Colorado Code § 11-109-701

Discontinuance of trust business - voluntary liquidation and dissolution
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(1) A trust company may discontinue its trust business upon furnishing to the
banking board satisfactory evidence of its release and discharge from all trust-related obligations
and trusts that it has undertaken or that have been imposed by law. Thereupon, the banking board
shall cancel the charter, and such trust company shall not be permitted to use the word "trust" in
its name or in connection with its business.
(2) (a) With the approval of the banking board, a trust company may liquidate and
dissolve. The banking board shall grant such approval if it appears that the proposal to liquidate
and dissolve has been approved by a vote of two-thirds of the outstanding voting stock of the
trust company at a meeting called for that purpose and that the trust company is solvent and has
sufficient liquid assets to pay off depositors and creditors immediately.
(b) (I) Upon approval by the banking board, the trust company shall forthwith cease to
do business, shall have only the powers necessary to effect an orderly liquidation, and shall
proceed to pay its depositors and creditors and to wind up its affairs.
(II) Within thirty days after the approval, a notice of liquidation shall be sent by mail to
each depositor and creditor, at the address of such person as shown in the records of the trust
company. The notice shall be posted conspicuously on the premises of the trust company and
shall be published in such a manner as the banking board may require. With each notice, the trust
company shall send a statement of the amount shown in the records of the trust company to be
the claim of the depositor or creditor. The notice shall require that claims of depositors and
creditors, if the amount claimed differs from the amount stated in the notice to be due, be filed
with the trust company before a specified date not earlier than sixty days thereafter, in
accordance with the procedure prescribed in the notice.
(III) The approval of an application for liquidation shall not impair any right of a
depositor or creditor to payment in full, and all lawful claims of creditors and depositors shall
promptly be paid.
(IV) Any assets remaining after the discharge of all obligations shall be distributed to the
stockholders in accordance with their respective interests. No such distribution shall be made
before all claims of depositors and creditors have been paid or any funds payable to a depositor
or creditor and unclaimed have been transmitted to the banking board, or, in the case of any
disputed claim, the trust company has transmitted to the banking board a sum adequate to meet
any liability that may be judicially determined.
(c) Any unclaimed distribution to a stockholder or depositor shall be held until ninety
days after the final distribution and then transmitted to the banking board. Such unclaimed
money shall be held by the banking board for six years and, unless sooner claimed by the person
entitled thereto, shall be transferred to the treasury of the county in which the trust company is
located. The county treasurer and the county treasurer's successors shall hold such money in trust
for a period of six years, unless the money is sooner paid out to the beneficial owner. Any money
remaining in the fund six years after such money is paid into the treasury of the county, for the
recovery of which no action is pending, shall be transferred to the general fund of the county,
and all rights of the beneficial owners therein to recover such money shall be forever barred.
(d) If the banking board finds that the assets will be insufficient for the full discharge of
all obligations or that completion of the liquidation has been unduly delayed, the banking board
may take possession and complete the liquidation in the manner provided in this article for
involuntary liquidations.
(e) The banking board may require reports of the progress of liquidation. If the banking
board is satisfied that the liquidation has been properly completed, it shall cancel the charter and
enter an order of dissolution.

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