TO BE PUBLISHED IN THE OFFICIAL REPORTS
OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
State of California
DANIEL E. LUNGREN
Attorney General
______________________________________
OPINION :
: No. 95-807
of :
: June 19, 1996
DANIEL E. LUNGREN :
Attorney General :
:
GREGORY L. GONOT :
Deputy Attorney General :
:
______________________________________________________________________________
LAURENCE M. WATSON, ACTING COUNTY COUNSEL, COUNTY OF
ORANGE, has requested an opinion on the following question:
May the treasurer of a general law county grant to a contract investment manager, who
is not a deputy of the treasurer, discretionary authority to invest funds on deposit with the treasurer?
CONCLUSION
The treasurer of a general law county may grant to a contract investment manager, who
is not a deputy of the treasurer, discretionary authority to invest funds on deposit with the treasurer,
provided that the treasurer exercises prudence in the selection of the manager and imposes suitable
safeguards to prevent abuse in the exercise of discretion by the manager. The treasurer would remain
responsible for any investment decisions made by the manager.
ANALYSIS
The question presented for resolution concerns the ability of a county treasurer to
contract with an investment manager for the purpose of investing funds which are in the custody of the
treasurer. The manager would select, purchase, and sell individual securities. We conclude that such
an arrangement would not violate state law if the treasurer exercises prudence in the selection of the
manager and imposes safeguards to prevent abuse in the exercise of discretion by the manager. The
treasurer would remain responsible for any investment decisions made by the manager.
1. 95-807
Government Code section 270001 provides that "[the] county treasurer shall receive
and keep safe all money belonging to the county and all other money directed by law to be paid to him
and apply and pay it out, rendering the account as required by law." Section 27000.1 states:
"The board of supervisors may, by ordinance, delegate to the county treasurer
the authority to invest or reinvest the funds of the county and funds of other depositors
in the county treasury . . . . The county treasurer shall thereafter assume full
responsibility for those transactions until the board of supervisors, by ordinance,
revokes its delegation of authority. . . ."
Section 27000.3 provides:
"The county treasurer is a trustee and therefore a fiduciary subject to the
prudent investor standard. When investing, reinvesting, purchasing, acquiring,
exchanging, selling, and managing public funds, the county treasurer shall act with
care, skill, prudence, and diligence under the circumstances then prevailing, that a
prudent person acting in a like capacity and familiarity with those matters would use in
the conduct of funds of a like character and with like aims, to safeguard the principal
and maintain the liquidity needs of the county and the other depositors. Within the
limitations of this section and considering individual investments as part of an overall
investment strategy, a trustee is authorized to acquire investments as authorized by law.
Nothing in this chapter is intended to grant investment authority to any person or
governing body except as provided in Sections 53601, 53607, and 53635."2
Section 27000.5 states:
"When investing, reinvesting, purchasing, acquiring, exchanging, selling, and
managing public funds, the primary objective of the county treasurer shall be to
safeguard the principal of the funds under his or her control. The secondary objective
shall be to meet the liquidity needs of the depositor. The third objective shall be to
achieve a return on the funds under his or her control."
When a county invests surplus funds, the board of supervisors must establish a county
treasury oversight committee. (' 25131.) The treasurer must annually prepare for the committee an
investment policy which includes:
"(a) A list of securities or other instruments in which the county treasurer
may invest, according to law, including the maximum allowable percentage by type of
security.
1
All section references are to the Government Code unless otherwise indicated.
2
The requirements of sections 53607 and 53635 are discussed below.
2. 95-807
"(b) The maximum term of any security purchased by the county treasury.
"(c) The criteria for selecting security brokers and dealers from, to, or
through whom the county treasury may purchase or sell securities or other instruments.
The criteria shall prohibit the selection of any broker, brokerage, dealer, or securities
firm that has, within any consecutive 48-month period following January 1, 1996, made
a political contribution in an amount exceeding the limitations contained in Rule-G37
of the Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board, to the local treasurer, any member of
the governing board of the local agency, or any candidate for those offices.
". . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ." (' 27133.)
While the committee has oversight responsibility, it may not "direct individual investment decisions,
select individual investment advisors brokers, or dealers, or impinge on the day-to-day operations of the
county treasury." (' 27137.)
Historically the Legislature placed numerous restrictions upon the investment of local
public funds. (See Stats. 1967, ch. 1026, ' 1; Stats. 1949, ch. 81, ' 1.) Differing requirements were
made applicable to the investment of local funds needed for immediate use, surplus funds needed for
future use, and specialized funds such as those contributed under an employee deferred compensation
plan. (See 57 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 534, 539-542 (1974).) Recently investment opportunities have been
broadened by the Legislature and given substantially similar treatment. (See, e.g., '' 53601, 53609,
53635.)
We may assume for our purposes that the county treasurer has been given the necessary
authority by the board of supervisors to invest the county's funds, that a county treasury oversight
committee has been established in the county, and that the treasurer will comply with all statutory
requirements relating to the investment of the funds.
Except insofar as the treasurer's powers may be exercised by a deputy,3 the governing
statutes do not expressly provide for any further grant of discretion with respect to the investment of
county funds. Here we are given that the manager would not be a deputy of the treasurer. Since no
express statutory authority allows a treasurer to grant discretion regarding investment decisions to such
an "outside" manager, may the authority to do so be implied? We believe the answer to this question
may be determined by examining the scope of the treasurer's authority as a trustee of the county's funds.
3
The county treasurer "may appoint as many deputies as are necessary for the prompt and faithful discharge of the
duties of his office." (' 24101.) "Whenever the official name of any principal officer is used in any law conferring
power or imposing duties or liabilities, it includes deputies." (' 24100; see also '' 7, 1194; 70 Ops.Cal.Atty.Gen. 710,
715, 718-719 (1980).)
3. 95-807
Section 27000.3 denominates the treasurer as a "trustee," thereby making him "a
fiduciary subject to the prudent investor standard." The prudent investor standard is set forth in the
Restatement Third of Trusts section 227. As applicable herein, section 227 states:
"The trustee is under a duty to the beneficiaries to invest and manage the funds
of the trust as a prudent investor would, in light of the purposes, terms, distribution
requirements, and other circumstances of the trust.
". . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
"(c) In addition, the trustee must:
"(1) conform to fundamental fiduciary duties of loyalty (' 170) and
impartiality (' 183);
"(2) act with prudence in deciding whether and how to delegate authority
and in the selection and supervision of agents (' 171); and
"(3) incur only costs that are reasonable in amount and appropriate to the
investment responsibilities of the trusteeship (' 188).
"(d) The trustee's duties under this Section are subject to the rule of ' 228,
dealing primarily with contrary investment provisions of a trust or statute."
The Restatement rule, section 171, governing a trustee's authority in granting discretion to others in
performing his responsibilities is as follows:
"A trustee has a duty personally to perform the responsibilities of the
trusteeship except as a prudent person might delegate those responsibilities to others.
In deciding whether, to whom and in what manner to delegate fiduciary authority in the
administration of a trust, and thereafter in supervising agents, the trustee is under a duty
to the beneficiaries to exercise fiduciary discretion and to act as a prudent person would
act in similar circumstances."
A comment to this Restatement rule explains "fiduciary duty" and "discretion" as regards a delegation
of responsibility:
"A trustee stands in a fiduciary relationship to the beneficiaries of the trust and
therefore is under a duty personally to perform the responsibilities of the trusteeship
except as it would be prudent, under the circumstances, to delegate to agents the
making of decisions or the performance of acts of administration." (' 171, com. a;
emphasis added.)
The prudent investor standard is also set forth in the Uniform Prudent Investor Act
(Prob. Code, '' 16045-16054). Probate Code section 16052, subdivision (a), states:
4. 95-807
"A trustee may delegate investment and management functions as prudent
under the circumstances. The trustee shall exercise prudence in the following:
"(1) Selecting an agent.
"(2) Establishing the scope and terms of the delegation, consistent with the
purposes and terms of the trust.
"(3) Periodically reviewing the agent's overall performance and compliance
with the terms of the delegation."4
The use of agents by a trustee may be necessary because "[m]any duties of the trustee
require special skills and knowledge which the trustee does not possess so that he could not be expected
to perform such work without advice and aid." (Bogert, Trusts (6th ed. 1987) ' 92, p. 331.) In a
comment regarding the prudent investor standard, the Restatement Third of Trusts states:
"The trustee is not required personally to perform all aspects of the investment
function. The trustee must not, however, abdicate the responsibilities of the office and
must not delegate unreasonably. Prudent behavior in this matter, as in other aspects of
prudent investment management, cannot be reduced to a simple, objective formula.
"With professional advice as needed, the trustee personally must define the
trust's investment objectives. The trustee must also make the decisions that establish
the trust's investment strategies and programs, at least to the extent of approving plans
developed by agents or advisers. Beyond these generalizations, expressed in terms that
are necessarily imprecise, there is no invariant formula concerning functions that are to
be performed by the trustee personally.
"Many factors affect the nature and extent of prudent and therefore permissible
delegation. These factors include the almost infinite variety that exists in trustees and
trusteeships, as well as in investment objectives and techniques and in the types,
circumstances, and goals of trusts. For example, it would be impractical for delegation
decisions not to take account of the scale of a trust's operations and the nature of the
trustee's operating structure. Corporate trustees necessarily act through their
employees; between that situation and the individual who acts as a trustee or co-trustee,
however, there are many variations of trusteeship, encompassing, for example,
institutional governing bodies, law firms, and panels of individuals operating with the
support of full-time staff.
4
A county treasurer's conduct may be measured under the principles applicable to trustees expressed in the Probate
Code. (See Prob. Code, ' 15003, subd. (c).)
5. 95-807
"The trustee's authority to delegate is not confined to acts that might reasonably
be described as `ministerial.' Nor is delegation precluded because the act in question
calls for the exercise of considerable judgment or discretion. The trustee's decisions
with regard to delegation are themselves matters of fiduciary judgment and
responsibility falling within the sound discretion of the trustee.
"As in other matters of fiduciary discretion . . ., the trustee must not abuse the
discretion to delegate. Accordingly, a court may substitute its judgment for that of the
trustee in a matter of delegation if and only if the trustee has acted unreasonably, or has
unreasonably failed to act. Similarly, a trustee's liability in a matter of delegation
depends on a failure to exercise the required degree of care, skill, or caution.
"In deciding what as well as whether to delegate and in selecting, instructing,
and supervising agents, the trustee has a duty to the beneficiaries to act as a prudent
investor would act under the circumstances. The trustee must exercise care, skill, and
caution in establishing the scope and specific terms of any delegation, and must keep
reasonably informed in order to monitor the execution of investment decisions or plans.
"In all of these matters the trustee has a duty to the beneficiaries to take account
of all relevant circumstances. These include the knowledge, skill, facilities, and
compensation of both the trustee and the prospective agents. Also of importance are
such considerations as the size of the trust estate and the burdens and complexity of
both the assets to be managed and the strategies to be implemented. Active
investment strategies, for example, especially in low efficiency markets such as real
estate and venture capital, are likely to require the hiring of agents with special skills
not possessed by many trustees, often not even by professional or corporate
fiduciaries." (' 227, com. j, pp. 39-40, emphasis added.)
The prudent investor standard requires a trustee to act in accordance with applicable
statutes. Section 228 of the Restatement Third of Trusts provides:
"In investing the funds of the trust, the trustee
"(a) has a duty to the beneficiaries to conform to any applicable statutory
provisions governing investment by trustees . . . ."
As previously indicated, upon receiving authority from the board of supervisors to invest county funds,
the treasurer assumes full responsibility for that function. (' 27000.1.) However, it is contemplated
by the Legislature that the treasurer, in making investments for the county (' 53607), will employ
necessary financial advisors, consultants, and managers in carrying out his responsibilities. Section
53635, for example, provides in part:
". . . A local agency purchasing or obtaining any securities described in this
section, in a negotiable, bearer, registered, or nonregistered format, shall require
delivery of all the securities to the local agency, including those purchased for the
6. 95-807
agency by financial advisors, consultants, or managers using the agency's funds, by
book entry, physical delivery, or by third-party custodial agreement. . . ." (Emphasis
added.)5
We believe that given (1) the relatively large amount of funds which may be
administered by a county treasurer, (2) the degree of skill required for investing in the complex forms of
securities described in section 53635, (3) the section 27133 requirement for annual preparation by the
treasurer of an investment policy to control investment decisions (including the maximum allowable
percentage by type of security), and (4) the section 27134 requirement for an annual audit which "may
include issues relating to the structure of the investment portfolio and risk," a county treasurer may
grant the authority in question under the prudent investor standard, assuming he has exercised prudence
in the selection of the manager and has imposed suitable safeguards to prevent abuse in the exercise of
discretion by the manager. Of course, in contracting with an investment manager, the treasurer may
not abdicate his responsibility for the investment of county funds.
We conclude that the treasurer of a general law county may grant to a contract
investment manager, who is not a deputy of the treasurer, discretionary authority to invest funds on
deposit with the treasurer provided that the treasurer exercises prudence in the selection of the manager
and imposes suitable safeguards to prevent abuse in the exercise of discretion by the manager. The
trustee would remain responsible for any investment decisions made by the manager.
*****
5
Wholly aside from the issue of granting discretion to a manager to invest county funds, we note that a county
board of supervisors may contract for investment advice under the terms of section 53060:
"The legislative body of any public or municipal corporation or district may contract with
and employ any persons for the furnishing to the corporation or district special services and advise in
financial, economic, accounting, engineering, legal, or administrative matters if such persons are
specially trained and experienced and compensation to perform the special services required.
". . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
"The legislative body of the corporation or district may pay from any available funds such
compensation to such persons as it deems proper for the services rendered."
7. 95-807