Cemetery Trust Corporation — Purpose, Powers, Exemptions — Charter and Capital Stock
Checkout our iOS App for a better way to browser and research.
A trust corporation, which shall be chartered as a not-for-profit general welfare corporation under the laws of Tennessee, may be formed for the sole purpose of administering and providing fiduciary services for a trust created for the perpetual care of a private cemetery, thereby benefiting all the citizens of this state.
The services performed by a trust corporation formed under this chapter are necessarily services not otherwise generally available for such purposes, and the commissioner of financial institutions shall exempt the corporation from any requirement of title 45, chapters 1 and 2, or the rules of the department of financial institutions, that would threaten the viability of the corporation, including, but not limited to, capitalization requirements, fees, and procedures that are not essential to the protection of the interests of the trust beneficiaries.
The trust corporation shall file its charter with the secretary of state and shall also record its charter in the office of the register of deeds in the county in which its principal office is located. The trust corporation's existence shall continue until terminated by law.
It is not the purpose of the corporation to engage in commercial banking activity or private fiduciary activity, except to the limited extent of acting in a fiduciary capacity for a person who creates a trust for the perpetual care of a private cemetery and specifically designates a trust corporation formed under this chapter to serve in the capacity as trustee.
A trust corporation formed under this chapter must use the word “cemetery” in its corporate title and may not advertise its services in such a manner as to represent that the corporation is a general fiduciary trust company.
In addition to the general duties and powers of corporations formed under the laws of Tennessee, a trust corporation formed under this chapter is authorized to:
Accept funds and gifts of land for the benefit of the trust;
Enter into contracts, trust agreements, and other fiduciary instruments;
Adopt, use and display a corporate seal;
Adopt and amend bylaws, rules and regulations for carrying out the purpose of this chapter;
Manage and invest money and other property for the benefit of the trust;
Act in a fiduciary capacity for a person creating a trust for the perpetual care of a private cemetery who specifically designates the trust corporation to act as trustee; and
Have such powers as are necessary and convenient to carry out the purpose for which the trust corporation is organized, including, but not limited to, any necessary and appropriate actions to associate with or participate in transactions through the federal reserve system.
As the trust corporation is formed for a valid public purpose and will exercise its powers for the benefit of the state, the trust corporation, its capital stock, all properties at any time owned or held by it in a fiduciary capacity, and income derived from the trust funds shall be exempt from taxation by the state or any local unit, or subdivision or instrumentality of the state.
Any capital stock of the trust corporation shall be held by the members of the board of directors and their successors in office, by virtue of their incumbency in office.