Code of Laws of South Carolina § 62-7-408 (2005).
Trust for care of animal.
(a) A trust may be
created to provide for the care of an animal alive
or in gestation
during the settlor’s lifetime, whether or not alive
at the time the trust is created. The trust terminates
upon the death of the last surviving animal.
(b) A trust authorized by this section may be
enforced by a person appointed in the terms of the
trust or, if no person is so appointed, by a
person appointed by the court. A person
concerned for the welfare of the animal may request
the court to appoint a person to enforce the trust
or remove a person appointed.
(c) Property of a trust authorized by
this section may be applied only for its intended
use, except to the extent the court determines that
the value of the trust property exceeds the amount
required for the intended use. Except as otherwise
provided in the terms of the trust, property not
required for the intended use must be distributed to
the settlor, if then living, otherwise to the
settlor’s successors in interest.
UTC Comment:
This section and the next section of the Code
validate so called honorary trusts. Unlike honorary
trusts created pursuant to the common law of trusts,
which are arguably no more
than
powers of appointment, the trusts created by this
and the next section are valid and enforceable. For
a discussion of the common law doctrine, see
Restatement (Third) of Trusts Section 47 (Tentative
Draft No. 2, approved 1999); Restatement (Second) of
Trusts Section 124 (1959).
This section addresses a particular type of honorary
trust, the trust for the care of an animal. Section
409 specifies the requirements for trusts without
ascertainable beneficiaries that are created for
other noncharitable
purposes. A trust for the care of an animal may last
for the life of the animal. While the animal will
ordinarily be alive on the date the trust is
created, an animal may be added as a beneficiary
after that date as long as the addition is made
prior to the settlor's
death. Animals in gestation but not yet born at the
time of the trust's creation may also be covered by
its terms. A trust authorized by this section may be
created to benefit one designated animal or several
designated animals.
Subsection (b) addresses enforcement.
Noncharitable trusts
ordinarily may be enforced by their beneficiaries.
Charitable trusts may be enforced by the State's
attorney general or by a person deemed to have a
special interest. See Restatement (Second) of Trusts
Section 391 (1959). But at common law, a trust for
the care of an animal or a trust without an
ascertainable beneficiary created for a
noncharitable purpose
was unenforceable because there was no person
authorized to enforce the trustee's obligations.
Sections 408 and 409 close
this gap. The intended use of a trust authorized by
either section may be enforced by a person
designated in the terms of the trust or, if none, by
a person appointed by the court. In either case,
Section 110(b) grants to the person appointed the
rights of a qualified beneficiary for the purpose of
receiving notices and providing consents. If the
trust is created for the care of an animal, a person
with an interest in the welfare of the animal has
standing to petition for an appointment. The person
appointed by the court to enforce the trust should
also be a person who has exhibited an interest in
the animal's welfare. The concept of granting
standing to a person with a demonstrated interest in
the animal's welfare is derived from the Uniform
Guardianship and Protective Proceedings Act, which
allows a person interested in the welfare of a ward
or protected person to file petitions on behalf of
the ward or protected person.
See, e.g., Uniform Probate Code Sections 5-210(b),
5-414(a).
Subsection (c) addresses the problem of excess
funds. If the court determines that the trust
property exceeds the amount needed for the intended
purpose and that the terms of the trust do not
direct the disposition, a resulting trust is
ordinarily created in the
settlor or settlor's
successors in interest. See Restatement (Third) of
Trusts Section 47 (Tentative Draft No. 2, approved
1999); Restatement (Second) of Trusts Section 124
(1959). Successors in interest include the
beneficiaries under the
settlor's will, if the
settlor has a will, or in the absence of an
effective will provision, the
settlor's heirs. The
settlor may also anticipate the problem of
excess funds by directing their disposition in the
terms of the trust. The disposition of excess funds
is within the settlor's
control: See Section 105(a). While a trust for an
animal is usually not created until the
settlor's death;
subsection (a) allows such a trust to be created
during the settlor's
lifetime. Accordingly, if the
settlor is still living, subsection (c)
provides for distribution of excess funds to the
settlor, and not to the
settlor'
s successors in interest.
Should the means chosen not be particularly
efficient, a trust created for the care of an animal
can also be terminated by the trustee or court under
Section 414. Termination
of a trust under that section, however, requires
that the trustee or court develop an alternative
means for carrying out the trust purposes. See
Section 414(c).
This section and the next section are suggested by
Section 2-907 of the Uniform Probate Code, but much
of this and the following section is new
South Carolina Comment:
South Carolina Trust Code Section 62-7-408 differs
in several minor ways from the uniform version. Two
provisions found in the UTC
Comment have been added to the body of Section
62-7-408(a): (1) that the trust can benefit animals
alive during the settlor's
lifetime, regardless of whether they are alive at
the time the trust is created, and (2) that animals
in gestation at the settlor's
death can be included in the trust. Surplus language
in the UTC has also been
omitted from the SCTC
version.
SCTC
Section 62-7-408(b) modifies the
UTC version, attempting
to clarify that a person need only be concerned for
an animal's welfare to petition the court. That
person does not have to have a legally cognizable
interest in the animal.
A trust created under this section would not be
recognized under former
South Carolina
law. Thus, this section creates a new concept for
South Carolina.
(2005 Act No. 66,
effective January 1, 2006) |