- (a) Subject to Subsection (g) and the other provisions of this chapter, one or more persons may organize and charter a state trust company as a state trust association or a limited trust association.
(b) A state trust company may engage in the trust business by:
- (1) acting as trustee under a written agreement;
- (2) receiving money and other property in its capacity as trustee for investment in real or personal property;
- (3) acting as trustee and performing the fiduciary duties committed or transferred to it by order of a court;
- (4) acting as executor, administrator, or trustee of the estate of a deceased person;
- (5) acting as a custodian, guardian, conservator, or trustee for a minor or incapacitated person;
- (6) acting as a successor fiduciary to a trust institution or other fiduciary;
- (7) receiving for safekeeping personal property;
- (8) acting as custodian, assignee, transfer agent, escrow agent, registrar, or receiver;
- (9) acting as investment advisor, agent, or attorney in fact according to an applicable agreement;
- (10) with the prior written approval of the banking commissioner and to the extent consistent with applicable fiduciary principles, engaging in a financial activity or an activity incidental or complementary to a financial activity, directly or through a subsidiary;
- (11) exercising additional powers expressly conferred by rule of the finance commission; and
- (12) exercising any incidental power that is reasonably necessary to enable it to fully exercise the powers expressly conferred according to commonly accepted fiduciary customs and usages.
- (c) For purposes of other state law, a trust association is considered a corporation and a limited trust association is considered a limited liability company. To the extent consistent with this subtitle, a trust association may exercise the powers of a Texas business corporation and a limited trust association may exercise the powers of a Texas limited liability company as reasonably necessary to enable exercise of specific powers under this subtitle.
- (d) A state trust company may contribute to a community fund or to a charitable, philanthropic, or benevolent instrumentality conducive to public welfare an amount that the state trust company's board considers appropriate and in the interests of the state trust company.
- (e) Subject to Section 184.301, a state trust company may deposit trust funds with itself.
- (f) A state trust company insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation may receive and pay deposits, with or without interest, made by the United States, the state, a county, or a municipality.
- (g) In the exercise of discretion consistent with the purposes of this subtitle, the banking commissioner may require a state trust company to conduct an otherwise authorized activity through a subsidiary.
Added by Acts 1999, 76th Leg., ch. 62, Sec. 7.16(a), eff. Sept. 1, 1999.
Amended by Acts 2001, 77th Leg., ch. 528, Sec. 20, eff. Sept. 1, 2001;
Acts 2001, 77th Leg., ch. 1420, Sec. 6.008(a), eff. Sept. 1, 2001.