GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF NORTH CAROLINA

1995 SESSION

 

 

CHAPTER 225

SENATE BILL 85

 

AN ACT TO AUTHORIZE HONORARY TRUSTS, TRUSTS FOR PETS, AND TRUSTS FOR CEMETERY LOTS, AS RECOMMENDED BY THE GENERAL STATUTES COMMISSION.

 

The General Assembly of North Carolina enacts:

 

Section 1.  Chapter 36A of the General Statutes is amended by adding a new Article to read:

ARTICLE 14.

"Honorary Trusts; Trusts for Pets;

Trusts for Cemetery Lots.

"§ 36A-145.  Honorary trusts.

Except as otherwise provided in this Article, a trust (i) for a noncharitable corporation or unincorporated society or (ii) for a lawful noncharitable purpose may be performed by the trustee for 21 years but no longer, whether or not there is a beneficiary who can seek the trust's enforcement or termination and whether or not the terms of the trust contemplate a longer duration.

"§ 36A-146.  Trusts for cemetery lots.

A trust, contract, or other arrangement to provide for the care of a cemetery lot, grave, crypt, niche, mausoleum, columbarium, grave marker, or monument is valid without regard to remoteness of vesting, duration of the arrangement, or lack of definite beneficiaries to enforce the trust, provided that the trust, contract, or other arrangement meets the requirements of G.S. 28A-19-10, Article 4 of Chapter 65 of the General Statutes, Article 9 of Chapter 65 of the General Statutes, or other applicable law.  This section does not revoke, repeal, supersede, or diminish G.S. 36A-49.

"§ 36A-147.  Trusts for pets.

(a)       Subject to the provisions of this section, a trust for the care of one or more designated domestic or pet animals alive at the time of creation of the trust is valid.

(b)       Except as expressly provided otherwise in the trust instrument, no portion of the principal or income may be converted to the use of the trustee or to any use other than for the benefit of the designated animal or animals.

(c)       The trust terminates at the death of the animal or last surviving animal.  Upon termination, the trustee shall transfer the unexpended trust property in the following order:

(1)       As directed in the trust instrument;

(2)       If the trust was created in a preresiduary clause in the transferor's will or in a codicil to the transferor's will, under the residuary clause in the transferor's will;

(3)       If no taker is produced by the application of subdivision (1) or (2) of this subsection, to the transferor or the transferor's heirs determined as of the date of the transferor's death under Chapter 29 of the General Statutes.

(d)       The intended use of the principal or income can be enforced by an individual designated for that purpose in the trust instrument or, if none, by an individual appointed by the clerk of superior court having jurisdiction over the decedent's estate upon application to the clerk by an individual.

(e)       Except as ordered by the clerk or required by the trust instrument, no filing, report, registration, periodic accounting, separate maintenance of funds, appointment, bond, or fee is required by reason of the existence of the fiduciary relationship of the trustee.

(f)        A governing instrument shall be liberally construed to bring the transfer within this section, to presume against the merely precatory or honorary nature of the disposition, and to carry out the general intent of the transferor.  Extrinsic evidence shall be admissible in determining the transferor's intent.

(g)       The clerk may reduce the amount of the property transferred, if the clerk determines that the amount substantially exceeds the amount required for the intended use.  The amount of the reduction, if any, passes as unexpended trust property under subsection (c) of this section.

(h)       If no trustee is designated or if no designated trustee agrees to serve or is able to serve, the clerk shall name a trustee.  The clerk may order the transfer of the property to another trustee, if required to assure that the intended use is carried out and if no successor trustee is designated in the trust instrument or if no designated successor trustee agrees to serve or is able to serve.  The clerk may also make such other orders and determinations as shall be advisable to carry out the intent of the transferor and the purpose of this section.

"§ 36A-148.  Termination of small trusts.

Notwithstanding any other provision of this Article, a trust created under this Article shall terminate upon the balance of the trust corpus falling below the sum of one hundred dollars ($100.00), at which time the remaining balance shall be disbursed as provided in G.S. 36A-147(c)."

Sec. 2. G.S. 65-9 reads as rewritten:

"§ 65-9.  Funds to be kept perpetually.

All money placed in the office of the superior court clerk in accordance with this Article shall be held perpetually, and or until such time as the balance of the trust corpus falls below one hundred dollars ($100.00), at which time the trust shall terminate and the clerk shall disburse the remaining balance as provided in G.S. 36A-147(c). Except as otherwise provided herein, no one shall have authority to withdraw or change the direction of the income on same."

Sec. 3.  The Revisor of Statutes shall cause to be printed along with this act all explanatory comments of the drafters of this act as the Revisor may deem appropriate.

Sec. 4. This act becomes effective October 1, 1995. Section 1 of this act applies to trusts created on or after that date.  Section 2 of this act applies to all cemetery trusts in existence before or created on or after that date.

In the General Assembly read three times and ratified this the 13th day of June, 1995.

 

 

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Dennis A. Wicker

President of the Senate

 

 

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Harold J. Brubaker

Speaker of the House of Representatives