
Challenging Fiduciary Duty
We aim to redefine fiduciary duty beyond wealth maximization by securing a legal opinion and exploring a test case on trustees' investment responsibilities.
1 - 6 months
Last update: October 05, 2023
Challenge
Description
We seek to instruct a barrister to produce advice, which analyses what it means to act in a beneficiaries’ best interest. What factors should be considered when trustees exercise their fiduciary duty to act in the beneficiaries’ best interest? We intend to make Counsel’s opinion publicly available. This will encourage public discourse, generate support for a more holistic approach to fiduciary duty and push for legislative change from regulators and government agencies. Counsel’s opinion should also provide us with the best strategy to pursue in terms of challenging the current interpretation of fiduciary duty in the court system. Ultimately we hope that by making counsel’s opinion public we will be in a position to identify one or more beneficiaries who are willing to engage in bringing a test case to obtain directions from the court as to the true meaning of fiduciary duty. Recent case law in the charitable context indicates the courts’ willingness to clarify the meaning of fiduciary duty and allow trustees of charitable trusts to invest in line with their charitable trust’s purpose (e.g. Butler-Sloss). Our project seeks to extend this legal interpretation to all fiduciaries. We believe this will have a significant impact on investment strategies, investment products, tax and legal advice as well as director decision making.
Outcomes
In challenging the current interpretation of fiduciary duty using legal tools, we hope to directly impact the investment strategy and long term management of private trusts in the UK. Similarly, this would result in the advisory industry having to pivot towards a system that no longer focuses on profit above all else. We hope that investment tools and strategies which centre justice, community and the more-than-human-world. This in turn should lead to the further development and support for investments that support the just transition. We also hope that challenging the interpretation of fiduciary duty in the context of private trusts will open doors for other similar challenges. For instance, in the context of pension trustees or directors.