Tuesday, October 14, 2025

Sole trustees of a partnership of trusts: No Surprises**

View Legal blog - Sole trustees of a partnership of trusts No Surprises by Matthew Burgess

Posts over recent weeks have considered the issues surrounding whether a partnership exists where two or more trusts have the same corporate trustee.

As mentioned last week, while the so called 'self-dealing rule' can potentially invalidate a structure of a single trustee of multiple trusts, that rule can be ignored where this is addressed in the relevant trust instruments.

Subject to this requirement, it appears that at least some professional bodies and third parties (for example the Law Society and Stamps Office) interpret the relevant legislation as allowing a sole corporate trustee of multiple trusts in partnership.

Two commercial examples in this regard would include trust cloning and trust splitting, both of which are founded on the basis that it is possible for the same trustee to contract with itself in relation to multiple trusts.

There does however need to be provisions along the lines set out in the trust deed for each partner.

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Example trust deed clauses

Conflicts of interest

1.1 The Trustee may:
  1. contract with, or sell or grant options to buy any part of the Trust Fund to;
  2. purchase Property from;
  3. borrow money from; or
  4. enter into any share farming or agistment agreement, lease, tenancy or partnership with, the Trustee in its own or any other capacity, either alone or in conjunction with any other persons or:
  5. any company or partnership, even if the Trustee, or any shareholder or director of the Trustee, is a shareholder, director, member or partner of that company or partnership; or
  6. a Child of the Trustee.
1.2 The Trustee may exercise (or concur in exercising) all of the powers and discretions contained in this document or otherwise conferred by law, even if:
  1. the Trustee, or any director or shareholder of a Trustee that is a company:
    1. has or may have any direct or personal interest in the mode or result of exercising that power or discretion; or
    2. may benefit either directly or indirectly as a result of the exercise of that power or discretion;
    3. is a party in its personal capacity to the transaction being contemplated; or
  2. the Trustee is the sole trustee.
1.3 The Trustee may sell, transfer, dispose, divide in specie, hire or lease any part of the Trust Fund to carry on or carry out any profit making undertaking or scheme in partnership with:
  1. the Trustee in any capacity (including its personal capacity, or in its capacity as trustee of another trust fund);
  2. any company or partnership, even if the Trustee, or any shareholder or director of the Trustee, is a shareholder, director, member or partner of that company or partnership; or
  3. a Child of the Trustee.

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** For the trainspotters, the title of today's post is riffed from the Radiohead song ‘No surprises’.

View here:
Radiohead song ‘No surprises’