2021 Colorado Code
Title 15 - Probate, Trusts, and Fiduciaries
Article 1 - Fiduciary
Part 4 - Uniform Principal and Income Act (Repealed Effective January 1, 2022)
§ 15-1-420. Liquidating Asset

Universal Citation: CO Code § 15-1-420 (2021)
  1. For purposes of this section, “liquidating asset” means an asset whose value will diminish or terminate because the asset is expected to produce receipts for a period of limited duration. The term includes a leasehold, patent, copyright, royalty right, and right to receive payments during a period of more than one year under an arrangement that does not provide for the payment of interest on the unpaid balance. The term does not include a payment subject to section 15-1-419, resources subject to section 15-1-421, timber subject to section 15-1-422, an activity subject to section 15-1-424, an asset subject to section 15-1-425, or any asset for which the trustee establishes a reserve for depreciation under section 15-1-428.
  2. A trustee shall allocate to income ten percent of the receipts from a liquidating asset and the balance to principal.

History. Source: L. 2000: Entire part R&RE, p. 1142, § 1, effective July 1, 2001.


OFFICIAL COMMENT

Prior Acts. Section 11 of the 1962 Uniform Act allocates receipts from “property subject to depletion” to income in an amount “not in excess of 5%” of the asset's inventory value. The 1931 Uniform Act has a similar 5% rule that applies when the trustee is under a duty to change the form of the investment. The 5% rule imposes on a trust the obligation to pay a fixed annuity to the income beneficiary until the asset is exhausted. Under both the 1931 and 1962 Uniform Acts the balance of each year's receipts is added to principal. A fixed payment can produce unfair results. The remainder beneficiary receives all of the receipts from unexpected growth in the asset, e.g., if royalties on a patent or copyright increase significantly. Conversely, if the receipts diminish more rapidly than expected, most of the amount received by the trust will be allocated to income and little to principal. Moreover, if the annual payments remain the same for the life of the asset, the amount allocated to principal will usually be less than the original inventory value. For these reasons, Section 15-1-420 abandons the annuity approach under the 5% rule.

Lottery payments. The reference in subsection (1) to rights to receive payments under an arrangement that does not provide for the payment of interest includes state lottery prizes and similar fixed amounts payable over time that are not deferred compensation arrangements covered by Section 15-1-419 .


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