Colorado Code § 15-5-108

Principal place of administration
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(1) Without precluding other means for
establishing a sufficient connection with the designated jurisdiction, terms of a trust designating
the principal place of administration are valid and controlling if:
(a) A trustee's principal place of business is located in or a trustee is a resident of the
designated jurisdiction; or
(b) All or part of the administration occurs in the designated jurisdiction.
(2) In the case of cotrustees, the principal place of administration, if not otherwise
designated in the trust instrument, is the usual place of business of the corporate trustee if there
is but one corporate cotrustee, or the usual place of business or residence of the individual trustee
who is a professional fiduciary if there is but one such person and no corporate cotrustee, and
otherwise the usual place of business or residence of any of the cotrustees as agreed upon by
them.
(3) A trustee is under a continuing duty to administer the trust at a place appropriate to
its purposes, its administration, and the interests of the beneficiaries.
(4) Without precluding the right of the court to order, approve, or disapprove a transfer,
the trustee, in furtherance of the duty prescribed by subsection (3) of this section, may transfer
the trust's principal place of administration to another state or to a jurisdiction outside the United
States.
(5) The trustee shall notify the qualified beneficiaries of a proposed transfer of a trust's
principal place of administration not less than sixty days before initiating the transfer. The notice
of a proposed transfer must include:
(a) The name of the jurisdiction to which the principal place of administration is to be
transferred;
(b) The address, e-mail address, and telephone number at the new location at which the
trustee can be contacted;
(c) An explanation of the reasons for the proposed transfer;
(d) The date on which the proposed transfer is anticipated to occur; and
(e) The date, not less than sixty days after the giving of the notice, by which the
qualified beneficiary must notify the trustee of an objection to the proposed transfer.
(6) If a qualified beneficiary notifies the trustee of an objection to a proposed transfer of
the trust's principal place of administration, the authority of a trustee pursuant to this section to
transfer a trust's principal place of administration is suspended, pending resolution of the
objection.
(7) In connection with a transfer of the trust's principal place of administration, the
trustee may transfer some or all of the trust property to a successor trustee designated in the
terms of the trust or appointed pursuant to section 15-5-704.

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