had this section not been enacted; or
(b) enable any person to recover any money distributed or paid under any trust, if he could not have recovered that money had this section not been enacted.
Miscellaneous powers in respect of property
26.-(1)
Every trustee, in respect of any property for the time being vested in him,
may-
(a)-expend money subject to the same trusts for the repair, maintenance, upkeep or renovation of the property, whether or not the work is necessary for the purpose of the salvage of the property;
(b) subject to the rules of law applicable in such cases and to any direction of the Court to the contrary, apportion the cost of the work mentioned in paragraph (a) between capital and income or otherwise among the persons entitled thereto in such manner as he considers equitable, with power, where the whole or part of the cost of the work is charged to capital, to recoup capital from subsequent income, if that course would be equitable having regard to all the circumstances of the case;
(c) expend money subject to the same trusts, but not, without the consent of the Court, exceeding ten thousand dollars for any one purpose, in the improvement or development of the property;
(d) where the property is land and the land may be sold or let or leased or otherwise disposed of under any power or trust vested in the trustee, subdivide the land into blocks and for that purpose construct and dedicate all such roads, streets, access ways, service lanes and footpaths, and make all such reserves, and do all such other things, and pay all such money, as he thinks necessary or as are required by or under any Act relating to subdivisions;
(e) contribute out of money subject to the same trusts such sum as he thinks reasonable towards the construction and maintenance of such roads, streets, access ways, service lanes and footpaths, and such sewerage, water, electricity, drainage and other works as are, in the opinion of the trustee, likely to be beneficial to the property, notwithstanding that they are intended to be constructed wholly or in part on land not subject to the same trusts;
(f) grant easements and enter into party wall agreements and agreements that relate to fencing, and execute all necessary documents to give effect thereto;
(g) pay rates, taxes, assessments, insurance premiums and other outgoings in respect of the property, out of money subject to the same trusts;
(h) as mortgagor or mortgagee, agree to the renewal, extension or variation of the mortgage for such period and on such terms and conditions as he thinks fit; but-
(i) the powers conferred by this paragraph may be exercised by a trustee as mortgagor for the purpose of raising additional money on the security of a mortgage of any property, where the trustee would have power under the provisions of section 39, to raise money by a mortgage of the property, and not otherwise;
(ii) nothing in this paragraph shall authorise any trustee to advance money on the security of any mortgage that would not be an authorised investment in respect of the amount advanced;
(iii) any variation of a mortgage that would require the trustee to release part of the security shall comply with the requirements of section 20; and
(iv) the powers conferred by this paragraph shall not be exercised in relation to a mortgage made under the powers conferred by the provisions of section 21, so as to exclude or vary any of the provisions inserted in the mortgage pursuant to subsection (2) of that section;
(i) make such inquiries, by way of advertisement or otherwise, as he thinks necessary for the purpose of ascertaining the next-of-kin or beneficiaries entitled to the property. and charge the cost of the inquiries and advertisements against the property;
(j) where the property includes a life policy and there is no money or insufficient money available for the payment of premiums on the policy, surrender the policy for money or accept, instead of the policy, a fully paid up policy, or vary the terms of the policy in such manner as the trustee thinks fit;
(k) appropriate any part of the property in or towards satisfaction of any legacy payable thereout or any share thereof (whether settled, contingent or absolute) to which any person is entitled, and for that purpose value the whole or any part of the property in accordance with the provisions of section 46 but-
(i) the appropriation shall not be made so as to affect adversely any specific gift; and
(ii) before any such appropriation is effectual, notice thereof shall be given to all persons of full age and full mental capacity who are interested in the appropriation, and to the parent or guardian of any infant who is interested in the appropriation, and to the person having the care and management of the estate of any person who is not of full mental capacity, and any such person may, within one calendar month after receipt of the notice, or, where the person to whom notice has been given is out of the jurisdiction, within such extended period as the Court may, on the application of the trustee or of any person interested, allow, apply to the Court to vary the appropriation, and such appropriation shall be conclusive save as otherwise directed by the Court;
(l) where provision is made in any instrument creating a trust for payment of an annuity or other periodic payment, and notwithstanding that the annuity or payment may by the instrument be charged upon the trust property or upon any part thereof, set aside and appropriate out of property, available for payment of the annuity, and invest a sum sufficient in the opinion of the trustee at the time of appropriation to provide out of the income thereof the amount required to pay the annuity or periodic payment, and so that after the appropriation shall have been made-
(i) the annuitant shall have the same right of recourse to the capital and income of the appropriated sum as he would have had against the trust property if no appropriation had been made: and
(ii) the trustee may forthwith distribute the residue of the trust property and the income thereof (which residue and income shall no longer be liable for the annuity) in accordance with the trusts declared of and concern in the same; or
(m) do or omit all acts and things, and execute all instruments necessary to carry into effect the powers and authorities given by this Act or by or under the instrument creating the trust.
(2)
Where, in the administration of any property employed in the production of
income or from which income is derived, a trustee considers
that-in the
interests of the persons entitled or who may become entitled to the capital of
the property, it is equitable to set up
a depreciation or replacement fund in
respect of the property or in respect of any asset comprised therein, then,
notwithstanding
any rule of law to the contrary, it shall be lawful for, but not
obligatory upon. him to do so and to credit from time to time and
accumulate by
way of compound interest such part of the income so produced or derived as he
considers equitable, and also the resulting
income therefrom; and in any such
case the fund shall follow the destination of the capital of the property and
shall be subject
to all the trusts, powers and provisions applicable thereto;
with further power to the trustee to apply as he thinks fit the fund
and
accumulations of income in or towards the replacement, repair, maintenance,
upkeep or renovation of the property or assets, or
in or towards the acquisition
by purchase or otherwise of property or assets of a like nature or property or
assets that otherwise
may advantageously be employed in conjunction with the
property in producing or deriving the income as aforesaid.
Power of trustee for sale to sell by auction, etc., or before date specified
27.-(1)
Where a trust for sale or a power of sale of property is vested in a trustee
whether by the instrument creating the trust or
by or under the provisions of
this or any other Act, he may sell or concur with any other person in selling
all or any part of the
property, either subject to prior encumbrances or not,
and either together or in lots by public auction, by public tender or by private
contract, subject to any such conditions respecting title or evidence of title
or other matters as the trustee may think fit, with
power to vary any contract
for sale, and to buy in at any auction, or to rescind any contract for sale and
to resell, without being
answerable for any
loss.
(2)
A trust or power to sell or dispose of land includes a trust or power to sell or
dispose of part thereof, whether the division
is horizontal, vertical or made in
any other way; and also includes a trust or power to sell or dispose of any
building, fixture,
timber or other thing affixed to the soil apart and
separately from the land
itself.
(3)
If a trustee joins with any other person in selling trust property and other
property, the purchase money shall be apportioned
in or before the contract of
sale, and a separate receipt shall be given by the trustee for the apportioned
share; but a contravention
of this subsection shall not invalidate, and shall
not be deemed to have invalidated, any instrument intended to affect or evidence
the title to the trust property, and no person being a purchaser, lessee,
mortgagee or other person who, in good faith and for valuable
consideration,
acquires the trust property or any interest in it or a charge over it, and
neither the Registrar of Titles nor any
other person registering or certifying
title, shall be affected by notice of, or be concerned to inquire whether there
has been,
a contravention of the provisions of this subsection.
Power to sell subject to depreciatory conditions
28.-(1)
A sale by a trustee shall not be impeached by any beneficiary upon the ground
that any of the conditions subject to which the
sale was made may have been
unnecessarily depreciatory, unless it also appears that the consideration for
the sale was thereby rendered
inadequate.
(2)
A sale by a trustee shall not, after the execution of the conveyance or
transfer, be impeached as against the purchaser, upon
the ground that any of the
conditions subject to which the sale was made may have been unnecessarily
depreciatory, unless it appears
that the purchaser was acting in collusion with
the trustee at the time when the contract for sale was
made.
(3)
A purchaser, upon any sale by a trustee, shall not be at liberty to make
objection against the title upon any of the grounds mentioned
in this
section.
Mortgage on sale of land
29.-(1)
Where a trustee sells land for an estate in fee simple, the trustee may, where
the proceeds are liable to be invested, contract
that the payment of not more
than two-thirds of the purchase money shall be secured by a mortgage of the land
sold, with or without
the security of any other property, and the mortgage
shall, if any buildings or other improvements are comprised in the mortgage,
contain a covenant by the mortgagor to keep them insured against loss or damage
by fire to their full insurable value in the names
of the mortgagor and the
mortgagee for their respective
interests.
(2)
The trustee shall not be bound to obtain any report as to the value of the land
or other property to be comprised in such a mortgage
referred to in subsection
(1), or any advice as to the making of the loan, and shall not be liable for any
loss that may be incurred
by reason only of the security being insufficient at
the date of the
mortgage.
(3)
Where the sale referred to in subsection (1) is made under an order of the
Court, the powers conferred by that subsection shall
apply only if and so far as
the Court may by order direct.
Deferred payment on sale of property
30.-(1)
A sale of property by a trustee, in exercise of any power vested in him in that
behalf by the instrument creating the trust
or by or under the provisions of
this or any other Act, may be on terms of deferred
payment.
(2)
The terms of deferred payment may provide that the purchase money shall be paid
by
instalments.
(3)
The terms upon which property is sold shall, in addition to such other
provisions as the trustee may think proper, include provisions
giving effect to
the following, namely that:-
(a) the part of the purchase money to be paid by deposit shall not be less than the sum which a person acting with prudence would, if the property were his own, have accepted in the circumstances in order to sell the property to the best advantage, and in any case shall not be less than one-tenth of the purchase money;
(b) the balance of the purchase money shall be payable by such instalments and shall bear interest payable half-yearly or oftener on the amount from time to time unpaid at such rate as a person acting with prudence would, if the property were his own, have accepted in the circumstances in order to sell the property to the best advantage, and in any case the whole purchase money shall be payable within a period not exceeding ten years from the date of sale;
(c) if any instalment or interest or part thereof is in arrear and unpaid for six months, or for such less period as may be specified, the whole of the purchase money shall become due and payable; and
(d) the purchaser shall maintain and protect the property, and, in the case of land, keep all buildings (if any) thereon insured against loss or damage by fire to their full insurable value in the names of the purchaser and the vendor for their respective interests.
(4)
Notwithstanding that the property has been sold on terms of deferred payment,
the trustee may, at any time after one-third of
the purchase money has been
paid, convey the property and take a mortgage back to secure payment of the
balance of the purchase money
and interest, with or without the security of any
other
property.
(5)
Whether the sale is made under an order of the Court or otherwise, the Court may
make such order as it thinks fit as to the terms
of deferred
payment.
(6)
A trustee selling property on terms authorised by this section, or by any order
of the Court, shall not be affected by the provisions
of sections
12
or
18
in respect of so much of the purchase money as is payable under an agreement for
sale or is secured by a mortgage, and shall not
be liable for any loss that may
be incurred by reason only of the security being insufficient at the date of the
agreement of
mortgage.
(7)
For the purposes of any consent or direction required by the instrument (if any)
creating the trust or by this or any other Act,
a trustee selling property on
terms of deferred payment shall be deemed not to be lending money or investing
trust funds.
Surrender of onerous leases
31.-(1)
Where a leasehold is vested in a trustee and the property is subject to onerous
covenants of such a nature that it would not
be in the interests of the
beneficiaries to retain the property, the trustee may surrender, or concur in
surrendering, the lease;
and the trustee shall not be chargeable with any breach
of trust nor shall the surrender be impeached by any beneficiary upon the
ground
only that the covenants were not of such a nature, if the trustee has acted bona
fide and on the advice of a person whom he
reasonably believed to be a competent
valuer instructed and employed independently of the lessor, whether the valuer
carried on business
in the locality where the property is situate or
elsewhere.
(2)
A subsequent purchaser or the Registrar of Titles or other person registering or
certifying title shall not be concerned to inquire
whether a surrender was
authorised by this section.
Power to renew leases
32.-(1)
A trustee of any leasehold for lives or years that is renewable under any
covenant or contract or by custom or usual practice
may, if he thinks fit, and
shall, if so required by any person having beneficial interest, present or
future or contingent, in the
leasehold, use his best endeavours to obtain from
time to time a renewed lease of the same hereditaments on the agreed or
reasonable
terms, and for that purpose may from time to time make or concur in
making a surrender of the lease for the time subsisting, and
do all such other
acts as are requisite; but where, by the terms of the instrument (if any)
creating the trust, the person in possession
for his life or other limited
interest is entitled to enjoy the same without any obligation to renew, or to
contribute to the expense
of renewal, this section shall not apply unless the
consent in writing of that person is obtained to the
renewal.
(2)
A trustee obtaining a renewal of a lease under the powers conferred by this
section or otherwise may pay or apply capital money
subject to the trust, for
the purpose of obtaining the renewal.
Power to purchase equity of redemption in lieu of foreclosure
33.
A trustee may, in lieu of proceeding to foreclosure, purchase the equity of
redemption of land in Fiji the subject of a mortgage
held by the trustee under
which default has been made, where the moneys expended in that purchase are
subject to the same trusts
as the mortgage debt; but in no case shall the moneys
paid by way of consideration for such purchase exceed five per cent of the
amount due under the mortgage.
Sale after right of redemption barred
34.-(1)
Where any property is vested in a trustee by way of security, and the property
becomes discharged from the right of redemption,
whether by reason of the law
relating to limitation or of any order for foreclosure or purchase of the equity
of redemption or otherwise,
the trustee shall hold the property on trust for
sale.
(2)
The net proceeds of sale of any property to which the provisions of this section
relate shall, after payment of costs and expenses,
be applied in like manner as
the mortgage debt, if received, would have been applied, and the income of the
property until sale shall
be applied in like manner as the interest, if
received, would have been
applicable.
(3)
This section shall not affect the right of any person to require that, instead
of a sale, the property be conveyed to him or in
accordance with his
directions.
Release of equity of redemption in discharge of mortgage debt
35.-(1)
Where an equity of redemption is vested in a trustee and the mortgaged property
is not of greater value than the amount of the
mortgage debt, the trustee may
release the equity of redemption to the mortgagee in discharge of the mortgage
debt or part thereof;
and the trustee shall not be chargeable with breach of
trust, nor shall the release be impeached by any beneficiary, upon the ground
only that the mortgaged property was of greater value than the amount of the
mortgage debt or of the part thereof discharged, if
the trustee has acted bona
fide and on the advice of a person whom he reasonably believed to be a competent
valuer instructed and
employed independently of the mortgagee, whether the
valuer carried on business in the locality where the property is situate or
elsewhere.
(2)
A subsequent purchaser or the Registrar of Titles or other person registering or
certifying title shall not be concerned to inquire
whether a release was
authorised by this section.
Application of income by trustee-mortgagee in possession
36.-(1)
Where a trustee is entitled, whether severally or as a co-mortgagee. to a debt,
secured by a mortgage of land, in trust as to
the whole or part of that debt,
for any person, and the trustee is at the commencement of this Act, or at any
time thereafter becomes,
mortgagee in possession of the mortgaged land, the
trustee shall apply the net income of the mortgaged land received by him after
he becomes mortgagee in possession-
(a) in discharge of all rents, taxes. rates and outgoings affecting the mortgaged land;
(b) in payment of the premiums of any insurances properly payable on the mortgaged property; and
(c) in keeping down all annual sums or other payments and the interest on all principal sums having priority to the mortgage in right whereof he is in possession,
and,
subject to the rights of the mortgagor, the trustee shall hold the residue of
the income so received by him upon the trusts to
which the mortgage debt is
subject.
(2)
The rents, taxes, outgoings, premiums, costs, annual sums, payments and interest
to be discharged, kept down and paid, pursuant
to the provisions of subsection
(1) shall be those accruing due-
(a) after the commencement of this Act, where the trustee is in possession of the mortgaged land at that date; and
(b) after the date of possession by the trustee, where the entry into possession is after the commencement of this Act,
but
if at the commencement of this Act, or on the date of possession by the trustee,
as the case may be, any rents, taxes, rates,
outgoings, annual sums, payments,
interest or premiums mentioned in paragraphs (a), (b) or (c) of subsection (1)
were or are due
and unpaid, and such of those rents, taxes, rates, outgoings,
annual sums, payments and premiums as are periodic payments, were payable
wholly
or in part in respect of any period subsequent to the date of commencement or to
the date of possession, as the case may be,
then the last mentioned rents,
taxes, rates, outgoings, annual sums, payments and premiums shall, for the
purpose of this section,
be considered as accruing from day to day and shall be
apportionable in respect of time
accordingly.
(3)
On the recovery of the moneys secured by the mortgage, whether in whole or in
part, and whether by repayment or on realization
of the security or otherwise,
such part of the income applied. by the trustee in the payments specified in
paragraphs (a), (b) and
(c) of subsection (1) as would otherwise have been
payable as interest to the person entitled to the interest of the mortgage debt
shall, as between the persons respectively entitled to the income and capital of
the mortgage debt, be deemed to be arrears of interest,
and the amount received
by the trustee shall be apportioned
accordingly.
(4)
Notwithstanding anything contained in this section, the trustee may, if in the
administration of the trust he thinks it necessary
so to do, apply income of the
mortgaged property received by him after the commencement of this Act in payment
of any rents, taxes,
rates, outgoings, premiums, costs, annual sums, payments
and interest affecting the mortgaged land, other than those specified in
subsection (2); but the person entitled to the interest on the mortgage debt
shall be entitled to recoupment out of the capital of
the mortgage debt of all
payments made by the trustee under the authority conferred by the provisions of
this subsection.
Power of trustees to give receipts
37.-(1)
The receipt in writing of a trustee for any money, securities or other personal
property or effects payable, transferable or
deliverable to him under any trust
or power shall be a sufficient discharge to the person paying, transferring or
delivering it or
them and shall effectually exonerate that person from seeing to
the application, or being answerable for any loss or misapplication,
of the
money, securities or other personal property or
effects.
(2)
This section does not, except where the trustee is a trust corporation, enable a
sole trustee to give a valid receipt for the
proceeds of sale or other capital
money arising under rider a disposition on trust for sale of
land.
(3)
This section applies notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained in the
instrument (if any) creating the trust.
Power to compound liabilities
38.
A trustee
may, if and as he thinks fit-
(a) accept any property, real or personal, before the time at which it is made transferable or payable; or
(b) sever and apportion any blended trust funds or property; or
(c) pay or allow any debt or claim on any evidence that he thinks sufficient; or
(d) accept any composition or any security, real or personal, for any debt or for any property, real or personal, claimed; or
(e) allow any time for payment of any debt; or
(f) compromise, compound, abandon, submit to arbitration or otherwise settle any debt, account, claim or thing whatsoever relating to the trust or to the trust property,
and
for any of those purposes may enter into, give, execute and do, such agreements,
instruments of composition or arrangement, releases
and other things as to him
seem expedient, without being responsible for any loss occasioned by any act or
thing so done by him in
good faith.
Power to raise money by sale or mortgage
39.-(1)
Where a trustee is authorised by the instrument (if any) creating the trust or
by or under the provisions of this or any other
Act or by law to pay or apply
capital money subject to the trust for any purpose or in any manner, he shall
have and shall be deemed
always to have had power to raise the money required by
sale, conversion, calling in or mortgage of all or any part of the trust
property for the time being in possession; and where a trustee, in the exercise
of his powers in that behalf, purchases any property
for the trust, he shall
have and shall be deemed always to have had power to make the purchase on terms
of deferred payment or on
mortgage of that
property.
(2)
The provisions of this section shall apply notwithstanding anything to the
contrary contained in the instrument (if any) creating
the trust.
Protection to purchasers and mortgagees dealing with trustees
40.
A purchaser or mortgagee, paying or advancing money on a sale or mortgage
purporting to be made under any trust or power (statutory
or otherwise) vested
in a trustee, shall not be concerned to see that the money is wanted, or that no
more than is wanted is raised,
or otherwise as to the application
thereof.
Devolution of powers or trusts
41.-(1)
Where a power or trust is given to, or imposed on, two or more trustees jointly,
then, unless the contrary is expressed in the
instrument (if any) creating the
power or trust, the power or trust may be exercised or performed for the time
being by the survivors
or survivor of
them.
(2)
Until the appointment of a new trustee, the personal representative for the time
being of a sole trustee or (where there were
two or more trustees) of the last
surviving or continuing trustee shall be capable of exercising or performing any
power on trust
that was given to, or capable of being exercised by, the sole or
last surviving or continuing trustee, or other trustees for the
time being of
the trust; but for the purposes of this subsection the term "trustee" does not
include a personal representative as
such.
(3)
The provisions of this section shall not authorise the exercise or performance
of any power or trust by an executor who has renounced
or has not
proved.
Power to insure
42.-(1)
A trustee may insure against loss or damage, whether by fire or otherwise, any
insurable property to any amount, including the
amount of any insurance already
in being, not exceeding the full replacement value of the property; and may also
insure against any
risk or liability against which it would be prudent for a
person to insure, if he were acting for himself; and may pay the premiums
for
such insurance out of the income of the property concerned or out of the income
of any other property subject to the same trusts,
without obtaining the consent
of any person who may be entitled wholly or partly to that
income.
(2)
A trustee may recover the amounts of any premiums paid in respect of any
insurance properly effected from the life tenant or other
person entitled to or
in receipt of the rents and profits of the property
concerned.
(3)
Nothing in this section shall impose any obligation on a trustee to insure or to
insure for any particular value or sum.
Application of insurance money where policy kept up under any trust, power or obligation
43.-(1)
Money receivable by a trustee or any beneficiary under a policy of insurance
against the loss of, or damage to, any property
subject to a trust, whether by
fire or otherwise, (in this section called "insurance money") shall, where the
policy has been kept
up under any trust in that behalf or under any power
(statutory of otherwise) or in performance of any obligation (statutory or
otherwise)
or by a tenant for life impeachable for waste, be capital for the
purposes of the trust, except so far as it would be regarded as
income under any
rule of
law.
(2)
If any insurance money is receivable by any person other than the trustee of the
trust, that person shall use his best endeavours
to recover and receive the
money, and shall pay the net residue thereof, after discharging any costs of
recovering and receiving
it, to the trustee or, if there is no trustee capable
of giving a discharge therefor, into
Court.
(3)
Any insurance money, receivable in respect of property held upon trust for sale,
shall be held upon the trusts and subject to
the powers and provisions
applicable to money arising by a sale under the trust; and, in any other case,
shall be held upon trusts
corresponding as nearly as may be with the trusts
affecting the property in respect of which it was
payable.
(4)
Any insurance money, or any part thereof, may be applied by the trustee, or, if
in Court, under the direction of the Court, in
rebuilding, reinstating,
replacing or repairing the property lost or damaged; but any such application by
the trustee shall be subject
to the consent of any person whose consent is
required, by the instrument (if any) creating the trust, to the investment of
money
subject to the
trust.
(5)
Nothing in this section shall affect the right of any person to require any
insurance money or any part thereof to be applied
in rebuilding, reinstating or
repairing the property lost or damaged, or the rights of any mortgagee, lessor
or lessee, whether under
the provisions of this or any other Act or
otherwise.
(6)
The provisions of this section shall apply to policies effected either before or
after the commencement of this Act, but only
to money received after such
commencement.
Deposit of documents for safe custody
44.
Subject to the provisions of section
17,
a trustee may deposit any document held by him relating to the trust, or to the
trust property, with any bank or corporation whose
business includes the
undertaking of the safe custody of documents, and any sum payable in respect of
any such deposit shall be paid
out of the income of the trust property, and, so
far as there is no available income, out of the capital of the trust
property.
Reversionary interests
45.-(1)
Where trust property includes any share or interest in property not vested in
the trustee, or the proceeds of sale of any such
property, or any other thing in
action, the trustee, on its or their falling into possession or becoming payable
or transferable
may-
(a) agree or ascertain the amount or value thereof or any part thereof in such manner as he thinks fit;
(b) accept in or towards satisfaction thereof, at the market or current value, or upon any valuation or estimate of value that he may think fit, any authorised investments;
(c) allow any deductions for duties, costs, charges and expenses that he thinks proper or reasonable; and
(d) execute any release in respect thereof, so as effectually to discharge all accountable parties from all liability in respect of any matter coming within the scope of the release,
without
being responsible for any loss occasioned by any act or thing so done by him in
good
faith.
(2)
The trustee shall not be under any obligation and shall not be chargeable with
any breach of trust by reason of any omission-
(a) to give any notice in respect of, or apply for any charging or other like order upon, any securities or other property out of or in which the share or interest or other thing in action mentioned in subsection (1) is derived, payable or charged; or
(b) to take any proceedings on account of any act, default or neglect on the part of any of the persons in whom the securities or other property mentioned in paragraph (a) or any of them or any part of them are for the time being, or had at any time been, vested,
unless
and until required in writing so to do by some person, or the guardian of some
person beneficially interested under the trust,
and unless also due provision is
made to his satisfaction for payment of the costs of any proceedings required to
be
taken.
(3)
Nothing in subsection (2) shall relieve the trustee of the obligation to get in
and obtain payment or transfer of the share or
interest or other thing in action
upon its falling into possession.
Valuations
46.-(1)
A trustee may, for the purpose of giving effect to the trust. or any of the
provisions of the instrument (if any) creating the
trust or of this or any other
Act, from time to time ascertain and fix the value of any trust property, or of
any property that he
is authorised to purchase or otherwise acquire, in such
manner as he thinks proper; and where the trustee is not personally qualified
to
ascertain the value of any property he shall consult a duly qualified person
(whether employed by him or not) as to that value;
but the trustee shall not be
bound to accept any valuation made by any person whom the trustee may
consult.
(2)
Any valuation made by the trustee in good faith under the provisions of this
section shall be binding on all persons beneficially
interested under the
trust.
Audit
47.-(1)
A trustee may, in his absolute discretion, from time to time, cause the accounts
of the trust property to be examined or audited
by a chartered accountant and
shall for that purpose produce such vouchers and give such information as such
accountant may
require.
(2)
The costs of the examination or audit, including the fee of the accountant,
shall be charged against the capital or income of
the trust property, or partly
in one way and partly in the other, as the trustee may in his absolute
discretion think fit, but, in
default of any direction by the trustee to the
contrary in any special case, costs attributable to capital shall be borne by
capital
and those attributable to income by income.
Power to concur with others
48.
Where an undivided share in any property is subject to a trust, the trustee may
(without prejudice to any trust or power in relation
to the entirety of the
property) execute or exercise any trust or power vested in him in relation to
that share in conjunction with
the persons entitled to, or having power in that
behalf over, the other share or shares, and notwithstanding that the trustee or
any one or more of several trustees may be entitled to or interested in any such
share, either in his or their own right or in a
fiduciary
capacity.
Power to employ agents
49.-(1)
A trustee may, instead of acting personally, employ and pay an agent, whether a
barrister and solicitor, accountant, bank, trustee
corporation, stockbroker or
other person, to transact any business or to do any act required to be
transacted or done in the execution
of the trust or the administration of the
trust property, including the receipt and payment of money, and the keeping and
audit of
trust accounts, and shall be entitled to be allowed and paid all
charges and expenses so incurred, and shall not be responsible for
the default
of any such agent employed in good faith and without
negligence.
(2)
A trustee may appoint any person to act as his agent or attorney for the purpose
of selling, converting, collecting, getting in
and executing and perfecting
assurances of, or managing or cultivating, or otherwise administering any
property, real or personal,
movable or immovable, subject to the trust in any
place outside Fiji, or executing or exercising any discretion or trust or power
vested in him in relation to any such property, with such ancillary powers, and
with and subject to such provisions and restrictions,
as he may think fit,
including a power to appoint substitutes, and shall not, by reason only of his
having made any such appointment,
be responsible for any loss arising
thereby.
(3)
Without limiting the generality of the powers conferred by subsections (1) and
(2) a trustee may-
(a) appoint a barrister and solicitor to be his agent to receive and give a discharge for any money or valuable consideration or property receivable by the trustee under the trust, by permitting the barrister and solicitor to have the custody of, and to produce, a deed or instrument having in the body thereof or endorsed thereon a receipt for the money or valuable consideration or property, the deed or instrument being executed, or the endorsed receipt being signed, by the person entitled to give a receipt for that consideration; or
(b) appoint a bank or barrister and solicitor to be his agent to receive and give a discharge for any money payable to the trustee under or by virtue of a policy of insurance, by permitting the bank or barrister and solicitor to have the custody of and to produce the policy of insurance with a receipt signed by the trustee,
and
the production, by the barrister and solicitor, of any deed or instrument
referred to in paragraph (a) shall have the same validity
and effect as if the
person appointing the barrister and solicitor had not been a
trustee.
(4)
A trustee shall not be chargeable with a breach of trust by reason only of his
having made, or concurred in making, any appointment
mentioned in subsection (3)
but nothing in that subsection shall exempt a trustee from any liability that he
would have incurred
if this Act or any Act replaced by it had not been passed,
where he permits any money, valuable consideration or property therein
mentioned
to remain in the hands or under the control of the bank or barrister and
solicitor for a longer period than is reasonably
necessary to enable the bank or
barrister and solicitor, as the case may be, to pay or transfer it to the
trustee.
(5)
The provisions of subsections (3) and (4) shall apply whether the money or
valuable consideration or property was or is received
before or after the
commencement of this Act.
Power to delegate trusts
50.-(1)
A trustee who for the time being is out of Fiji or is about to depart therefrom,
or is a member of Her Majesty's Forces, or
who is, or may be about to become, by
reason of physical infirmity, temporarily incapable of performing all his duties
as a trustee
may, subject to the provisions of this section, but notwithstanding
any rule of law or equity to the contrary, by power of attorney,
delegate to any
person the execution or exercise during his absence or incapacity, as the case
may be, of all or any trusts, powers,
authorities and discretions vested in him
as such trustee, whether alone or jointly with any other person or persons; but
a person
being the only other co-trustee and not being a trustee corporation
shall not be appointed to be an attorney under the provisions
of this
subsection.
(2)
Where any delegation has under the provisions of this section been duly made to
and accepted by any person and is for the time
being in operation, that person
shall have, within the scope of the delegation, the same trusts, powers,
authorities, discretions,
liabilities and responsibilities (except the power of
delegation conferred by the provisions of this section) as he would have if
he
were then the
trustee.
(3)
In any proceedings brought by any person beneficially interested under the trust
against the donor of a power of attorney given
under the provisions of this
section, in respect of any act or default of the donee of the power, it shall be
a defence for the donor
to prove that the donee was appointed by him in good
faith and without
negligence.
(4)
All jurisdiction and powers of any court shall apply to the donee of a power of
attorney given under the provisions of this section
in the same manner, so far
as respects the execution of the trust or the administration of the estate to
which the power of attorney
relates, as if the donee were acting in relation to
the trust or estate in the same capacity as the donor of the
power.
(5)
A power of attorney given under the provisions of this section shall not come
into operation unless and until the donor is out
of Fiji or is incapable of
performing all of his duties as a trustee, and shall be suspended by his return
to Fiji or by his recovery
of that capacity, as the case may
be.
(6)
In favour of any person dealing with the donee of a power of attorney given
under the provisions of this section, any act done
or instrument executed by the
donee shall be, notwithstanding that the power has never come into operation or
has been suspended
or revoked, whether by the act of the donor of the power or
by operation of law, as valid and effectual as if the power had come
into
operation and remained unrevoked at the time when the act was done or the
instrument executed, unless that person had at that
time actual notice that the
power had never come into operation or of the suspension or revocation of the
power.
(7)
A statutory declaration by the donee of a power of attorney given under the
provisions of this section relating to any trust or
estate that the power has
come into operation, or that in any transaction the donee is acting in the
execution of the trust or the
administration of the estate, shall be, in favour
of a person dealing with the donee of the power, conclusive evidence of that
fact.
(8)
The fact that it appears from any power of attorney given under the provisions
of this section, or from any evidence required
for the purposes of any power of
attorney or otherwise, that in any transaction the donee of the power is acting
in the execution
of a trust shall not affect with notice of the trust any person
dealing in good faith with the
donee.
(9)
Where it is intended that the donee of a power of attorney given under the
provisions of this section shall be entitled to transfer,
or otherwise deal
with, land under the operation of the Land Transfer Act the power of attorney
shall be in the form, and executed and attested in the manner, prescribed by
Part XVIII of that
Act.
(Cap.
131.)
Power to carry on business
51.-(1)
Subject to the provisions of any other Act, if at the time of his death any
person is engaged (whether alone or in partnership)
in carrying on a business,
trade or occupation, it shall be lawful for his trustee to continue to carry on
that business, trade or
occupation, in the same manner, for any one or more of
the following periods, namely:-
(a) two years from the date of death of that person;
(b) such period as may be necessary or desirable for the winding up of the business; or
(c) such further period or periods as the Court may approve.
(2) In exercise of the powers conferred by the provisions of this section or by the instrument creating the trust, a trustee may-
(a) employ any part of the deceased's estate that is subject to the same trusts;
(b) from time to time increase or diminish the part of the estate employed as provided by paragraph (a);
(c) purchase stock. machinery, implements and chattels for the purposes of the business mentioned in subsection (1);
(d) employ such mangers, agents, servants, clerks, workmen and others as he thinks fit; and
(e) at any time enter into a partnership agreement to take the place of any partnership agreement subsisting immediately before the death of the deceased or at any time thereafter and notwithstanding that the trustee was a partner of the deceased in his own right.
(3)
Application to the Court for leave to carry on a business may be made by the
trustee or by any person beneficially interested
in the estate at any time,
whether or not any previous authority to carry on the business has expired; and
the Court may make such
an order, or may order that the business be not carried
on, or be carried on subject to conditions or may make such other order as,
in
the circumstances, it thinks
fit.
(4)
Nothing in this section shall affect any other authority to do the acts thereby
authorise to be
done.
(5)
Where a trustee is in any manner interested or concerned in a trade or business,
he may make such subscriptions as it would be
prudent for him to make, if he
were acting for himself, out of the income of the assets affected, to any fund
created for objects
or purposes in support of any trade or business of a like
nature and subscribed to by other persons engaged in a like trade or
business.
Power to convert business into a company
52.-(1)
A trustee may at any time, at the expense of the trust property, convert or join
in converting any business into a company limited
by shares, in such manner as
he thinks fit; and may, at the like expense, promote and assist in promoting a
company for taking over
the business; and may sell or transfer the business and
the capital and assets and goodwill thereof, or any part thereof, to the
company, or to any company having for its objects the purchase of such a
business, in consideration, in either case, wholly or in
part of ordinary or
preference shares wholly or partially paid up of any such company, or wholly or
in part of debentures, debenture
stock or bonds of any such company, and as to
the balance (if any) in cash payable immediately, or by any instalments with or
without
security.
(2)
A trustee may retain as an authorised investment of the trust any shares.
debentures, debenture stock or bonds received by him
in consequence of the
exercise by him of any power conferred by the provisions of subsection
(1).
Trustee may sue himself in a different capacity
53.
Notwithstanding any rule of law or practice to the contrary, a trustee of any
property in that capacity may sue, and be sued by,
himself in any other capacity
whatsoever, including his personal capacity; but in every such case the trustee
shall obtain the directions
of the court in which the proceedings are taken, as
to the manner in which the opposing interests are to be
represented.
PART V-MAINTENANCE, ADVANCEMENT AND PROTECTIVE TRUSTS
Power to apply income for maintenance, etc. and to accumulate surplus income during a minority
54.-(1)
Where any property is held by a trustee in trust for any person for any interest
whatsoever, whether vested or contingent, then,
subject to any prior interest or
charges affecting that property-
(a) during the infancy of that person, if his interest so long continues, the trustee may, at his sole discretion, pay to his parent or guardian (if any) or otherwise apply for or towards his maintenance, education (including past maintenance or education) or his advancement or benefit, the whole or such part (if any) of the income of that property as may, in all the circumstances, be reasonable, whether or not there is-
(i) any other fund applicable to the same purpose; or
(ii) any person bound by law to provide for his maintenance, education, advancement or benefit; and
(b) if the person on attaining the age of twenty-one years has not a vested interest in that income, the trustee shall thenceforth pay the income of that property and of any accretion thereto, under the provisions of subsection (2), to him until he either attains a vested interest therein or dies, or until failure of his interest,
but,
in deciding whether the whole or any part of the income of the property is
during a minority to be paid or applied for the purposes
in this subsection
mentioned, the trustee shall have regard to the age of the infant and his
requirements and, generally, to the
circumstances of the case, and in particular
to what other income (if any) is applicable for the same purposes; and where the
trustee
has notice that the income of more than one fund is applicable for those
purposes, then, so far as practicable, unless the entire
income of the funds is
paid or applied for those purposes or the Court otherwise directs, a
proportionate part only of the income
of each fund shall be so paid or
applied.
(2)
During the infancy of any such person as is mentioned in subsection (1), if his
interest so long continues, the trustee shall
accumulate all the residue of that
income in the way of compound interest by investing it and the resulting income
thereof from time
to time in authorised investments, and shall hold those
accumulations-
(a) if the person-
(i) attains the age of twenty-one years, or marries under that age, and his interest in the income during his infancy or until his marriage is a vested interest; or
(ii) on attaining the age of twenty-one years or on marriage under that age becomes entitled to the property from which the income arose in fee simple, absolute or determinable, or absolutely, or for an entailed interest,
in trust for that person absolutely, but without prejudice to any provisions with respect thereto contained in any settlement by him made under any statutory power during his infancy, and so that the receipt of that person after marriage, and though still an infant, shall be a good discharge; and
(b) in any other case, notwithstanding that the person had a vested interest in the income, as an accretion to the capital of the property from which the accumulations arose and as one fund with that capital for all purposes,
but
the trustee may, at any time during the infancy of that person if his interest
so long continues, apply those accumulations, or
any part thereof, as if they
were income arising in the then current
year.
(3)
The provisions of this section shall apply in the case of a contingent interest,
only if the limitation or trust carries the intermediate
income of the property
held in trust, but it shall apply to a future or contingent legacy by the parent
of, or a person standing
in loco parentis to, the legatee, if and for such
period as, under the general law, the legacy carries interest for the
maintenance
of the legatee, and in the latter case the rate of interest shall
(if the income available is sufficient and subject to any rules
of court to the
contrary) be five per cent per annum; and where in the case of a contingent
interest the limitation or trust would,
but for the operation of a protective
trust (whether created or statutory) carry the intermediate income of the
property, that limitation
or trust shall for the purposes of this subsection be
deemed, notwithstanding the protective trust, to carry the intermediate
income.
(4)
The provisions of this section shall apply to a vested annuity in like manner as
if the annuity were the income of property held
by a trustee in trust to pay the
income thereof to the annuitant for the same period for which the annuity is
payable, save that
in any case accumulations made during the infancy of the
annuitant shall be held in trust for the annuitant or his personal
representative
absolutely.
Power to apply capital for maintenance, etc.
55.
A trustee may at any time or times pay or apply any capital money or other
capital asset subject to a trust for the maintenance,
education (including past
maintenance or education) or the advancement or benefit, in such manner as he
may in his absolute discretion
think fit, of any person entitled to the capital
of the trust property or any share thereof, whether absolutely or contingently
on
his attaining any specified age or on the occurrence of any other event, or
subject to a gift over on his death under any specified
age or on the occurrence
of any other event, and whether in possession or in remainder or reversion, and
any such payment or application
may be made notwithstanding that the interest of
that person is liable to be defeated by the exercise of a power of appointment
or
revocation or by the operation of the rule against perpetuities or to be
diminished by the increase of the class to which he belongs;
but-
(a) the money or asset so paid or applied for the maintenance, education, advancement or benefit of any person shall not exceed altogether two thousands dollars or half of the presumptive or vested share or interest of that person in the trust property, whichever is the greater;
(b) where that person or any other person is or becomes absolutely and indefeasibly entitled to the share of the trust property in which that person had a presumptive or vested interest when the money or asset was so paid or applied, that money or asset shall be brought into account as part of that share of the trust property; and
(c) that payment or application shall not be made so as to prejudice any person entitled to any prior life or other interest. whether vested or contingent, in the money or asset paid or applied. unless that person is in existence and of full age and consents in writing to the payment or application, or unless the Court, on the application of the trustee. so orders.
Conditional advances for maintenance, etc.
56.-(1)
Where a power to pay or apply any property for the maintenance, education,
advancement or benefit of any person or for any one
or more of those purposes is
vested in a trustee, the trustee when exercising the power shall have, and be
deemed always to have
had, authority to impose on the person any condition,
whether as to repayment, payment of interest, giving security or otherwise;
and
at any time after imposing any such condition, the trustee may, either wholly or
in part, waive the condition or release any
obligation undertaken or any
security given by reason of the
condition.
(2)
In determining the amount or value of the property that a trustee, who has
imposed a condition pursuant to the provisions of subsection
(1), may pay or
apply in exercise of his powers in that regard, any money repaid to the trustee
or recovered by him shall be deemed
not to have been so paid or applied by the
trustee.
(3)
Nothing in this section contained shall impose upon a trustee any obligation to
impose any condition pursuant to the provisions
of subsection (1); and a
trustee, when imposing any condition as to giving security, shall not be
affected by any restrictions upon
the investment of trust funds, whether imposed
by the provisions of this Act or by any rule of law or by the trust instrument
(if
any).
(4)
A trustee shall not be liable for any loss which may be incurred in respect of
any money that is paid or applied under the provisions
of this section, whether
the loss arises through failure to take security, through the security being
insufficient, through failure
to take action for its protection, through the
release or abandonment of the security without payment, or from any other
cause.
Protective trusts
57.-(1)
Where any income, including an annuity or other periodic income payment, is
directed to be held on protective trusts for the
benefit of any person (in this
section called "the principal beneficiary") for the period of his life or any
less period, then during
that period (in this section called "the trust period")
that income shall, without prejudice to any prior interest, be held on trust
as
by this section
provided.
(2)
The income to which this section refers shall be held on trust for the principal
beneficiary during the trust period or until,
whether before or after the
termination of any prior interest-
(a) the principal beneficiary does, or attempts to do, or suffers, any act or thing; or
(b) any event, other than an advance under any statutory or express power, happens,
whereby,
if the income were payable during the trust period to the principal beneficiary
absolutely during that period, he would be
deprived of the right to receive it
or any part of it; and, in any of those cases, as well as on the termination of
the trust period,
whichever first happens, the trust of the income shall fail
and
determine.
(3)
Where the trust, to which the provisions of subsection (2) refer, fails or
determines during the subsistence of the trust period,
then, during the
remainder of that period, the income to which such provisions refer shall be
held upon trust for the application
thereof for the maintenance, education,
advancement or benefit of all, or any one or more exclusively of the other or
others, of-
(a) the principal beneficiary and his wife or her husband (If any and his. or her. children or more remote issue (if any); or
(b) where there is no wife or husband or issue of the principal beneficiary in existence, the principal beneficiary and the persons who would, if he were dead, be entitled to the trust property or the income or the annuity fund (if any) or arrears of the annuity,
as
the trustee, in his absolute discretion and without being liable to account for
the exercise of that discretion, thinks
fit.
(4)
This section shall not apply to trust coming into operation before the
commencement of this Act, and shall have effect subject
to any variation,
contained in the instrument creating the trust, of the trusts declared by
subsections (2) and
(3).
(5)
Nothing in this section contained shall operate to validate any trust that
would, if contained in the instrument creating the
trust, be liable to be set
aside.
PART VI-INDEMNITIES AND PROTECTION OF TRUSTEES, ETC.
Protection against liability in respect of rents and covenants
58.-(1)
Where a trustee liable as such for-
(a) any rent, covenant or agreement reserved by, or contained in, any lease; or
(b) any rent, covenant or agreement payable under, or contained in, any grant made in consideration of a rent charge; or
(c) any indemnity given in respect of any rent, covenant or agreement referred to in either of paragraphs (a) or (b),
satisfies
all liabilities under the lease or grant that may have accrued and been claimed
up to the date of the conveyance hereinafter
in this subsection mentioned, and,
where necessary, sets apart a sufficient fund to answer any future claim that
may be made in respect
of any fixed and ascertained sum that the lessee or
grantee agreed to layout on the property demised or granted, although the period
for laying out that sum may not have arrived then, and in any such case, the
trustee may convey the property demised or granted to
a purchaser, legatee,
devisee or other person entitled to call for a conveyance thereof; and may
thereafter distribute the trust
estate, other than the fund (if any) set apart
under the provisions of this subsection, to or amongst the persons entitled
thereto,
without appropriating any part, or any further part, as the case may
be, of the trust estate to meet any future liability under the
said lease or
grant; and notwithstanding that distribution, the trustee shall not be
personally liable in respect of any subsequent
claim under the lease or
grant.
(2)
For the purposes of this section, a trustee shall be deemed to be liable as such
for any liabilities arising from privity of estate
that he may incur under the
obligations contained in a lease or grant, if he is entitled to reimburse
himself out of the trust property
for all expenses he may incur in respect of
such
liabilities.
(3)
This section shall operate without prejudice to the right of the lessor or
grantor, or the persons deriving title under the lessor
or grantor, to follow
the trust property or any part thereof or any property representing that
property into the hands of the persons
amongst whom it may have been
distributed, and applies notwithstanding any thing to the contrary contained in
the instrument (if
any) creating the
trust.
(4)
In this section-
"lease" includes a sublease and an agreement for a lease or sublease and any instrument giving any such indemnity as is mentioned in subsection (1) or varying the liabilities under the lease;
"grant" applies to a grant whether the rent is created by limitation, grant, reservation or otherwise, and includes an agreement for a grant and any instrument giving any such mentioned indemnity or varying the liabilities under the grant; and
"lessee" and "grantee" include persons respectively deriving title under a lessee or grantee.
Protection against creditors and others by means of advertisement
59.-(1)
Where a trustee has given notice by advertisement published at least once in the
Gazette and in a newspaper circulating in each
locality in which, in the opinion
of the trustee, claims are likely to arise, requiring persons having claims to
which this section
applies to send to the trustee, within the time fixed in the
notice, particulars of their claims and warning them of the consequences
of
their failure to do so, then, at the expiration of that time or at any time
thereafter, the trustee may administer or distribute
the property or any part
thereof to which the notice relates to or among the persons entitled thereto
having regard only to the claims,
whether formal or not ,of which the trustee
then has notice; and he shall not, as respects the property so administered or
distributed,
be liable to any person of whose claim he has not had notice at the
time of the administration or
distribution.
(2)
Nothing in this section contained shall affect any remedy that a person may have
under the provisions of section
61
or any other right or remedy available to him against any person other than the
trustee, including any right that he may have to
follow the property and any
money or property into which it is
converted.
(3)
The time to be fixed in any notice, published in accordance with the provisions
of subsection (1), shall be not less than two
months from the date on which the
notice is first
published.
(4)
Notice by advertisement for the purposes of this section shall, so far as
regards the contents of the advertisement, be sufficient
if given in the form
set out in the Schedule or in a form to the like
effect.
(5)
Where the trustee is in doubt as to what advertisements should be published
under the provisions of this section, he may apply
to the Court for
directions.
(6)
Any advertisement published under the provisions of this section may relate to
more than one estate or trust
property.
(7)
Except as provided in subsection (8), this section shall apply to claims,
whether present or future, certain or contingent, against
a trustee, being
claims-
(a) against or in respect of the estate of the deceased person or the trust property, including (without limiting the generality of the foregoing) claims that survive or lie against or in respect of the estate or property under the provisions of the Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions) (Death and Interest) Act; or
(Cap. 27.)
(b) against the trustee personally, by reason of his being under any liability in respect of which he is entitled to reimburse himself out of the estate or property that he is administering.
(8)
This section shall not apply to-
(a) preclude any claim under the Inheritance (Family Provision) Act; or
(Cap. 61.)
(b) extinguish any claim by a person that he is a beneficiary.
Barring of claims
60.-(1)
Where a trustee wishes to reject a claim that has been made, or that he has
reason to believe may be made-
(a) to or against the estate or property that he is administering; or
(b) against the trustee personally, by reason of his being under any liability in respect of which he is entitled to reimburse himself out of the estate or property that he is administering,
the
trustee may serve upon the claimant, or the person who may become a claimant, a
notice calling upon him, within a period of three
months from the date of
service of the notice, to take legal proceedings to enforce the claim and also
to prosecute the proceedings
with all due
diligence.
(2)
At the expiration of the period stipulated in a notice served under the
provisions of subsection (1), the trustee-
(a) may apply to the Court for an order under the provisions of subsection (3) and shall serve a copy of the application on the person concerned; or
(b) may administer the estate or property with which he is concerned as trustee at the expiration of a further period of three months from the expiry of the notice served under the provisions of subsection (1) whereupon all claims shall be barred unless a claimant has within the time specified taken legal proceedings to enforce his claim.
(Substituted by 55 of 1971, s.2.)
(3)
Where, on the hearing of an application made under the provisions of paragraph
(a) of subsection (2), the person concerned does
not satisfy the Court that he
has commenced proceedings and is prosecuting them with all due diligence, the
Court may make an order-
(a) extending the period, or barring the claim, or enabling the trust property to be dealt with without regard to the claim; and
(b) imposing such conditions and giving such directions, including a direction as to the payment of the costs of or incidental to the application, as the Court thinks fit.
(Amended by 55 of 1971, s.2.)
(4)
Where a trustee has served any notices under the provisions of this section in
respect of claims on two or more persons, and the
period specified in each of
those notices has expired, he may, if he thinks fit, apply for an order in
respect of the claims of those
persons by a single application, and the Court
may, on that application, make an order
accordingly.
(5)
The provisions of this section shall apply to every claim therein mentioned,
whether the claim is or may be made as creditor or
next-of-kin or beneficiary
under the trust or otherwise; but it shall not apply to any claim made under the
provisions of the Inheritance (Family Provision) Act and no order made under the
provisions of this section shall affect any application for revocation of any
grant of probate or of
letters of administration, whether that application is
made before or after the
order.
(Cap.
61.)
(6)
On an application by a trustee under the provisions of this section, the persons
beneficially entitled to the estate or property
need not be made parties to the
proceedings, and an order made by the Court on such application shall not affect
the right of such
persons to contest the claim of the trustee to be entitled to
indemnify himself out of the estate or property that he is administering
where
they were not parties to the proceedings in which the order was
made.
Following of assets, etc.
61.-(1)
The provisions of this section shall apply where a trustee has distributed any
assets forming part of the estate of a deceased
person or subject to a trust,
and there is nothing in any Act to prevent the distribution from being
disturbed.
(2)
Where this section applies, the Court may make such order as, in the
circumstances of the case, it may consider appropriate on
a claim,
being-
(a) an application under the Inheritance (Family Provision) Act;
( Cap. 61.)
(b) a claim to which section 59 applies; or
(c) a claim by a person to be a beneficiary under the will, or to be entitled on the intestacy, of the deceased person, or to be beneficially interested under the trust,
any
of which applications or claims are, hereinafter in this section, called "the
claim".
(3)
An order made under the provisions of subsection (2) may, without limiting the
generality thereof, include provision that-
(a) any person to whom any assets, to which this section applies, were distributed, or his personal representative, shall pay to the person making the claim or to the trustee a sum not exceeding the value of those assets; or
(b) any person, who has received, otherwise than in good faith and for valuable consideration, any interest in any assets, to which this section applies, from the person to whom they were distributed or his personal representative, shall pay to the person making the claim or to the trustee a sum not' exceeding the value of that interest;
and
for the purpose of giving effect to any such order the Court may make such
further order as it thinks
fit.
(4)
The remedies given to any person by the provisions of this section shall be in
addition to all other rights and remedies (if any)
available to that person, and
nothing, other than the provisions of subsections (7) and (8), shall restrict
those other rights and
remedies.
(5)
Subject to the provisions of subsection (6), an order under the provisions of
this section shall not be made by the Court-
(a) where the claim is an application for an order under the Inheritance (Family Provision) Act, unless that application is made within the time permitted by that Act; or
(Cap. 61.)
(b) in the case of any other claim, unless the application for that order is made within the time within which the applicant could have enforced his claim in respect of the estate, without special leave of the Court, if the assets had not been distributed,
but,
notwithstanding standing the foregoing provisions of this subsection, the order
may be made, with the special leave of the Court,
on an application made within
the time within which the applicant could have enforced his claim, in respect of
the estate, with special
leave of the Court, if the assets had not been
distributed.
(6)
Notwithstanding anything to the contrary provided in subsection (5) where a
trustee has made a distribution of any assets forming
part of the estate of a
deceased person or subject to a trust, and any person who is entitled to apply
for an order under the provisions
of this section has, within the time specified
in that subsection, applied to the Court for an order on the claim and that
person
was not aware of the distribution at the time when he made that
application, the Court may hear an application by that person under
the
provisions of this section after the expiration of the period prescribed by
subsection (5), if it is made within six months after
the date on which the
person first became aware of the distribution, and may make an order
accordingly.
(7)
Notwithstanding any rule of law to the contrary, where a trustee has made a
distribution of any assets forming part of the estate
of a deceased person or
subject to a trust-
(a) a person may exercise the remedies (if any) given to him by the provisions of this section and all other rights and remedies available to him (including all rights that he may have to follow assets and any money or property into which they have been converted) without first exercising the rights and remedies (if any) available to him against the trustee in consequence of the making of the distribution; and
(b) a person shall not exercise any remedy that may be available to him against the trustee in consequence of the making of the distribution, until he has exhausted all other remedies available to him, whether under the provisions of this section or in equity or otherwise.
(8)
Where a trustee has made a distribution of any assets forming part of the estate
of a deceased person or subject to a trust, relief
(whether under the provisions
of this section or in equity or otherwise) against any person other than the
trustee or in respect
of any interest of any such person in any assets so
distributed and in any money or property into which they have been converted,
shall be denied, wholly or in part, if the person from whom relief is sought
received the assets or interest in good faith and has
so altered his position in
reliance on his having an indefeasible interest in the assets or interest, that,
in the opinion of the
Court, having regard to all possible implications in
respect of the trustee and other persons, it would be inequitable to grant
relief
or to grant relief in
full.
(9)
Without prejudice to the provisions of subsection (8), an order made under the
provisions of this section may provide that any
payment directed to be made by
that order shall be made by periodic payments or by instalments, and the Court
may fix the amount
or rate thereof in the order, and may from time to time vary,
suspend or discharge the order for cause shown, as the Court thinks
fit.
Distribution of shares of missing beneficiaries
62.-(1)
Where any property is held by a trustee and the property or any part thereof
cannot be distributed because the trustee does
not know-
(a) whether any person who is, or may be, entitled thereto is, or at any material date was, in existence; or
(b) whether all or any of the persons who are members of any class that is or may be entitled thereto are, or at any material date were, in existence; or
(c) whether any such person as is mentioned in paragraphs (a) and (b) is alive or dead or where he is to be found,
the
trustee may publish such advertisements (whether in Fiji or elsewhere) as are
appropriate in the circumstances calling upon every
such person and every person
claiming through any such person to send in his claim within a time to be
specified in the advertisements,
being, in any case, not less than two months
from the date on which the advertisement is
published.
(2)
Where the trustee is in doubt as to what advertisements should be published
under the provisions of this section, he may apply
to the Court for directions
in that
regard.
(3)
Where the trustee has received (whether as a result of advertisement or not) a
claim that any person is a person to whom any advertisement
made under the
provisions of this section relates, or any notice that any person may claim to
be such a person, and the trustee is
not satisfied that the claim is or would be
valid, the trustee may serve upon the claimant or the person of whom the trustee
has
notice as aforesaid, a notice calling upon him, within a period of three
months from the date of service of the notice, to take legal
proceedings to
enforce the claim, if he wishes to pursue it, and to prosecute the proceedings
with all due diligence; and advising
him that, if he fails to do so, his claim
may be disregarded and application may be made to the Court without further
notice for
an order authorising the distribution of the
property.
(4)
Nothing contained in subsection (3) shall make it necessary for the trustee to
serve a notice on any person; and the Court may
make an order under the
provisions of this section, whether or not such a notice has been served on any
person, if it is satisfied
that the information supplied to the trustee by that
person or otherwise in the possession of the trustee indicates that the person
is not one of the persons specified in the advertisement or is not likely to be
one of those
persons.
(5)
Upon proof by affidavit of the circumstances, and of the inquiries that have
been made, and of the results of the inquiries and
advertisements, and of the
claims of which the trustee has received notice, and of the notices that the
trustee has given to claimants
under the provisions of subsection (3), and of
the action (if any) that the claimants have taken to enforce their claims, the
Court
may order that the trustee be at liberty to distribute the property or
part thereof, subject to such conditions as the Court may
impose-
(a) as if every person and every member of any class of persons specified in the order (being all or any of the persons specified in the advertisements) is not in existence or never existed or has died before a date or event specified in the order; and
(b) where as a consequence of the order it is not possible or practicable to determine whether or not any condition or requirement affecting a beneficial interest in the property or any part thereof has been complied with or fulfilled, as if that condition or requirement had or had not been complied with or fulfilled, as the Court may determine.
(6)
In making any order under the provisions of subsection (5), the Court
may-
(a) disregard (without express reference thereto in the order) the claims of any persons who do not appear to the Court to be, or likely to be, any of the persons specified in the advertisements;
(b) disregard (without express reference thereto in the order) the claim of any person to whom the trustee has given notice under the provisions of subsection (3) and who has failed to take legal proceedings to enforce the claim or to prosecute any such proceedings with all due diligence;
(c) exclude from the operation of the order any person to whom the trustee has not given notice under the provisions of subsection (3) and who, in the opinion of the Court, may be one of the persons specified in the advertisements, or any person whom the Court considers should, for any reason, be excluded from the operation of the order;
(d) provide that the order shall not be acted on for such period or except on such conditions as may be specified in the order, or that the effect of the order shall, during a period so specified, be advertised in such manner and form as may be specified in the order, or that the order be served upon such person or persons as are specified therein; and in the event of the Court exercising the jurisdiction conferred by this paragraph, it may, in the order direct that such order shall be of no effect in respect of any person specified therein in the event of that person instituting proceedings in Fiji to enforce his claim and serving the proceedings upon the trustee within such period as is specified in the order.
(7)
The Court may make an order under the provisions of this section notwithstanding
that there has not been strict compliance with
any directions as to
advertisements previously given by the Court, or that an error has been made in
any advertisement (whether or
not any directions have previously been given by
the Court) if the Court considers that the error would not be likely to have
prejudiced
or misled the persons to whom the advertisement
relates.
(8)
Where the Court makes an order under the provisions of this section that the
trustee may distribute any property or part thereof
as if every person and every
member of any class of persons specified in the order (not being a person
expressly excluded from the
operation of the order) is not in existence or never
existed or has died before a date or event specified in the order, and the
trustee
distributes in accordance with the order, the trustee shall be
exonerated from any further liability to any such person or to any
member of any
such class; but nothing in this section shall affect any remedy that any person
may have against any person other than
the trustee, including any right that he
may have to follow the property and any money or property into which it is
converted.
(9)
The Court may make one or more orders under the provisions of this section in
respect of the same
property.
(10)
Any order may under the provisions of this section direct how the costs of such
order and of advertising under or for the purposes
thereof shall be
borne.
(11)
It shall not be necessary to serve notice of an application for an order under
the provisions of this section upon any person,
unless the Court otherwise
orders.
(12)
Nothing in this section contained shall affect the right of the trustee (if he
so wishes) to distribute under any other law or
statutory provision or shall
affect the protection thereby afforded when he makes distribution pursuant to
any such law or provision.
Service of notices, etc.
63.-(1)
Any notice, application or order that is to be served in accordance with the
provisions of sections
60
or
62,
or in accordance with any order made pursuant to the latter section, or any
notice that it is to be served under the provisions
of paragraph (k) of
subsection (1) of section
26,
may be served-
(a) by delivering it to the person for whom it is intended or by sending it by prepaid registered letter addressed to that person at his usual or last known place of abode or business; or
(b) in such other manner as may be directed by an order of the Court.
(2)
Where a notice is sent by post as provided by this section, it shall be deemed
to be served at the time at which it would have
been delivered in the ordinary
course of post.
Protection in regard to notice
64.
A trustee acting for the purposes of more than one trust shall not, in the
absence of fraud, be affected by notice of any instrument,
matter, fact or
thing, in relation to any particular trust, if he has obtained notice thereof
merely by reason of his acting or having
acted for the purposes of another
trust.
Exoneration of trustees in respect of powers of attorney
65.-(1)
A trustee acting or paying money in good faith in reliance on any power of
attorney and on a statutory declaration or other
sufficient evidence that the
power of attorney had not been revoked shall not be liable for that act or
payment by reason of the
fact that at the time of the act or payment the person
who gave the power of attorney was subject to any disability or bankrupt or
dead, or had done or suffered some act or thing to avoid the power, if this fact
was not known to the trustee at the time of his
so acting or
paying.
(2)
Nothing in this section contained shall affect the right of any person entitled
to money paid by a trustee, in the circumstances
referred to in subsection (1),
against the person to whom the payment is made; and the person so entitled shall
have the same remedy
against the person to whom payment is made as he would have
had against the trustee.
Implied indemnity of trustees
66.
A trustee shall be chargeable only for money and securities actually received by
him notwithstanding his signing any receipt for
the sake of conformity; and
shall be answerable and accountable only for his own acts, receipts, neglects or
defaults, and not for
those of any other trustee, nor those of any bank, broker
or other person with whom any trust money or securities may be deposited,
nor
for the insufficiency or deficiency of any securities, nor for any other loss,
unless the insufficiency, deficiency or loss occurs
through his own wilful
default.
Reimbursement of trustee out of trust property
67.
A trustee may reimburse himself for or pay or discharge out of the trust
property all expenses reasonably incurred in or about the
execution of the
trusts or powers.
Protection of trustee in handing over chattels to life tenant
68.-(1)
Where any chattels are, under the provisions of a will, bequeathed to any
person, including an infant, for life or for any limited
interest, the trustee
may cause an inventory to be made of the chattels, of which inventory a copy
shall be signed by that person
and retained by the trustee, and another copy
shall be delivered to that
person.
(2)
The trustee may, upon obtaining a signed copy of an inventory thereof, deliver
any chattels to a person referred to in subsection
(1) on such terms and
conditions as the trustee thinks fit, and shall not thereafter be bound to see
to the repair or insurance of
the chattels, and shall not be subject to any
liability whatsoever by reason of the loss or destruction of the chattels or the
neglect
of that person to effect any necessary repairs or
insurance.
(3)
Any inventory made under the provisions of this section and signed by the person
to whom chattels are to be delivered and by the
trustee shall be deemed to be a
bill of sale within the meaning of the Bills of Sale Act, and shall be
registered and kept registered
accordingly.
(Cap.
225)
(4)
Where chattels bequeathed to a person for life or some other limited interest
consist wholly of articles of household furniture,
the trustee may deliver those
articles to that person and shall be entitled to the protection provided by the
provisions of subsection
(2) without any obligation to register an inventory
under the provisions of the last preceding subsection.
Protection of trustee in handing over chattels to infant
69.-(1)
A trustee may in his discretion deliver to an infant, or to the guardian or any
of the guardians of an infant, any chattels
absolutely vested in the infant, and
the receipt of the infant or guardian shall be a complete discharge to the
trustee for any chattels
so
delivered.
(2)
The powers conferred by this section are in addition to the powers conferred by
section
55
and, for the purposes of paragraph
(a)
of that section, the value of the chattels delivered pursuant to this section
shall not be taken into account in any way.
Personal representatives relieved from personal liability in respect of calls made after transfer of shares
70.
A personal representative of a deceased person who was registered as the holder
of the shares not fully paid up in any incorporated
company may distribute the
assets of the estate of that deceased person as soon as the personal
representative has procured the registration
of some other person as the holder
of such shares, without reserving any portion of the estate for the payment of
any calls made
after the date of such registration, whether made by the company
or its directors or by its liquidators in a winding up, but nothing
in this
section contained shall affect any right that the company or its liquidator may
have to follow the assets of the deceased
person into the hands of any persons
to or amongst whom they have been transferred or distributed.
Power of Court to relieve trustee from personal liability
71.
If it appears to the Court that a trustee, whether appointed by the Court or
otherwise, is or may be personally liable for any breach
of trust, whether the
transaction alleged to be a breach of trust occurred before or after the
commencement of this Act, but has
acted honestly and reasonably, and ought
fairly to be excused for the breach of trust and for omitting to obtain the
directions of
the Court in the matter in which he committed the breach, then the
Court may relieve him either wholly or partly from personal liability
for that
breach.
Power of Court to make beneficiary indemnify for breach of trust
72.-(1)
Where a trustee commits a breach of trust at the instigation or request or with
the consent in writing of a beneficiary, the
Court may, if it thinks fit, make
such order as to the Court seems just for impounding all or any part of the
interest of the beneficiary
in the trust estate by way of indemnity to the
trustee or persons claiming through
him.
(2)
The provisions of this section shall apply to breaches of trust committed as
well before as after the commencement of this Act.
PART
VII-FURTHER POWERS OF THE
COURT
DIVISION
1-APPOINTMENT OF NEW TRUSTEES
Power of Court to appoint new trustees
73.-(1)
The Court may, whenever it is expedient to appoint a new trustee or new
trustees, and it is inexpedient, difficult or impracticable
so to do without the
assistance of the Court, make an order for the appointment of a new trustee or
new trustees, either in substitution
for or in addition to any existing trustee
or trustees, or although there is no existing
trustee.
(2)
In particular, and without limiting the generality of the provisions of
subsection (1), the Court may make an order appointing
a new trustee in
substitution for a trustee who-
(a) desires to be discharged;
(b) has been held by the Court to have misconducted himself in the administration of the trust;
(c) is convicted of any misdemeanour involving dishonesty, or of any felony;
(d) is a person of unsound mind;
(e) is bankrupt; or
(f) is a corporation that has ceased to carry on business, or is in liquidation, or has been dissolved.
(3)
An order under the provisions of this section, and any consequential vesting
order or conveyance, shall not operate further or
otherwise as a discharge to
any discharged, former or continuing trustee than an appointment of new trustees
under any power for
that purpose contained in any instrument would have
operated.
(4)
Nothing in this section contained shall confer power to appoint an executor or
administrator.
(5)
Every trustee appointed by the Court shall have, before as well as after the
trust property becomes by law or by assurance or
otherwise vested in him, the
same powers, authorities and discretions, and may in all respects act, as if he
had been originally
appointed a trustee by the instrument (if any) creating the
trust.
DIVISION 2-VESTING ORDERS
Vesting orders
74.-(1)
The Court may make an order, in this Act called a "vesting order", that has
effect as provided in section
81.
(2)
A vesting order may be made in any of the following cases,
namely:-
(a) where the Court appoints or has appointed a new trustee;
(b) where a new trustee has been appointed out of Court under any statutory or express power;
(c) where a trustee retires or has retired;
(d) where a trustee is under a disability;
(e) where a trustee is out of the jurisdiction of the Court;
(f) where a trustee cannot be found;
(g) where a trustee is bankrupt;
(h) where a trustee, being a corporation, has ceased to carry on business, or is in liquidation, or has been dissolved;
(i) where a trustee neglects or refuses to convey any property, or to receive the dividends or income of any property, or to sue for or recover any property according to the direction of the person absolutely entitled to the same, for twenty-eight days next after a request in writing to that affect has been made to him by that person;
(j) where it is uncertain who was the survivor of two or more trustees jointly entitled to or possessed of any property;
(k) where it is uncertain whether the last trustee known to have been entitled to or possessed of any property is alive or dead;
(l) where there is no personal representative of the last trustee who was entitled to or possessed of any property or where it is uncertain who is the personal representative of that trustee or where the personal representative of that trustee cannot be found;
(m) where any person neglects or refuses to convey any property, or to receive the dividends or income of any property, or to sue for or recover any property, in accordance with the terms of an order of the Court;
(n) where a deceased person was entitled to or possessed of any property and his personal representative is under a disability; or
(o) where property is vested in a trustee and it appears to the Court to be expedient to make a vesting order.
(3)
Where the provisions of subsection (2) are applicable, they shall extend to a
trustee entitled to or possessed of any property
either solely or jointly with
any other person and whether by way of mortgage or otherwise.
In whom property to be vested, etc.
75.-(1)
A vesting order may vest the property in such person, in such manner and for
such estate or interest, as the Court may direct,
or may release or dispose of
any contingent right to such person as the Court may
direct.
(2)
The fact that a vesting order is founded or purports to be founded on an
allegation of the existence of any of the matters mentioned
or referred to in
section
74
shall be conclusive evidence of the matter so alleged, in any Court, upon any
question as to the validity of the
order.
(3)
Nothing in this Act contained shall prevent the Court from directing a
reconveyance or the payment of costs occasioned by any
vesting order if
improperly obtained, or from making a further vesting
order.
(4)
Where, by reason of the dissolution of a corporation either before or after the
commencement of this Act, a legal estate in any
property has been determined,
the Court may by order create a corresponding estate and vest it in the person
who would have been
entitled to such determined estate had it remained a
subsisting estate.
Orders as to contingent rights of unborn persons
76.
Where any property is subject to a contingent right in any unborn person or
class of unborn persons who on coming into existence
would become entitled to or
possessed of the property on any trust, the Court may make an order releasing
the property from the contingent
right or may make an order vesting in any
person the estate or interest to, or of, which the unborn person or class of
unborn persons
would, on coming into existence, be entitled or possessed in the
property.
Vesting order in place of conveyance by mortgagee under a disability
77.
Where any person entitled to or possessed of any property by way of mortgage is
under a disability the Court may make an order vesting
or releasing or disposing
of the property in like manner as in the case of a trustee under like
disability.
Vesting orders, etc., in relation to infant's beneficial interests
78.
Where an infant is beneficially entitled to any property, the Court may, where
it considers it necessary or desirable in the interests
of the infant, or of the
infant and some other person, make an order-
(a) appointing a person to sell and convey, lease, mortgage or charge the property, or otherwise to exercise such of the powers as are conferred by or under the provisions of this Act on a trustee, as the Court may in such order specify; or
(b) in the case of stock or a thing in action, vesting in any person the right to transfer or call for a transfer of that stock, or to receive the dividends or income thereof, or to sue for and recover that thing in action, upon such terms as the Court thinks fit.
Vesting order consequential on order for sale or mortgage of land
79.
Where the Court gives a judgment or makes an order directing the sale or
mortgage of any land, every person who is entitled to or
possessed of any
interest in the land, or entitled to a contingent right therein, and is a party
to the action or proceeding in which
the judgment or order is given or made or
is otherwise bound by the judgment or order, shall be deemed to be so entitled
or possessed
as a trustee for the purposes of this Act, and the Court may, if it
thinks expedient, make an order vesting the land or any part
thereof, for such
estate or interest as the Court thinks fit, in the purchaser or mortgagee or in
any other person.
Vesting order consequential on judgment for specific performance
80.
Where a judgment is given for the specific performance of a contract concerning
any interest in land, or for partition, or sale
in lieu of partition, or
exchange of any land, or generally where any judgment is given for the
conveyance of any interest in land
(either in cases arising out of the doctrine
of election or otherwise), the Court may declare-
(a) that any of the parties to the action are trustees of any interest in the land or any part thereof, within the meaning of this Act; or
(b) that the interests of unborn persons who might claim under any party to the action, or under the will or voluntary settlement of any deceased person who was during his lifetime a party to the contract or transaction concerning which the judgment is given, are the interests of persons who, on coming into existence, would be trustees within the meaning of this Act,
and
thereupon the Court may make a vesting order relating to the rights of those
persons, born and unborn, as if they had been trustees.
Effect of vesting order
81.-(1)
In the case of a vesting order consequential on the appointment of a new trustee
or the retirement of a trustee, the vesting
order shall have the same
effect-
(a) as if the persons (if any), who before the appointment or retirement were the trustees, had duly executed all proper conveyances of the property for such estate or interest as the Court directs; or
(b) if there is no such person as is mentioned in paragraph (a), or no such person of full capacity, as if such person had existed and been of full capacity, and had duly executed all proper conveyances of the property for such estate or interest as the Court directs.
(2)
In every case, other than those mentioned in subsection (1), the vesting order
shall have the same effect as if the trustee or
other person or description or
class of persons to whose rights, or supposed rights, the provisions of this
Division respectively
relate had been an ascertained and existing person of full
capacity and had executed a conveyance or release to the effect intended
by the
order.
(3)
In the case of land subject to the operation of the Land Transfer Act, the land
shall not vest until the appropriate entries are made in accordance with the
provisions of that
Act.
(Cap.
131.)
(4)
In the case of-
(a) any property that does not come within the provisions of subsection (3), but a transfer of which is required to be registered by or under any Act; or
(b) any security that is transferable only in books kept by a corporation, company or other body, or in manner directed by or under any Act, a vesting order shall vest in the person named in the order the right to transfer or call for a transfer of the property or security.
(5)
In the case of any security or thing in action, the vesting order shall vest in
the person named in the order the right to receive
the dividends or income
thereof, and to sue for or recover the thing in
action.
(6)
The person, in whom the right to transfer or call for the transfer of any
property or security is vested by an order of the Court
under the provisions of
this Act, may transfer the property or security to himself or to any other
person in accordance with the
order; and all banks, corporations, companies,
societies, associations and persons shall give effect to the transfer or comply
with
any direction or request to transfer the property or security given or made
in accordance with the
order.
(7)
After service on him of an office copy of an order made under the provisions of
this section, it shall not be lawful for any bank,
corporation, company,
society, association or person to transfer any property or security to which the
order relates, or to pay any
dividends thereon, except in accordance with the
order.
(8)
An order shall not be made under the provisions of this section vesting in any
person shares that are not fully paid up, unless
that person applies for the
order or consents to the making of the order.
Directions, etc., as to manner of transferring stock, etc.
82.
The Court may make declarations and give directions concerning the manner in
which the right to transfer any stock or thing in action
vested under the
provisions of this Act is to be exercised.
Power to appoint persons to convey
83.
Where a vesting order can be made under any of the foregoing provisions of this
Division, the Court may, in its discretion, appoint
a person to convey the
property or release any right, and a conveyance or release by that person in
conformity with the order shall
have the same effect as an order under the
appropriate provision.
Vesting orders of charity property
84.
The powers conferred by this Act as to vesting orders may be exercised for
vesting any property in any trustee of a charity or society
over which the Court
would have jurisdiction upon action duly instituted, whether the appointment of
the trustee was made by instrument
under a power or by the Court under its
general or statutory jurisdiction.
DIVISION 3-JURISDICTION TO MAKE OTHER ORDERS
Power of Court to authorise dealings with trust property
85.-(1)
Where, in the opinion of the Court, any sale, lease, mortgage, surrender,
release or other disposition, or any purchase, investment,
acquisition,
retention, expenditure or other dealing, transaction, act or thing, is expedient
in the management or administration
of any property vested in a trustee, or
would be in the best interests of the persons or the majority of the persons
beneficially
interested under the trust, but it is inexpedient or difficult or
impracticable to effect the disposition, dealing, transaction,
act or thing
without the assistance of the Court, or the same cannot be effected by reason of
the absence of any power for that purpose
vested in the trustee by the trust
instrument (if any) or by law, the Court may by order confer upon the trustee,
either generally
or in any particular instance, the necessary power for that
purpose, on such terms and subject to such provisions and conditions
(if any) as
the Court may think fit, and may direct in what manner any money authorised to
be expended, and the costs of any dealing,
transaction, act or thing, are to be
paid or borne, and as to the incidence thereof between capital and
income.
(2)
The Court may from time to time rescind or vary any order made under the
provisions of this section, or may make any new or further
order; but such a
rescission or variation of any order shall not affect any act or thing done in
reliance on the order before the
person doing the act or thing became aware of
the application to the Court to rescind or vary the
order.
(3)
An order may be made under the provisions of this section notwithstanding
anything to the contrary contained or expressed in the
instrument (if any)
creating the
trust.
(4)
An application to the Court under the provisions of this section may be made by
the trustees or by any of them, or by any person
beneficially interested under
the trust.
Power of Court to authorise variations of trust
86.-(1)
Without limiting any other powers of the Court, it is hereby declared that,
where any property is held on trusts arising under
any will, settlement or other
disposition, or on the intestacy or partial intestacy of any person, or under
any order of the Court,
the Court may, if it thinks fit, by order approve, on
behalf of-
(a) any person having, directly or indirectly, an interest, whether vested or contingent, under the trusts who, by reason of infancy or other incapacity, is incapable of assenting; or
(b) any person (whether ascertained or not) who may become entitled, directly or indirectly, to an interest under the trusts as being, at a future date or on the happening of a future event, a person of any specified description or a member of any specified class of persons; but this paragraph shall not include any person who would be of that description or a member of that class, if that date had fallen or that event had happened at the date of the application to the Court; or
(c) any unborn or unknown person; or
(d) any person, in respect of any discretionary interest of his under a protective trust, where the interest of the principal beneficiary has not failed or determined,
any
arrangement (by whomsoever proposed, and whether or not there is any other
person beneficially interested who is capable of assenting
thereto) varying or
revoking all or any of the trusts, or enlarging the powers of the trustees of
managing or administering any of
the property subject to the
trusts.
(2)
Except where the Court approves an arrangement on behalf of a person referred to
in paragraph
(d)
of subsection (1), the Court shall not approve an arrangement on behalf of any
person if the arrangement is to his detriment; and,
in determining whether any
such arrangement is to the detriment of a person, the Court may have regard to
all of the benefits that
may accrue to him directly or indirectly in consequence
of the arrangement, including the welfare and honour of the family to which
he
belongs.
(3)
Any rearrangement approved by the Court under the provisions of subsection (1)
shall be binding on all persons on whose behalf
it was so approved, and
thereafter the trusts as so rearranged shall take effect
accordingly.
(4)
In this section-
"discretionary interest" means an interest arising under the trust specified in subsection (3) of section 57 or any like trust;
"principal beneficiary" has the same meaning as in subsection (1) of section 57;
"protective trusts" means the trusts specified in subsections (2) and (3) of section 57 or any like trusts.
Power to vary amount of periodic payments
87.
Without limiting any other powers of the Court, it is hereby declared that the
Court may, on the application of any trustee or of
any person beneficially
interested under the trust, by order, vary from time to time the amount of any
payment (whether by way of
annuity or otherwise) being made periodically to any
beneficiary, if the Court is of opinion, having regard to all the circumstances
of the case, that is is just and equitable that the amount be
varied.
Right of trustee to apply to Court for directions
88.-(1)
Any trustee may apply to the Court for directions concerning any property
subject to a trust, or respecting the management or
administration of that
property, or respecting the exercise of any power or discretion vested in the
trustee.
(2)
Every application made under the provisions of this section shall be served
upon, and the hearing thereof may be attended by,
all persons interested in the
application or such of them as the Court thinks expedient.
Persons entitled to apply to Court
89.-(1)
An order under the provisions of this Act for the appointment of a new trustee,
or concerning any property subject to a trust,
may be made on the application of
any person beneficially interested in the property, whether under a disability
or not, or on the
application of any person duly appointed trustee of the
property or intended to be so
appointed.
(2)
An order under the provisions of this Act concerning any interest in any
property subject to a mortgage may be made on the application
of any person
beneficially interested in the property, whether under a disability or not, or
of any person interested in the money
secured by the mortgage.
Applications to Court to review acts and decisions of trustee
90.-(1)
Any person who has, directly or indirectly, an interest whether vested or
contingent, in any trust property, and who is aggrieved
by any act, omission or
decision of a trustee in the exercise of any power conferred by this Act, or who
has reasonable grounds to
apprehend any such act, omission or decision of a
trustee by which he would be aggrieved, may apply to the Court to review the
act,
omission or decision, or to give directions in respect of the apprehended
act, omission or decision; and the Court may require the
trustee to appear
before it and to substantiate and uphold the grounds of the act, omission or
decision that is being reviewed, and
may make such order in the premises as the
circumstances of the case may
require.
(2)
An order of the Court made under the provisions of subsection (1) shall
not-
(a) disturb any distribution of the trust property, made without breach of trust, before the trustee became aware of the making of the application to the Court; or
(b) affect any right acquired by any person in good faith and for valuable consideration.
(3)
Where any application is made under the provisions of this section, the Court
may-
(a) if any question of fact is involved, direct how the question shall be determined; and
(b) if the Court is being asked to make an order that may adversely affect the rights of any person who is not a party to the proceedings, direct that that person shall be made a party to the proceedings.
Protection of trustee while acting under direction of Court
91.-(1)
Any trustee acting under any direction of the Court shall be deemed, so far as
regards his own responsibility, to have discharged
his duty as trustee in the
subject-matter of the direction, notwithstanding that the order giving the
direction is subsequently invalidated,
overruled, set aside or otherwise
rendered of no effect, or
varied.
(2)
The provisions of this section shall not indemnify any trustee in respect of any
act done in accordance with any direction of
the Court if such trustee has been
guilty of any fraud or wilful concealment or misrepresentation in obtaining the
direction or in
acquiescing in the Court making the order giving the
direction.
Powers of Court to make orders in absence of parties
92.-
(1) Where in any proceedings the Court is satisfied that diligent search has
been made for any person, who, in the character of
trustee, is made a defendant
in any action to serve him with a process of the Court, and that he cannot be
found, the Court may hear
and determine the proceedings and give judgment
therein against that person, in his character of a trustee, as if he had been
duly
served or had entered an appearance in the action, and had also appeared by
a barrister and solicitor at the hearing, but (except
as provided in subsection
(2)) without prejudice to any interest he may have in the matters in question in
the proceedings in any
other
character.
(2)
Where any party to any proceedings relating to a trust, or where any person or
class of persons that the Court thinks should be
made a party or parties to
those proceedings or otherwise be given an opportunity to attend and be heard in
those proceedings, at
the time of the proceedings-
(a) is not within the jurisdiction; or
(b) is under disability; or
(c) cannot be found; or
(d) is unborn; or
(e) is not capable of being identified or ascertained,
the
Court may appoint some person to represent that party, person or class, or may
proceed in his or their absence, and all orders
made in the proceedings shall be
as binding on that party, person or class as if personally present and of full
capacity.
Power of Court to charge costs on trust estate
93.
The Court may order the costs and expenses of and incidental to any application
for any order under the provisions of this Act,
or of and incidental to the
order, or any conveyance or assignment in pursuance thereof, to be raised and
paid out of the property
in respect of which any of them is made, or out of the
income of the property, or to be borne and paid in such manner and by such
persons as the Court thinks fit.
Remuneration of trustee
94.-(1)
The Court may, out of the property subject to any trust, allow to any person who
is or has been a trustee thereof or to that
person's personal representative,
such commission or percentage for that person's services as is just and
reasonable.
(2)
The aggregate commission or percentage allowed under the provisions of
subsection (1) in respect of all persons who are or have
been the trustees shall
not exceed five per cent of the gross value of the trust property at the time
the application for commission
or percentage is made or, if the trust property
has at that time been distributed, at the time of
distribution.
(3)
No allowance shall be made under the provisions of subsection (1) except on the
termination of the trust, unless the Court otherwise
orders.
(4)
Where the Court allows a commission or percentage under the provisions of this
section, in any case in which two or more persons
are or have been trustees,
whether acting at the same time or at different times, the Court may, in its
discretion, apportion the
total amount allowed among the trustees in such manner
as it thinks fit, and, in particular, may divide the amount in unequal shares
or
may make the allowance to one or more of the trustees to the exclusion of the
other or
others.
(5)
In the absence of a direction to the contrary in the trust instrument, a
trustee, being a person engaged in any profession or
business for whom no
benefit or remuneration is provided in the trust instrument, is entitled to
charge and be paid out of the trust
property all usual professional or business
charges for business transacted, time expended and acts done by him or his firm
in connexion
with the trust, including acts that a trustee not being in any
profession or business could have done personally; and, on any application
to
the Court for commission or percentage under the provisions of subsection (1),
the Court may take into account any charges that
have been paid out of the trust
property under the provisions of this subsection.
Payment into Court by trustees
95.-(1)
Trustees or the majority of trustees having in their hands or under their
control money or securities subject to a trust may
pay them into Court; and they
shall be dealt with according to the orders, and subject to the rules, of the
Court.
(2)
The receipt or certificate of the proper officer shall be a sufficient discharge
to the trustees for any money or securities paid
into
Court.
(3)
Where money or securities are vested in any persons as trustees and the majority
are desirous of paying them into Court, but the
concurrence of the other or
others cannot be obtained, the Court may order the payment into Court to be made
by the majority without
the concurrence of the other or
others.
(4)
Where any money or securities ordered to be paid into Court under the provisions
of subsection (3) are deposited with a banker,
broker or other depositary, the
Court may order payment or delivery of the money or securities to the majority
of the trustees for
the purpose of payment into
Court.
(5)
Every transfer, payment and delivery of money or securities made in pursuance of
any order made under the provisions of this section
shall be valid and shall
take effect as if it had. been made on the authority or by the act of all the
persons entitled to the money
and securities.
PART VIII-MISCELLANEOUS
Indemnity to banks and others
96.
This Act and every order purporting to be made thereunder shall be a complete
indemnity to every bank, corporation, company, society,
association or person
for any acts done pursuant thereto, and it shall not be necessary for any bank,
corporation, company, society,
association or person to inquire concerning the
propriety of the order, or whether the Court had jurisdiction to make
it.
Protection of bankers dealing with trustees in certain cases
97.-(1)
Where there are two or more trustees of a trust and the trustees by writing
under their hands authorise a banker-
(a) to pay bills of exchange drawn upon the banking account of the trustees by the trustee or trustees named in that behalf in the authority; or
(b) to recognize, as a valid endorsement upon any bill of exchange payable to the order of the trustees, the endorsement thereon by the trustee or trustees named in that behalf in the authority; or
(c) to pay money out of any account of the trust in a savings bank, on presentation of withdrawal forms signed in the manner specified in the authority,
the
banker acting in pursuance of that authority shall not be deemed privy to a
breach of trust on the ground only of notice that
the persons giving the
authority were trustees, or that the instrument (if any) by which the trust was
created did not contain any
express power to give such an
authority.
(2)
The protection afforded to bankers by the provisions of subsection (1) shall not
apply in the case of anything done by a banker,
in pursuance of an authority
given under that subsection, after the banker has received notice in writing of
the revocation, by death
or otherwise, of the
authority.
(3)
The provisions of this section shall not affect any question of the liability of
any trustee for breach of trust in authorising
a banker as provided by
subsection
(1).
(4)
Nothing in this section or in any rule of law shall prevent trustees from
opening a bank account named as an imprest account and
authorising any one or
more of their number or any other person or persons to operate upon the imprest
account.
Inclusion of non-charitable and invalid purposes not to invalidate a trust
98.-(1)
In this section the term "imperfect trust provision" means any trust under which
some non-charitable and invalid as well as
some charitable purpose or purposes
is or are or could be deemed to be included in any of the purposes to or for
which an application
of the trust property or any part thereof is by the trust
directed or
allowed.
(2)
A trust shall not be held to be invalid by reason that the trust property is to
be held or applied in accordance with an imperfect
trust
provision.
(3)
Every trust under which property is to be held or applied in accordance with an
imperfect trust provision shall be construed and
given effect in the same manner
in all respects as if no holding or application of the trust property or any
part thereof to or for
any non-charitable and invalid purpose had been or could
be deemed to have been so directed or
allowed.
(4)
This section shall apply to every trust under which property is to be held or
applied in accordance with an imperfect trust provision,
whether the trust is
declared before or after the commencement of this Act; but it shall not apply to
any trust declared by the will
of any testator dying before, or to any other
trust declared before, the commencement of this Act, if before the commencement
of
this Act-
(a) the trust has been declared to be invalid by any order or judgment made or given in any legal proceedings; or
(b) any property subject to the imperfect trust provision or income therefrom has been paid or conveyed to, or applied for the benefit of, or set apart for, the persons entitled by reason of the invalidity of the trust.
Special rules as to apportionment on purchase, sale or transfer in certain cases
99.-(1)
Whenever any payment received by a trustee in respect of a sale of trust
property, being securities bearing interest at a fixed
rate, is, or includes,
payment for the right to receive any interest accrued from those securities at
the time of the sale, though
that interest may not then be due, the amount of
that accrued interest shall for the purposes of the trust be deemed to have been
received by the trustee as interest in respect of the period during which the
interest so
accrued.
(2)
Whenever any payment made by a trustee out of trust money in respect of a
purchase of any securities bearing interest at a fixed
rate is, or includes,
payment for the right to receive any interest accrued from those securities at
the time of the purchase, though
that interest may not then be due, the amount
of that accrued interest when received on account of the trust shall, for the
purposes
of the trust, be deemed to have been so received as purchase money
repaid.
(3)
Anything done by a trustee before the commencement of this Act that would have
been authorised by this section, if this section
had then been in force. shall
be deemed to have been authorised by this
section.
(4)
The provisions of this section apply if and so far only as a contrary intention
is not expressed in the instrument (if any) creating
the trust, and have effect
subject to the terms of that instrument.
Costs and testamentary expenses to be payable out of capital of settled residuary estate of deceased
100.-(1)
Where, under the provisions of the will of a person (in this section called "the
deceased") who dies after the commencement
of this Act, any real or personal
property included either by specific or general description in a residuary gift
is settled by way
of succession, no part of the income of that property (which
property is hereinafter in this section called "the settled property")
shall be
applicable in or towards the payment of the funeral, testamentary and
administration expenses, or the debts, legacies and
liabilities, or of the
interest (if any) thereon, up to the date of the death of the
deceased.
(2)
The provisions of subsection (1) shall not apply to any commission that is
payable to the trustee in respect of any such income
as is mentioned in that
subsection or to any testamentary or administration expenses that apart from
that subsection, would be payable
wholly out of
income.
(3)
The income of the settled property shall be applicable in priority to any other
assets in payment of the interest (if any) accruing
due on the funeral,
testamentary and administration expenses, and on the debts, legacies and
liabilities after the date of death
of the deceased and up to the date of
payment thereof, and the balance of that income shall be payable to the person
for the time
being entitled to the income of the settled
property.
(4)
Where, after the death of the deceased, income, of assets comprised in the
settled property that are ultimately applied in or
towards payment of the
funeral, testamentary and administration expenses, and the debts, legacies and
liabilities, arises pending
that application, that income shall for the purposes
of this section be deemed to be income of the residuary estate of the
deceased.
(5)
In this section "administration expenses" includes estate duty payable under the
provisions of any Act and any other duty payable
in any country outside Fiji on
or consequent on, or arising out of, the death of the deceased to the extent to
which such duties
are payable out of
residue.
(6)
Nothing in this section shall apply to any annuity that is payable out of the
estate of the
deceased.
(7)
The provisions of this section shall affect only the rights of beneficiaries
under the will as between themselves and shall not
affect the rights of
creditors of the deceased nor limit any other powers of the
trustee.
(8)
The provisions of this section shall apply if and so far only as a contrary
intention is not expressed in the will, and shall
have effect subject to the
terms of the will and of any Act as to charges on property of the
deceased.
Application of income of settled property pending conversion
101.-(1)
Where, under the will of any person, any real or personal property, included
(either by specific or general description) in
a residuary gift, is settled by
way of succession, then, notwithstanding that the property may be of a wasting,
speculative or reversionary
nature-
(a) pending any sale, calling in or conversion of the settled property, the -whole of the net income of the property actually producing income shall be applied as income and no part thereof shall be apportioned to capital; and
(b) on any sale, calling in or conversion of the settled property, or on the falling in of any reversionary property, no part of the proceeds of the sale, calling in, conversion or falling in shall be applied as past income.
(2)
The provisions of this section shall apply only in respect of the wills of
persons who die after the commencement of this
Act.
(3)
The provisions of this section shall apply if and so far only as a contrary
intention is not expressed in the will of the deceased,
and shall have effect
subject to the terms of that will.
Certain periodic payments to be applied as income
102.-(1)
The provisions of this section shall apply to-
(a) every payment of an annuity contributed for or purchased by, for, or on behalf of, a deceased person who dies after the commencement of this Act; and
(b) every periodic payment, however described, paid in terms of, or pursuant to, a policy of insurance on the life of a deceased person, who dies after the commencement of this Act, and providing for payments to be made thereunder for a period of years or until a specified date or on the occurrence of a specified event or for the life of any person,
that
is received as part of the estate of the deceased person by the trustee of his
estate.
(2)
Every payment to which the provisions of this section apply shall be paid or
applied as if it were income of the estate of the
deceased person received on
the date on which that payment is received, and so that the dispositions, trusts
and powers, applicable
in the administration of the estate with respect to
income received on that date, apply with respect to that
payment.
(3)
The provisions of this section shall apply if and so far only as a contrary
intention is not expressed in the will of the deceased
person and shall have
effect subject to the terms of that will.
Fees and commission deemed a testamentary expense
103.
The fees, commission, remuneration and other charges, payable to a trustee in
respect of the administration of the estate of a deceased
person, shall be
deemed to be testamentary expenses.
Costs of inquiries regarding beneficiaries
104.
The costs, expenses and charges of the trustee of any property, in respect of
any inquiries made by him to ascertain the existence
or identity of any person
or persons entitled to any legacy, money or distributive share in the property,
or otherwise incurred in
relation thereto, shall be borne by and paid out of the
legacy, money or distributive share of the person or persons in respect of
whom
the inquiries were made, unless a contrary intention appears in the instrument
(if any) creating the trust.
Life tenant, etc., to have powers of a trustee in certain cases
105.-(1)
Where there is no trustee of any land, but the land is for the time being
lawfully vested in any person entitled to the possession
thereof, or to the
receipt of the rents and profits therefrom, for an estate for life, or for a
term of years determinable with his
life, or for any greater estate not being a
fee simple absolute, that person may exercise all of the powers conferred on a
trustee
by this Act, and the Court may confer on that person all of the powers
that it could confer on a trustee under the provisions of
this Act; and anything
done by that person in exercise of any power by or under the provisions of this
section conferred has the
same force and effect as if it had been done by a
trustee.
(2)
Nothing in this section contained shall authorise any person mentioned in
subsection (1) to sell any land therein mentioned, or
to raise any capital money
by a mortgage thereof or other dealing therewith, unless the money paid on the
sale or the capital money
so raised is paid to a trustee who is duly appointed
and entitled to receive it.
Clarification
106.
In the event of any conflict arising between the provisions of this Act and the
provisions of the Land Transfer Act, the provisions of this Act shall
prevail.
(Cap. 131.)
SCHEDULE
(Section 59)
A.
B., late of
[set
out the usual residence and addition or other description of the
deceased].
Creditors
and other persons having claims (to which section
59
of the Trustee Act, relates) in respect of the estate of the deceased, who died
[set
out the date of death with such accuracy as the information of the trustee,
personal representative or applicant for grant of
representation
permits],
are required by the trustee (or personal representative or applicant for grant
of representation)..................................,of
...........................[set
out name and address of trustee or personal representative or applicant for
grant of
representation]
to send particulars of their claims to him by the .................. day of
....................19......,* after which date the
trustee (or personal
representative or applicant for grant of representation) may convey or
distribute the assets, having regard
only to the claims of which he then has
notice.
(Date)
*A date not less than two months from date of advertisement.
(Amended by 5 of 1969, s. 2.)
Controlled by Ministry of the Attorney- General
----------------------------------------
Subsidiary
Legislation
CHAPTER 65
TRUSTEE
SECTION 12-TRUSTEE INVESTMENTS
(Proclamations by Governor and Orders by Minister)
The
following have, by Proclamation or by Order, been declared under section
12(1)(k)
of the Act to be investments in which a trustee may invest trust
funds:-
Proclamation No. 23 of 1966
1.
Stocks, shares and debentures issued by the Home Finance Company
Limited.
Proclamation No. 34 of 1966
2.
Loans to, and investments in, the Housing Authority.
Proclamation No. 11 of 1968 (Legal Notice No. 45 of 1968)
3.
Loans to the Fiji Development Bank secured by mortgage, debenture or registered
debenture stock or other-wise, and investments
in such Bank.
Proclamation No. 27 of 1968 (Legal Notice No. 187 of 1968)
4.
Loans to the Fiji Electricity Authority secured by any mortgage, debenture or
registered debenture stock or otherwise, and investments
in such
Authority.
Order 23rd March 1971 (Legal Notice No. 41 of 1971)
5.
Loans secured by any debentures or other securities charged on the funds or
property of any town council or provincial council
in Fiji.
Order 28th June 1971 (Legal Notice No. 88 of 1971)
6.
First legal mortgages of or charges upon estates in leasehold from the Housing
Authority with an unexpired term of not less than
50 years when such mortgages
or charges are executed.
Order 14th October 1971 (Legal Notice No. 132 of 1971)
7.
National Development Loans of the Government of Western Samoa.
Order 251h January 1974 (Legal Notice No. 22 of 1974)
8.
Deposits with the Central Monetary Authority of Fiji.
Order 15th October 1974 (Legal Notice No. 166 of 1974)
9.
First legal mortgages of or charges upon estates in leasehold from a city or
town council with an unexpired term of not less than
50 years when such
mortgages or charges are executed.
Order 23rd February 1977 (Legal Notice No. 32 of 1977)
10.
Loans to the Board of Fire Commissioners of Suva.
Order 21st October 1977 (Legal Notice No. 155 of 1977)
11.
The Unit Trust of Fiji.
Order 9th February 1978 (Legal Notice No. 34 of 1978)
12.
First legal mortgages or charges of an estate in leasehold other than from the
Crown or the Native Land Trust Board for an unexpired
term of not less than
fifty years at the time when such mortgage or charge is made.
Order 7th September 1979 (Legal Notice No. 154 of 1979)
13.
Loans to the Ports Authority of Fiji secured by any mortgage, debenture or
registered debenture stock or otherwise, and investments
in the
Authority.
Controlled by Ministry of Justice
------------------------------------------------------
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