charitable incorporated organisations alice faure walker february 2013

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Charitable Incorporated Organisations Alice Faure Walker February 2013

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Page 1: Charitable Incorporated Organisations Alice Faure Walker February 2013

Charitable Incorporated Organisations

Alice Faure Walker

February 2013

Page 2: Charitable Incorporated Organisations Alice Faure Walker February 2013

• Background• Pros and cons• Setting up a CIO• Running a CIO• Converting to a CIO• Case studies

Page 3: Charitable Incorporated Organisations Alice Faure Walker February 2013

History/background to the CIO

What is the CIO?•A new incorporated legal form designed especially for charities

Page 4: Charitable Incorporated Organisations Alice Faure Walker February 2013

Why was it needed?

Legal forms for charities

•Unincorporated

– Trust

– Unincorporated association

•Incorporated– Charitable company limited by guarantee

– Industrial and Provident Society

Page 5: Charitable Incorporated Organisations Alice Faure Walker February 2013

Why an incorporated legal form?

• Legal identity

• Limited liability for trustees

BUT

• More administration (and regulation)

Page 6: Charitable Incorporated Organisations Alice Faure Walker February 2013

Problems with the charitable company limited by guarantee

• Dual regulation– Companies House– Charity Commission

• Company law– Unsuitable for charities?– Assumes that members have a financial interest

Page 7: Charitable Incorporated Organisations Alice Faure Walker February 2013

How could this be improved?

• Private action public benefit, Cabinet Office Strategy Unit 2001/2002

– A new incorporated legal form just for charities, with a single regulator

• Draft Charities Bill 2004

• Charities Act 2006

• Relevant provisions and regulations in force 2 January 2013

Page 8: Charitable Incorporated Organisations Alice Faure Walker February 2013

Compare with a charitable CLG

• Pros

• Cons

• Differences

Page 9: Charitable Incorporated Organisations Alice Faure Walker February 2013

Compare with a charitable CLG

• Pros

– Single Regulator

– No company law

• No reporting to Companies House (annual and event driven)

• Less risk of fines and offences

• More suitable regime?

– Tailored especially for charities

– Receipts and payments accounts for smaller charities (with a statement about outstanding guarantees and charged debts)

– Lower costs

• Currently no registration or filing fees

– No income threshold for registration

• From January 2014 CIOs may register even if their annual income is below £5,000

Page 10: Charitable Incorporated Organisations Alice Faure Walker February 2013

Compare with a charitable CLG

• Cons

– New and untested

– Gaps in the law

– No Register of Charges – may deter lenders

– Not formed until registration

– Changes to constitution not made until registered with Commission

– Dissolved if ceases to be a charity - within three months

– Not available for exempt charities (eg academies)

Page 11: Charitable Incorporated Organisations Alice Faure Walker February 2013

Compare with a charitable CLG

• Differences

– Members have fewer rights

• Rights to amend, approve transfer/amalgamation with another CIO, dissolve/wind up

• No automatic rights to: accounts; call meetings; circulate resolutions; appoint proxies; remove the board

– Members’ duty

• Members of a CIO have an express duty to exercise their powers in a way which they believe in good faith would be most likely to further the purposes of the CIO

– Privacy

• Broadly speaking, only the members and trustees may inspect the register of members of a CIO

Page 12: Charitable Incorporated Organisations Alice Faure Walker February 2013

Compare with a charitable CLG

• Differences

– Electronic communications

• Company members must give express individual consent to email communications: a CIO’s constitution may provide that supplying an email address to a CIO acts as deemed consent

– Conflicts of interest

• CIO regime is more restrictive

– Charity trustees may not benefit personally unless made prior disclosure to all trustees

– Charity trustees may not take part in a trustees’ or members’ decision if they would benefit (what if they would all benefit eg membership fees or trustee indemnity insurance?)

Page 13: Charitable Incorporated Organisations Alice Faure Walker February 2013

Compare with a charitable CLG

• Minor differences

– Majorities for written resolutions

• CIO rules require unanimity: company law requires a similar level of majority to a resolution passed at a meeting (e.g. 50% or 75%)

– Flexibility to change legal form in future

• Companies will be able to convert to CIO (when relevant legislation comes into force): no framework for CIO to convert to a company

– Chair’s casting vote

• No casting vote at members’ meetings for post October 2007 companies: CIOs can include a casting vote

Page 14: Charitable Incorporated Organisations Alice Faure Walker February 2013

Compare with a charitable CLG

• More minor differences

– Consensus voting

• CIO regime allows the constitution to provide for this at trustees’ and members’ meetings

– Statutory duty of care for trustees of CIO

• Still a two tier structure!

Page 15: Charitable Incorporated Organisations Alice Faure Walker February 2013

Charity law

• The usual rules of charity law apply to a CIO e.g:

– Public benefit

– Restrictions on non-primary purpose trading

– Restrictions on campaigning

– Restrictions on trustee benefit

• Guidance on accounting requirements is available at www.charity-commission.gov.uk/Charity_requirements_guidance/Accounting_and_reporting

Page 16: Charitable Incorporated Organisations Alice Faure Walker February 2013

Setting up a CIO

• Documents you will need– Charity Commission application form

– Declaration for trustees

– Constitution

Page 17: Charitable Incorporated Organisations Alice Faure Walker February 2013

Setting up a CIO – constitution

• CIO constitution

– Charity Commission model

• No power to remove trustees in foundation model

• Conflict of interest provisions may cause problems?

– Bespoke constitution

• Foundation vs Association model

– The role of the membership

Page 18: Charitable Incorporated Organisations Alice Faure Walker February 2013

Setting up a CIO – constitution

Key elements:

• Name

– Charity Commission may refuse to register on account of name

• Principal office

– Physical place

• Objects

• Powers

– A CIO may do anything which is calculated to further its purposes or is conducive or incidental to doing so. May wish to include express powers.

Page 19: Charitable Incorporated Organisations Alice Faure Walker February 2013

Setting up a CIO – constitution

Key elements:

•Not for profit

•Trustee benefit

- Restrictions

•Members’ guarantee

- No guarantee or nominal amount

Page 20: Charitable Incorporated Organisations Alice Faure Walker February 2013

Setting up a CIO – constitution

Key elements:

•Members

- Appointment

• Who will they be?

- Removal

- Taking decisions

• Meetings

• Decisions outside a meeting

- Electronic communications

Page 21: Charitable Incorporated Organisations Alice Faure Walker February 2013

Setting up a CIO – constitution

• Trustees

– Eligibility

– Appointment

• How are they appointed?

• Term of office

– Removal

– Decision-making

• Registers and record keeping

• Amendment

• Dissolution

Page 22: Charitable Incorporated Organisations Alice Faure Walker February 2013

• When will the Charity Commission accept applications?

- Currently - new charities with income over £5,000

- From 1 March – existing unincorporated charities with income over £250,000

- From 1 May – existing unincorporated charities with income over £100,000

- From 1 July – existing unincorporated charities with income over £25,000

- From 1 October – existing unincorporated charities with income over £5,000

- From 1 January 2014 – new charities and existing unincorporated charities regardless of income level

Setting up a CIO - Timetable

Page 23: Charitable Incorporated Organisations Alice Faure Walker February 2013

Setting up a CIO

• Procedure– File application with Charity Commission

– Wait!

Page 24: Charitable Incorporated Organisations Alice Faure Walker February 2013

Running a CIO

• Meetings

• Trustees’ meetings

– Who can call a meeting?

– Notice period

• How is notice given?

Page 25: Charitable Incorporated Organisations Alice Faure Walker February 2013

Running a CIO

• Trustees’ meetings

– Procedure

• Chair

• Quorum

• Voting

• Remote attendance

• Conflicts of interest

– Disclosure

– Not vote?

Page 26: Charitable Incorporated Organisations Alice Faure Walker February 2013

Running a CIO

• Trustees’ meetings

– Decisions outside meetings

• Written

• Email

• Consensus decision-making?

• Delegation

Page 27: Charitable Incorporated Organisations Alice Faure Walker February 2013

Running a CIO

• Member’s meetings

– Which decisions are made by members?

• Appointment/removal of trustees?

• Amendment of constitution

• Transfer to/amalgamation with another CIO

• Dissolution and winding up

Page 28: Charitable Incorporated Organisations Alice Faure Walker February 2013

Running a CIO

• Members’ meetings

– Who calls?

– Notice period

• Use of email/websites to give notice

– Procedure

• Quorum

• Chair

• Voting

• Conflicts of interest

• Postal or email voting

• Proxies

Page 29: Charitable Incorporated Organisations Alice Faure Walker February 2013

Running a CIO

• Meetings

– Decisions outside meetings

• Majority required?

– Some notice periods and majorities prescribed by the CIO legislation

• eg amendments to constitution require 14 days notice and 75% majority

Page 30: Charitable Incorporated Organisations Alice Faure Walker February 2013

Running a CIO

• Registers

– Trustees

• Required

– Trustee interests

• Good practice

– Members

• Required

– Who can inspect?

Page 31: Charitable Incorporated Organisations Alice Faure Walker February 2013

Running a CIO

• Records

– Minutes

• Publicity requirements

– Name and status to be disclosed on business documents, emails, website etc

– Offence for failure to comply

• Charity Commission

– Accounts within 10 months of year end

– Details of changes in particulars which appear on the register – file within 28 days

– Constitutional changes – file within 15 days

• Dissolution

Page 32: Charitable Incorporated Organisations Alice Faure Walker February 2013

Converting from an existing unincorporated form

Reminder of the reasons for incorporation

•Pros

– Limited liability

– Note the limited scope of trustee indemnity insurance (see “Duties of Charity Trustees” available at www.bwbllp.com/knowledge/2012/08/09/resources-for-trustees)

– Legal identity

– Succession planning

•Cons

– Upheaval

– Greater administrative burden

– Privacy

Page 33: Charitable Incorporated Organisations Alice Faure Walker February 2013

Converting from an existing unincorporated form

Process•Create a new legal vehicle

– Registration with the Charity Commission•Transfer of assets and liabilities etc

– List assets, liabilities, registrations, contracts (eg staff, bank accounts)

– Decide on mechanism for transfer• Transfer document

• Obtain third party agreement where required (eg funding con tracts, grants)

• Change registrations (eg Ofsted, Information Commissioner)−Pensions−Permanent endowment

Page 34: Charitable Incorporated Organisations Alice Faure Walker February 2013

Converting from an existing unincorporated form

Wind up existing charity

•Register of mergers?

Page 35: Charitable Incorporated Organisations Alice Faure Walker February 2013

Conversion of company limited by guarantee to a CIO

• Why would you?

• Not yet available – 2014

• No change of legal identity

Page 36: Charitable Incorporated Organisations Alice Faure Walker February 2013

Case studies

Page 37: Charitable Incorporated Organisations Alice Faure Walker February 2013

More Information

• Charity Commission

www.charity_commission.gov.uk/Start_up_a_charity/Do_I_need_to_register/CIOs

• BWB

www.bwbllp.com

Page 38: Charitable Incorporated Organisations Alice Faure Walker February 2013

Contact

Alice Faure Walker

[email protected]

Bates Wells & Braithwaite London LLP

2-6 Cannon Street

London EC2V 6YH

www.bwbllp.com

Tel: 020 7551 7777