2020 Colorado Revised Statutes
Title 15 - Probate, Trusts, And Fiduciaries
Article 5. Colorado Uniform Trust Code
Section 15-5-1010. Limitation on personal liability of trustee.

(1) Except as otherwise provided in the contract, a trustee is not personally liable on a contract properly entered into in the trustee's fiduciary capacity in the course of administering the trust if the trustee in the contract disclosed the fiduciary capacity.

  1. A trustee is personally liable for torts committed in the course of administering atrust, or for obligations arising from ownership or control of trust property, including liability for violation of environmental law, only if the trustee is personally at fault.

  2. A claim based on a contract entered into by a trustee in the trustee's fiduciary capacity, on an obligation arising from ownership or control of trust property, or on a tort committed in the course of administering a trust, may be asserted in a judicial proceeding against the trustee in the trustee's fiduciary capacity, whether or not the trustee is personally liable for the claim.

  3. The question of liability as between the trust estate and the trustee individually maybe determined:

  1. In a proceeding pursuant to section 15-10-504;

  2. In a proceeding for accounting, surcharge, indemnification, sanctions, or removal; or(c) In other appropriate proceedings.

(5) A trustee is not personally liable for making a distribution of property that does not take into consideration the possible birth of a posthumously conceived child unless, prior to the distribution, the trustee received notice or acquired actual knowledge that:

  1. There is or may be an intention to use an individual's genetic material to create achild; and

  2. The birth of the child could affect the distribution of the trust assets.

(6) If a trustee has reviewed the records of the county clerk and recorder in every county in Colorado in which the trustee has actual knowledge that the decedent was domiciled at any time during the three years prior to the decedent's death and the trustee does not have actual notice or actual knowledge of the existence of a valid, unrevoked designated beneficiary agreement in which the decedent granted the right of intestate succession, the trustee is not individually liable for distributions made to devisees or heirs at law that do not take into consideration the designated beneficiary agreement.

Source: L. 2018: Entire article added, (SB 18-180), ch. 169, p. 1186, § 1, effective January 1, 2019.

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