When a Manhattan business owner establishes a trust, they often name their most responsible child or a close sibling to manage the assets. To the person selected, it feels like an honor—a final vote of confidence from a departing parent. They assume the job consists of writing a few checks and keeping the family home in good repair. But the moment the trust creator passes away or loses capacity, that title transforms into a strict legal burden. Being a trustee is not an honorary designation. It is a highly scrutinized job with intense legal exposure.
The Weight of Fiduciary Duty
I regularly sit across the desk from newly appointed trustees who assume their primary task is distributing funds whenever a beneficiary asks. The reality is far more demanding. A trustee is a fiduciary. You are bound by law to act exclusively in the best interests of the trust’s beneficiaries. This duty of loyalty is absolute—it leaves no room for personal gain.
If a trustee mixes trust funds with their personal accounts, borrows from the trust to float their own business, or makes a decision that benefits themselves at the expense of a beneficiary, they are personally liable for the financial damage. Under EPTL §11-1.1, fiduciaries hold specific powers to manage estate and trust property, but those powers are tethered to strict legal constraints. You cannot use trust assets to fund a personal venture. You cannot give favorable treatment to one sibling over another just because you share a closer relationship.
Prudent Management and Generational Wealth
A trust exists to protect assets over time. This requires deliberate financial management. A trustee cannot simply leave a million dollars sitting in a non-interest-bearing checking account for a decade. Conversely, they cannot gamble the principal on highly speculative investments. Generational wealth is fragile. The law protects it accordingly.
Under the New York Prudent Investor Act (EPTL §11-2.3), a trustee must manage trust assets with the same care, skill, and caution that a prudent person would exercise in managing their own portfolio. This requires assessing the long-term needs of the beneficiaries, the economic environment, and the overarching purpose of the trust. If the trust holds real estate, the trustee becomes a property manager—responsible for paying taxes, maintaining upkeep, and securing proper insurance. If the trust holds equities, the trustee must ensure the portfolio is appropriately diversified and continually monitored.
The law demands careful, deliberate management. Stewardship.
Delegation vs. Abdication
While the legal burden rests entirely on your shoulders, New York law does not expect a fiduciary to be an expert in all fields. A prudent trustee is expected to hire professionals when necessary to protect the assets. You are permitted to retain accountants to prepare the trust’s tax returns, financial advisors to manage the investment portfolio, and attorneys to interpret complex provisions of the trust instrument.
However, there is a strict line between delegating a task and abdicating your responsibility. If you hire a financial advisor, you cannot simply hand over the checkbook and walk away. You retain the duty to monitor that advisor’s performance, ensure their fees are reasonable, and verify that their investment strategy aligns with the specific goals of the trust. If an advisor mismanages the funds and the trustee failed to supervise them, the Surrogate’s Court will hold the trustee accountable for the losses—not just the advisor. The role demands active, ongoing oversight.
Transparency and the Duty to Account
One of the most common ways a trustee faces litigation is by failing to keep beneficiaries informed. A trustee operates under a microscope. You cannot make financial decisions in the dark, and you cannot refuse a reasonable request for information from a beneficiary who holds a vested interest in the trust.
When we advise trustees, we emphasize the critical importance of meticulous record-keeping. Every penny that enters or leaves the trust must be tracked, categorized, and documented with supporting evidence. Under SCPA Article 22, beneficiaries have the right to compel a formal accounting. If a beneficiary demands to know how the trust funds have been managed, the trustee must produce a detailed record outlining every transaction, investment gain, loss, and distribution. If the records are sloppy or incomplete, the trustee can be surcharged—meaning they must pay out of their own pocket to make the trust whole.
Furthermore, the trustee must balance competing interests. Often, a trust will name one person as the income beneficiary (who receives the revenue the trust generates) and another as the remainderman (who receives the principal after the income beneficiary passes). The income beneficiary typically wants high-yield investments to maximize their monthly payout—the remainderman wants the principal protected and grown for the future. The trustee must resolve this tension impartially, making decisions that honor the original intent of the trust creator without violating their fiduciary obligations to either party.
Taking the Next Step
Accepting the role of a trustee means accepting a profound legal responsibility. It requires careful organization, a clear understanding of New York estate law, and a commitment to preserving a family’s legacy. If you have recently been named as a trustee, do not attempt to administer the trust based on assumptions. Instead, schedule a formal trust review with our office so we can examine the governing document, identify your immediate legal obligations, and establish a compliant framework for managing the assets.




