Allard v. Pacific National Bank, 99 Wn.2d 394, 663 P.2d 104 (Wash. 1983)
Allard v. Pacific National Bank is a cornerstone Washington Supreme Court decision that crystallizes a trustee's affirmative fiduciary duty to keep beneficiaries reasonably informed and to provide advance notice of nonroutine transactions that could materially affect their interests.
Does a trustee have an affirmative fiduciary duty to provide timely notice and material information to trust beneficiaries before consummating a nonroutine transaction—such as the sale of a principal or uniquely significant trust asset—that could materially affect the beneficiaries' interests?
A trustee owes beneficiaries an affirmative fiduciary duty to keep them reasonably informed of material facts necessary for the protection of their interests, including furnishing full and accurate information about the trust property and administration, responding to reasonable requests for information, and, crucially, providing advance notice of and an opportunity to be heard regarding nonroutine transactions that may significantly affect the trust or beneficiaries' interests (e.g., sale of a principal asset or controlling interest in a closely held corporation). Broad discretionary powers or administrative clauses in the trust instrument do not eliminate or excuse this core duty to inform and consult. Failure to comply constitutes a breach of trust, subjecting the trustee to equitable remedies and surcharge.
Yes. The trustee breached its fiduciary duties by failing to inform and consult the beneficiaries before selling a principal, uniquely significant trust asset. The duty to inform and provide advance notice of nonroutine, materially impactful transactions is a core fiduciary obligation that is not negated by broad discretionary powers in the trust instrument.
Allard is a leading authority on the trustee's duty to inform and consult, particularly in the context of nonroutine transactions affecting uniquely valuable assets (e.g., closely held business interests, core real property). It underscores that broad administrative powers neither displace nor dilute core fiduciary obligations. The case is frequently taught alongside the Restatement and the Uniform Trust Code § 813, illustrating how courts operationalize transparency to enable pre-closing judicial oversight when needed. For practitioners and students, Allard provides a clear framework to distinguish routine from nonroutine actions and to evaluate trustee process, beneficiary engagement, and available remedies.