The Regulator for Charities in England and Wales
ALTERATIONS TO GOVERNING DOCUMENTS: CHARITABLE COMPANIES
| Purpose | This guidance explains the legal requirement for our consent to alterations of the governing documents of charitable companies. |
Functional responsibility
| For action | Regulatory Framework | For information | All operational divisions |
1. The legal background
2. Section 64 consent at a glance
3. Regulated alterations – the law
4. Regulated alterations – policy on giving consent
Glossary of Terms used in this Guidance
Index to further related information
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| The Law | Refer to a lawyer | Refer to an accountant |
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| 2. Section 64 consent at a glance | |
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2.1 The main requirement for consent | |
| Under section 64(2A) of the Charities Act 1993, as inserted by the 2006 Act, a charitable company needs our written consent before passing resolutions that make any "regulated alterations" to its memorandum or articles of association: | |
| Regulated alterations are:- | |
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| See OG47 B2 for guidance about some pre-1982 companies that may require our consent to all changes. All other charities do not require our consent for any changes which are not "regulated alterations" – see B1 | |
| When looking at alterations under section 64 of the 1993 Act we consider that the term alteration means both additions (including the insertion of completely new clauses), and deletions of, or alterations to, existing provisions in the memorandum and articles of association. | |
| Not only do we have an obligation to consider these changes but we are also required to keep an accurate and up-to-date Register, both for ourselves and the public. Similarly, trustees are legally required to inform us of any changes to their Register details. See OG 47 C1 about the consent to amendments and subsequent follow-up. | |
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| 3. Regulated alterations – the law | |
| The memorandum of association of every company must state the objects of the company: usually the objects of a company are set out in a single clause. Modern drafting practice in the case of charitable companies is to exclude from the objects clause any provision which is not strictly speaking an object of the company. In the case of older companies, the objects clause may include not only the objects of the company but also the powers to be used by the company in furthering those objects. | |
| The amendment of any provision in the objects clause requires our prior written consent under section 64(2A)(a), whether or not it impacts on the charitable purposes. This means that we have to give consent to amendments which, had the amended provisions been outside the objects clause, would not have required consent, because they would have been outside the scope of section 64(2A)(a). | |
| For the purposes of considering consents under section 64(2A)(a) we should regard any clause containing charitable purposes as an objects clause regardless of its title or position in the memorandum of association, and even where part of the objects are contained in another clause or clauses. | |
| More detailed guidance on considering such amendments is given at 4.1 below. | |
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3.2. Changing the dissolution provisions - section 64(2A)(b) | |
| Any amendment to a provision dealing with the application of a charitable company’s property on dissolution requires our consent. | |
| Detailed guidance on considering such amendments is given at 4.2 below. | |
| Section 64(2A)(c) provides that any alteration to the memorandum and articles of association which would provide authorisation for any benefit to be obtained by directors or members of the company, or persons connected to them within the meaning of section 73B(5) and (6) (see OG92), requires our consent. | |
| Although section 73 of the 1993 Act creates a statutory power to pay trustees or connected persons for services, we will still have to give our consent to any change to an existing memorandum of association which authorises such a benefit, even if the scope of the amended clause does not exceed the scope of the statutory provision. | |
| See 4.3 below for our policy on considering such amendments, whether or not they exceed the scope of the statutory provision. | |
| NOTE: The removal of an express prohibition of trustee or director benefit is, in itself, not a regulated alteration which requires our consent even though it may permit the statutory power to be used. The reason for this is that it is the statutory power, not the removal of the prohibition, which authorises the remuneration. If an express prohibition is to be replaced by a provision which authorises benefits to trustees or directors, then that new provision will require our consent. | |
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| 4. Regulated alterations – policy on giving consent | |
| The essential aim of section 64 of the 1993 Act as amended is to relax the restrictions on companies amending their memoranda and articles and to limit the number of occasions on which they have to come to us for our consent to do this. | |
| In general, in considering applications for our consent to regulated alterations we should take a risk based approach, considering whether the proposed changes might affect the charitable status of the company or its reputation or whether the alteration seems likely to give rise to problems at a later date. | |
| An outline of our approach to each category of regulated alteration is given immediately below, with more detailed discussion of the points to be considered in B2 of this series. | |
| For the purpose of section 64 consents, any clause containing all or part of the charity’s objects is an objects clause. | |
| The 2006 Act does not specify what changes may be acceptable. | |
| Essentially we need to be satisfied that, if the change to the objects is material: | |
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| See also OG 47 B2 about giving consent to changes. | |
| Any immaterial change to the objects clause is one which does not affect the meaning of the objects themselves and where the change is purely administrative and would not normally need our consent if it were not in the objects clause. For this sort of change, we should give our consent readily unless it is a change which no body of reasonable trustees could have made. | |
| New objects being proposed must, of course, be clearly charitable in law. | |
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4.2 Changes affecting application of property on dissolution | |
| We may be asked to approve alterations to a dissolution clause that require: | |
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| In any of these cases we have to ensure that the proposed amendment is likely to be workable at the time the charity eventually dissolves and that it is not an amendment which no body of reasonable trustees could have made. | |
| Where the changes to a dissolution clause require the property to be applied for purposes completely different to the charitable purposes of the charity as set out in its objects, we need to be satisfied that the criteria set out in 4.1 are satisfied. | |
| These scenarios are discussed in more detail in OG 47 B2, although this is not an exhaustive list of possibilities. If caseworkers encounter a proposed change which does not fit into any of these categories they should seek legal advice. | |
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4.3 Changes providing authorisation for benefit to directors etc. | |
| The third category of "regulated alteration" concerns the extension of provisions which can benefit directors, members, or connected persons personally. | |
| We will apply the principles normally applied to giving consent to the extension of trustee benefit provisions – see OG100 about Trustee Indemnity Insurance and OG92 on Payment of Trustees – except in the following circumstances: | |
| 4.3.1 Consideration of whether or not proposals exceed statutory provision | |
| It is important here to distinguish between the statutory but limited trustee benefit provisions in section 73 of the 1993 Act, as inserted by the 2006 Act, and any measures which the trustees wish to insert which go beyond their scope. | |
| We will agree to provisions which do not exceed the scope of the statutory provision. | |
| Glossary of Terms used in this Guidance | |
| 1993 Act | |
| Trustees | |
Index to further related information
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