Readings in Money and Banking Part 25
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(1) Its permanency: it does not die.
(2) It does not go abroad.
(3) It does not become insane.
(4) It does not imperil the trust by failure or dishonesty.
(5) Its experience and judgment in trust matters are beyond dispute.
(6) It never neglects its work or hands it over to untrustworthy people.
(7) It does not refuse to act from caprice or on the ground of inexperience.
(8) It is invariably on hand during business hours and can be consulted at all times.
(9) Its wide experience of trust business and trust securities is invaluable to the estate.
(10) It is absolutely confidential.
(11) It has no sympathies or antipathies and no politics.
(12) It can be relied upon to act up to its instructions.
(13) It does not resign.
(14) All new investments of value suitable for trust estates are offered in the first instance to trust companies, and in that way it has a choice of valuable security; and as its purchases are on a scale of magnitude, it can usually buy at a rate which is lower than that at which the individual trustee can purchase.
The most common objection to the appointment of corporate trustees is thus stated by Augustus Peabody Loring, Esq.:
The trust companies, which have of late years become so numerous, to a considerable extent do away with the element of personal risk attaching to an individual trustee; but they lack the advantages of personal management. These companies sometimes fail from improper management as utterly as individuals do, and as a rule the lack of personal management results in securing the minimum return only on the amount invested, and lacks the great advantages often secured by the able personal oversight of individual trustees.
The question, after all, comes back to the personal qualifications of corporate officers and individuals. If the former are less capable than the latter, the fault is with the particular company--not the system, and if interest returns are sometimes less under corporate management, this fact is more than equalized by the added safety to the corpus of the estate.
A "Trustee Company" has been suggested as a proper t.i.tle for the company doing a legitimate trust business, and is the name used in Australia and in New Zealand. In some states the use of the word "trust" in corporate t.i.tles is now regulated by law. Confusion has arisen in the popular mind between the trust company and the trusts or industrial combinations.
The usual functions of a trust company are: banking in a more or less limited form, execution of corporate trusts, execution of individual trusts, care of securities and valuables. In addition, other functions are sometimes exercised, such as life, t.i.tle, and fidelity insurance, and the business of becoming surety. The earlier companies in the United States were chartered to manage individual estates only and to act in certain fiduciary capacities; the recent development of the trust company has been in the direction of banking functions and corporate trust business.
It is worthy to note that the life insurance companies which originally secured trust powers have, with but few exceptions, given up their life insurance business, and that most of the fidelity insurance and surety business is given over to companies which now make a specialty of such risks. The fact is being recognized that the a.s.sumption of vast risks contingent on future occurrences is not compatible with the absolute security which is essential in the transaction of legitimate trust business.
BANKING
The banking functions of trust companies may include any or all of the following:
The receipt of money deposits payable on demand and subject to check, or payable at a fixed date, or according to special agreement. Interest is usually allowed on all deposits above a fixed maximum amount or on the total sum.
Money advances secured by the hypothecation of stocks, bonds, life insurance policies, bonds and mortgages, or other personal property.
Real estate loans, secured by bond and mortgage. It is customary to loan not over two-thirds of the value of improved property; when the property is unimproved, not more than half.
Discounting paper is engaged in princ.i.p.ally by companies transacting a commercial banking business. The purchase of unsecured paper is permitted in some states where discounting is not allowed.
The purchase and sale of securities.
Trust companies sometimes guarantee issues of bonds, or at least set their stamp of approval upon them.
The issue or guarantee of letters of credit, and the transaction of a foreign exchange business.
The care of savings deposits. For this purpose a separate department is usually maintained.
CORPORATE TRUSTS
Among the most important functions of a trust company are those relative to the business of other corporations:
Of late years the trust companies in the Eastern cities have been selected as trustees instead of individuals whenever the law of the State where the property was situated allowed such selection. Trust companies have manifold advantages over individuals in such a relations.h.i.+p; they do not die; the large amount of financial business which they daily transact provides them with the machinery for such purposes; while their well-known names stand as evidence to the purchasing public that at least the necessary formalities have been complied with. Beyond that responsibility the trustees of corporation mortgages usually a.s.sume none.
In recent years the trust companies have shown a tendency, when acting as mortgage trustees, to recognize a greater moral responsibility than they at first were willing to bear. Trust companies did not, of course, intend to appear as in any way guaranteeing the bonds to which they certified, though that seems often to have been the erroneous opinion of the unthinking; but trustees now acknowledge themselves bound within the limits of the mortgage to use their influence to protect the interest of the bondholders. A trust company which should now allow the issue of unsecured bonds because of some glaring defect in the language of the mortgage, would not longer be morally excused by financial opinion, though perhaps held technically innocent.[92]
As trustee under corporate mortgages and trust deeds, the trust company acts for the bondholders. It is customary for it to authenticate each bond issued subject to the provisions of the mortgage, to represent the bondholders in case of default, and to exercise such other functions as may be provided in the mortgage.
A generation ago it was customary for a railroad to name one or more individuals as trustees of the mortgages executed to secure bond issues.
The development of trust companies and their manifest advantages over individuals in such a capacity has resulted in their absorbing almost all this business. Trust companies are now generally appointed as trustees in corporation mortgages, and are also often named to succeed individuals who have died or resigned. The appointment is one of the most important and far reaching which the trust company can accept. Its name and reputation serve as an a.s.surance that the transaction is a regular one, and entered into in good faith. Although the modern corporation mortgage is usually explicit in its terms to the effect that the trustee in no way guarantees the value of the security and a.s.sumes no liability except for its own negligence, yet the intimate connection between the trustee and the borrowing corporation in the minds of investors makes it necessary that care be taken not to a.s.sume trustees.h.i.+ps which may lead to a wrong use of the name and credit of the trust company.
As trustee under mortgages securing bond issues, the t.i.tle to the mortgaged property is vested in the trust company for the benefit of the security holders. The corporation owning the mortgaged property retains physical possession of it so long as the terms of the obligation are complied with, except in the case of securities pledged, which are usually lodged with the trustee. In case of default, however, it devolves upon the trustee to protect the interests of the bondholders, and this may necessitate the foreclosure of the mortgage and sale of the property.
As fiscal agent it dispenses coupon and interest payments on bond issues, and dividends on stock. It receives sums set aside as sinking funds to provide for the retirement of obligations at maturity, or when bonds are subject to redemption, draws the specified amount by lot and pays the princ.i.p.al.
As registrar the trust company authenticates certificates of stock and bonds in order to prevent an over-issue, and to reduce the chance of loss or theft. As transfer agent, the company attends to perfecting transfers of owners.h.i.+p for stock and bond issues or parts thereof.
The New York Stock Exchange, like most other stock exchanges, in its const.i.tution requires that all active listed stocks must be registered.
This Exchange also requires that a trust company or other agency shall not at the same time act as registrar and transfer agent of the same corporation. In the popular mind, and even in the minds of some trust company officers, the difference between the duties of the two positions has been more or less confused. Both have been created to safeguard and facilitate the pa.s.sing of t.i.tle to shares of stock, but the duties of a transfer agent and a registrar are not synonymous; they are distinctive.
One is called upon to examine and give clear t.i.tles to property transfers, and the other is merely to record such transfers.
As manager of underwriting syndicates, the trust company issues the prospectus and markets the securities of corporations which are being launched, or of established companies which are putting out new securities.
In railroad and other reorganizations, the trust company takes a prominent part, acting both as a depositary for, and as a representative of, the committees which formulate and execute the plans of reorganization. Its officers often have a large share in the preparation of such plans.
As a.s.signee and receiver, the trust company acts in the same capacity for corporations as for individuals and firms or partners.h.i.+ps, a.s.sisting in winding up insolvent businesses and in conducting embarra.s.sed ones.
INDIVIDUAL TRUSTS
The execution of individual trusts is the function originally a.s.sumed by trust companies. The various other forms of business which are now engaged in, have, with the exception of life insurance, been later developments of the trust company idea. The earliest power granted these companies was to receive moneys or other property, real or personal, in trust. The trust company now also acts as executor and administrator of the estates of decedents.
As executor appointed by the will of a decedent, it takes out letters testamentary upon probate of the will, advertises, files inventory and apprais.e.m.e.nt, pays debts, collects claims, makes the requisite accounting to the probate or orphans' court, and makes distribution of the estate in accordance with the terms of the will and the court's decree.
As administrator acting under appointment of the register of wills or probate court, it performs similar duties, distributing the estate in accordance with decedent's will if there is one, or if there is none, in accordance with the intestate laws of the state, which specify the order of succession and distributive shares in the case of estates of decedents leaving no wills. There are different kinds of administrators, in any of which capacities a trust company may be called upon to act.
Readings in Money and Banking Part 25
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Readings in Money and Banking Part 25 summary
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