The order creating or approving the funding of a trust funded by court order must provide that the trust is subject to the continuing jurisdiction of the court and may provide that the trust is to be subject to court supervision under the Probate Code.
Except as provided in (d), unless the court otherwise orders for good cause shown, trust instruments for trusts funded by court order must:
Unless the court otherwise orders for good cause shown, the requirements of (c)(5),(8) of this rule do not apply to trust instruments for trusts that will have total assets of $20,000 or less after receipt of the property ordered by the court.
Cal. R. Ct. 7.903
Advisory Committee Comment
Subdivision (a) of this rule defines a court-funded trust as a product of three court proceedings. Two of these, a petition for substituted judgment in a probate conservatorship (Prob. Code, Section 2580) and a proceeding for a particular transaction in the property of an impaired spouse or domestic partner without a conservator (Prob. Code, Section 3100; Fam. Code, Section 297.5), are regularly heard in the probate department of the court. The third proceeding, an application for an order approving the settlement of a minor's claim or a pending action involving a minor or person with a disability or approving the disposition of the proceeds of a judgment in favor of a minor or person with a disability (Prob. Code, Section 3600), may be heard in either a probate or a civil department.
The Judicial Council has adopted standard 7.10 of the Standards of Judicial Administration to address proceedings under Probate Code section 3600 that involve court-funded trusts and are heard in civil departments. The standard makes two recommendations concerning the expertise of judicial officers who hear these proceedings on trust issues. The recommendations are to develop practices and procedures that (1) provide for determination of the trust issues in these matters by the probate department of the court or by a judicial officer who regularly hears probate proceedings or (2) ensure that judicial officers who hear these matters have experience or receive training in substantive and technical issues involving trusts, including special needs trusts.