August 2006 Presentation

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Transcript August 2006 Presentation

VAS Conference 2012 Company Law and Charity Law

Alastair Keatinge Head of Charities, Lindsays

Legal Entities available to not for profit organisations

Unincorporated

Incorporated

Trust

Simple: no registration requirements

A way of holding assets to separate ownership from economic interest

Trustees personally liable

Unincorporated / Voluntary Association

Informal – no general regulation of this structure / no registration required

Not a legal entity distinct from those who run it

Creates problems for contracts and holding property

Potential liability of members

SALP – Scottish Association with Legal Personality NEW

Incorporated Acronyms Rule OK

CLG

Company Limited by Shares

Industrial & Provident Societies

SCIO

CIC

Industrial & Provident Society

Registered with Financial Services Authority

Must be:

bona fide co-operative society (i.e. for mutual benefit of the members)

Community benefit (“benecom”) (for the benefit of people who are not members)

Examples – retail co-operatives, community associations, housing associations, credit unions

SCIOs – Scottish Charitable Incorporated Organisation: Key features:

A SCIO is a corporate body – so can hold property, employ people, enter into contracts etc in its own name

Members of the SCIO have the benefit of limited liability (nil liability)

Incorporated by OSCR, rather than Companies House or the FSA – single step process for incorporation and charitable status

SCIOs – Scottish Charitable Incorporated Organisation: Key features (cont):

Governed by charities legislation, rather than company law (cf CIO in England) or IPS legislation

Has a constitution, rather than articles of association/rules

The principal office must be in Scotland

A SCIO must have at least two members (which can include some or all of the charity trustees) – so can’t be wholly owned subsidiary

SCIOs – Disadvantages (Compared with Company Limited by Guarantee):

Less familiar to banks, landlords, some funders and the general public

Cannot grant a floating charge

Community right-to-buy legislation does not currently allow a SCIO to be registered as a community body

CICs – Community Interest Company Key features:

Company name end with “Community Interest Company” or “CIC”, not limited

Badge of social enterprise…….. but cannot have charitable status

Can be company limited by guarantee or Company Limited by shares

Must satisfy “community interest test”

CICs – Community Interest Company Key features (cont):

“Asset lock” – any transfer of assets (other than for the benefit of community or to another asset-locked body) must be for all consideration

Dividend cap – so unattractive to a conventional equity investor

CICs – Main Applications:

Generally a “Plan B” if charitable status not available

Badge of social enterprise (or public benefit)

Social entrepreneur(s) wanting control at board level, while drawing reasonable remuneration

Operations intended to deliver social benefit but outwith the boundaries for charitable status

Others:

Partnership (not) for charities – profit requirement

LLP (not) for charities – profit requirement

Incorporated by Royal Charter

Incorporated by Act of Scottish Parliament or by Statutory Instrument

Governance Structures:

Wide membership

Narrow Member/Trust Model

Supporters

© 2012 Alastair Keatinge [email protected]

0131 656 5746 www.lindsays.co.uk