Nevada remains a top-tier private-wealth destination, and recent state-law developments have continued to close the few remaining competitive gaps between Nevada and the handful of similarly situated jurisdictions such as South Dakota and Tennessee. A discussion of significant trends in Nevada private-wealth practice, appellate decisions, and legislative developments follows.
Emergence of Licensed Family Trust Companies
Although Nevada’s family trust company statutes have provided for licensure since 2009, only in recent years have significant numbers of families begun choosing licensed family trust companies (as opposed to less-regulated unlicensed family trust companies). Among the factors promoting this trend is the exemption of licensed family trust companies from:
Although licensure requires an initial regulatory application filing with the Nevada Financial Institutions Division ("NFID"), which includes submission of personal and financial background information for owners, directors, and officers; a suitability investigation of those individuals; regular renewal applications containing updates on changes to ownership, board members, and officers; and periodic examination by NFID auditors or a qualified third-party auditor, families seem increasingly to find the benefits of license outweigh the marginal regulatory oversight of forming an operating a licensed family trust company. Beyond exemption from certain federal oversight and regulations, those benefits also include greater options for ownership and control, broader definitions for identification of family members, availability of independent directors, and the ability to operate branches in certain other state jurisdictions, allowing family trust companies.
Increased formations of retail trust companies in Nevada
Due to the combination of explosive growth in the global private wealth space and Nevada's highly favorable trust and creditor-protection laws, lack of state income tax, minimal regulatory capital requirements, and ease of access to international travel hubs and major metropolitan areas in the western United States, Nevada has experienced unprecedented growth in the formation of local and regional retail trust companies. Those forming retail trust companies include national trust companies, registered investment advisers, multi-family offices, and individual high-net-worth investors. Among the trust and creditor-protection laws they seem to find most appealing are those providing for asset-protection trusts, spousal-access trusts, 365-year multi-generational irrevocable trusts, decanting to modify discretionary trusts, silent-trust features, elective sealing and redaction of court documents (discussed below), and arbitration.
Noteworthy Nevada Supreme Court decisions
Matter of Paul D. Burgauer Revocable Living Trust, 138 Nev., Adv. Op. 79, 521 P.3d 1160 (2022)
The Nevada Supreme Court held that minimum contacts under NRS 164.010, the Nevada statute providing Nevada courts with personal jurisdiction over nonresident trustees of Nevada trusts, is a necessary but not sufficient condition for a Nevada court to exercise such jurisdiction, and, if a Nevada court is to exercise such jurisdiction, the nonresident trustee must also have minimum contacts with Nevada under the Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. This decision clarified that the bar for hauling a nonresident trustee into Nevada court is higher than previously thought, making Nevada a more attractive jurisdiction for families that wish to retain highly competent trustees who reside beyond Nevada’s borders.
Matter of 23 Partners Trust I, 138 Nev., Adv. Op. 84, 521 P.3d 1190 (2022)
The Nevada Supreme Court held that under Nevada's trust-account statutes:
This decision clarified the exceedingly narrow bounds of a discretionary beneficiary’s entitlement to an account and a copy of the trust instrument itself, offering assurance to the growing number of families who wish to employ silent trusts in their estate planning.
Shortly after this decision, the Nevada Legislature, working closely with Nevada private-wealth practitioners, amended the statute defining the “support interest” category of trust-distribution interests to clarify that a “support interest” is not a discretionary-distribution interest to which the 23 Partners rule would apply. The new statutory language specifies that
The Legislature has thereby distinguished a "support interest" from a mere discretionary distribution for a beneficiary's support, the latter of which is left to the trustee’s discretion not only as to the determination but also whether to make the distribution in the first place. A trustor should thus use a purely discretionary standard, such as HEMS, for distributions to any beneficiary with respect to whom the trustor wishes to leverage Nevada’s silent-trust laws.
Elective sealing and redaction of court filings
Settlors, beneficiaries, and fiduciaries now have expanded rights to seal and redact confidential information related to trusts in Nevada court filings. Since 2015, family trust companies, settlors, beneficiaries, and other fiduciaries of trusts could petition a court to seal trust documents in proceedings relating to a trust or estate. These documents include trust instruments, inventories, accounts, annual reports, final reports, documents relevant to trust administration, and all court orders. Courts typically granted such petitions, but Nevada private-wealth practitioners wished to offer greater assurance to families that proceedings would be entirely confidential with respect to non-interested persons from the very start of proceedings. Thus, during the 2023 Legislative Session, the State Bar of Nevada’s Probate and Trust Section proposed - and Nevada lawmakers enacted - a new statute allowing a party simply to elect sealing or redaction upon filing a petition rather than filing and seeking court approval for sealing or redaction. Once a filing is electively sealed or redacted, all subsequent filings and orders are likewise sealed or redacted and may be unsealed or unredacted only upon court order.
Popularity of spousal access trusts
For spouses who are uncertain about outliving their resources but desire to fully leverage the ample unified credit and generation-skipping-transfer-tax exemption (“GST exemption”) available (each projected to be USD13.61 million in 2025 before roughly halving upon the expiration of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act in 2026), the use of a Nevada lifetime spousal-access trust ("SLAT") has become an increasingly popular option. A SLAT is an irrevocable trust that names the grantor's spouse as a discretionary beneficiary along with others, including children. Properly funded with the grantor's separate property, the grantor's transfer of assets to a SLAT uses a portion of the grantor's unified credit and possibly GST exemption if the SLAT is eventually to become a long-term, multi-generational irrevocable trust. The objective is to allow the grantor potential indirect access to the income and principal of the trust through distributions to the grantor's spouse. Certain targeted provisions, such as special testamentary powers of appointment and termination of the spouse's beneficial interest in the SLAT upon divorce, can mitigate those challenges and create materially different SLATs for each spouse.
Advantages of the SLAT technique in Nevada include:
Disadvantages of the SLAT technique include:
Long-Term Irrevocable Discretionary Trusts
The long-term irrevocable discretionary trust (also known as a “dynasty trust”) remains a cornerstone of long-term estate and succession planning in Nevada partly because of the state's advantageous trust and tax laws and 365-year rule-against-perpetuities period. The benefits of a successful long-term irrevocable discretionary trust in Nevada include:
Because long-term discretionary trusts hold significant amounts of wealth, lawmakers frequently propose federal legislation that would cause adverse tax consequences and ultimately diminish the advantages of long-term irrevocable discretionary trusts. But, for now, such trusts remain an increasingly attractive option for the reasons discussed above.
New default rule that trust protector acts in fiduciary capacity
The Nevada Legislature, again working closely with Nevada private-wealth practitioners, recently replaced language in NRS 163.5553(1), which previously provided that a trust protector may exercise powers as provided in the trust instrument under a best-interests-of-the-trust standard, and added clarifying language in a new subsection. By replacing the best-interests standard with “subject to the terms and provisions in the trust instrument” and clarifying in the additional language that the powers are fiduciary, the Legislature has established a default rule that a trust protector acts in a fiduciary capacity unless the terms of the trust instrument specifically provide otherwise. The option of definitively electing out of fiduciary treatment may be the most appealing aspect of this new law, and it better serves the general policy under Nevada trust law of allowing a trust instrument to determine the scope and extent of applicable fiduciary duties.
Required documentation for statute of limitations on action contesting trust
The Nevada Legislature also replaced and added new language in NRS 164.021 to precisely clarify what a trustee must provide to interested persons in order to shorten the limitations period for contesting the terms of a trust instrument after the settlor's death. The additional language also allows an interested person to consent to an even shorter limitation period. This is an especially welcome clarification after an earlier court decision caused many Nevada practitioners to disclose prior trust provisions that had been superseded or revoked.
Compliance with the Corporate Transparency Act
The recently enacted Corporate Transparency Act (“CTA”), a new and unprecedented disclosure regime designed to create a national, electronic registry of “beneficial-ownership information” for “reporting companies,” will require an estimated 30-million-plus entities to disclose personal information to the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network by January 1, 2025. Although trusts are generally not among the directly affected entities, various individuals associated with a trust are deemed “beneficial owners” and must disclose the required information. That information includes the reporting individual's full legal name, date of birth, residential address, and unique identifying number from a government-issued document. Such individuals include owners, officers, directors, committee members, and certain grantors, trustees, beneficiaries, trust protectors, investment trust advisers, as well as power holders and owners.
The CTA represents a broader trend toward European-style disclosure at the federal and state levels. But, while states like New York have recently imposed similar and overlapping disclosure requirements at the state level, Nevada requires only initial and annual lists disclosing a company's principals and their respective business or residential addresses.
100 West Liberty Street, Tenth Floor
Reno, Nevada 89501
USA
+1 775 788 2000
+1 775 788 2020
rarmstrong@mcdonaldcarano.com www.mcdonaldcarano.com