Constitution
adopted on
the 4th March 2008 by the
School Room Management Committee
PART 1
1. Adoption of the Constitution
The association
and its property will be administered and managed in accordance with the
provisions in Parts 1 and 2 of this constitution.
2. The Name
The association’s
name is Bratton Clovelly School Room
(and in this document it is called the
Charity).
3. The Objects
The Charity’s
objects (the Objects) are:
(1)The provision and maintenance of a village
hall for the use of the inhabitants of Bratton Clovelly and District without
distinction of political, religious or other opinions, including use for:
(a)
meetings, lectures and classes, and
(b) other forms of recreation and leisure-time
occupation, with the object of improving the conditions of life for the
inhabitants.
(2)The
preservation for the benefit of the public of the building known as Bratton
Clovelly National School Room by virtue of its historical, architectural or
constructional merit.
4. Application of the Income and Property
(1) The income
and property of the Charity shall be applied solely towards the promotion of the Objects.
(2) A Trustee may
pay out of, or be reimbursed from, the property of the Charity reasonable
expenses properly incurred by him or her when acting on behalf of the Charity.
(3) None of the
income or property of the Charity may be paid or transferred directly or
indirectly by way of dividend bonus or otherwise by way of profit to any member
of the Charity. This does not prevent:
(a) a member who
is not also a Trustee from receiving reasonable and proper remuneration for any
goods or services supplied to the Charity;
(b) a Trustee
from:
(i) buying goods
or services from the Charity upon the same terms as other members or members of
the public;
(ii) receiving a
benefit from the Charity in the capacity of a beneficiary of the Charity,
provided that the Trustees comply with the provisions of sub clause (6) of this
clause, or as a member of the Charity and upon the same terms as other members;
(c) the purchase
of indemnity insurance for the Trustees against any liability that by virtue of
any rule of law would otherwise attach to a Trustee or other officer in respect
of any negligence, default breach of duty or breach of trust of which he or she
may be guilty in relation to the Charity but excluding:
(i) fines;
(ii) costs of
unsuccessfully defending criminal prosecutions for offences arising out of the
fraud, dishonesty or wilful or reckless misconduct of the Trustee or other
officer;
(iii) liabilities
to the Charity that result from conduct that the Trustee or other officer knew
or ought to have known was not in the best interests of the Charity or in
respect of which the person concerned did not care whether that conduct was in
the best interests of the Charity or not.
(4) No Trustee
may be paid or receive any other benefit for being a Trustee.
(5) A Trustee
may:
(a) sell goods,
services or any interest in land to the Charity;
(b) be employed
by or receive any remuneration from the Charity;
(c) receive any
other financial benefit from the Charity, if :
(d) he or she is
not prevented from so doing by sub-clause (4) of this clause; and
(e) the benefit
is permitted by sub-clause (3) of this clause; or
(f) the benefit
is authorised by the Trustees in accordance with the conditions in sub-clause
(6) of this clause.
(6) (a) If it is
proposed that a Trustee should receive a benefit from the Charity that is not
already permitted under sub-clause (3) of this clause, he or she must:
(i) declare his
or her interest in the proposal;
(ii) be absent
from that part of any meeting at which the proposal is discussed and take no
part in any discussion of it;
(iii) not be
counted in determining whether the meeting is quorate;
(iv) not vote on
the proposal.
(b) In cases
covered by sub-clause (5) of this clause, those Trustees who do not stand to
receive the proposed benefit must be satisfied that it is in the interests of
the Charity to contract with or employ that Trustee rather than with someone
who is not a Trustee and they must record the reason for their decision in the
minutes. In reaching that decision the Trustees must balance the advantage of
contracting with or employing a Trustee against the disadvantage of doing so
(especially the loss of the Trustee’s services as a result of dealing with the
Trustee’s conflict of interest).
(c) The Trustees
may only authorise a transaction falling within paragraphs 5(a)–(c) of this
clause if the Trustee body comprises a majority of Trustees who have not
received any such benefit.
(d) If the
Trustees fail to follow this procedure, the resolution to confer a benefit upon
the Trustee will be void and the Trustee must repay to the Charity the value of
any benefit received by the Trustee from the Charity
(7) A Trustee
must absent himself or herself from any discussions of the Trustees in which it
is possible that a conflict will arise between his or her duty to act solely in
the interests of the Charity and any personal interest (including but not
limited to any personal financial interest) and take no part in the voting upon
the matter.
(8) In this
Clause 4, “Trustee” shall include any person firm or company connected with the
Trustee.
5. Dissolution
(1) If the
members resolve to dissolve the Charity the Trustees will remain in office as
Charity Trustees and be responsible for winding up the affairs of the Charity
in accordance with this clause.
(2) The Trustees
must collect in all the assets of the Charity and must pay or make provision
for all the liabilities of the Charity.
(3) The Trustees
must apply any remaining property or money
(a) directly for
the Objects;
(b) by transfer
to any Charity or charities for purposes the same as or similar to the Charity;
(c) in such other
manner as the Charity Commission for England and Wales (“the Commission”) may
approve in writing in advance.
(4) The members
may pass a resolution before or at the same time as the resolution to dissolve
the Charity specifying the manner in which the Trustees are to apply the
remaining property or assets of the Charity and the Trustees must comply with
the resolution if it is consistent with paragraphs (a)–(c) inclusive in
sub-clause (3) above.
(5) In no
circumstances shall the net assets of the Charity be paid to or distributed
among the members of the Charity (except to a member that is itself a Charity).
(6) The Trustees
must notify the Commission promptly that the Charity has been dissolved. If the
Trustees are obliged to send the Charity’s accounts to the Commission for the
accounting period which ended before its dissolution, they must send the Commission
the Charity’s final accounts.
6. Amendments
(1) The Charity
may amend any provision contained in Part 1 of this Constitution provided that
(a) no amendment
may be made that would have the effect of making the Charity cease to be a
Charity at law;
(b) no amendment
may be made to alter the Objects if the change would not be within the
reasonable contemplation of the members of or donors to the Charity;
(c) no amendment
may be made to clause 4 without the prior written consent of the Commission;
(d) any
resolution to amend a provision of Part 1 of this constitution is passed by not
less than two thirds of the members present and voting at a general meeting.
(2) Any provision
contained in Part 2 of this constitution may be amended, provided that any such
amendment is made by resolution passed by a simple majority of the members
present and voting at a general meeting.
(3) A copy of any
resolution amending this constitution shall be sent to the Commission within
twenty one days of it being passed.
Part 2
7. Membership
(1) Membership is
open to individuals over eighteen who reside in Bratton Clovelly and District or organisations who are
approved by the Trustees.
(2) (a) The Trustees
may only refuse an application for membership if, acting reasonably and
properly, they consider it to be in the best interests of the Charity to refuse
the application.
(b) The Trustees
must inform the applicant in writing of the reasons for the refusal within
twenty-one days of the decision.
(c) The Trustees
must consider any written representations the applicant may make about the
decision. The Trustees’ decision following any written representations must be
notified to the applicant in writing but shall be final.
(3) Membership is
not transferable to anyone else.
(4) The Trustees
must keep a register of names and addresses of the members which must be made
available to any member upon request.
8. Termination of Membership
Membership is
terminated if:
(1) the member
dies or, if it is an organisation, ceases to exist;
(2) the member
resigns by written notice to the Charity unless, after the resignation, there
would be less than two members;
(3) any sum due
from the member to the Charity is not paid in full within six months of it
falling due;
(4) the member is
removed from membership by a resolution of the Trustees that it is in the best
interests of the Charity that his or her membership is terminated. A resolution
to remove a member from membership may only be passed if:
(a) the member
has been given at least twenty one days’ notice in writing of the meeting of
the Trustees at which the resolution will be proposed and the reasons why it is
to be proposed;
(b) the member
or, at the option of the member, the member’s representative (who need not be a
member of the Charity) has been allowed to make representations to the meeting.
9. General meetings
(1) The Charity
must hold a general meeting within twelve months of the date of the adoption of
this constitution.
(2) An annual
general meeting must be held in each subsequent year and not more than fifteen
months may elapse between successive annual general meetings.
(3) All general
meetings other than annual general meetings shall be called special general
meetings.
(4) The Trustees
may call a special general meeting at any time.
(5) The Trustees
must call a special general meeting if requested to do so in writing by at
least ten members or one tenth of the membership, which ever is the greater.
The request must state the nature of the business that is to be discussed. If
the Trustees fail to hold the meeting within twenty-eight days of the request,
the members may proceed to call a special general meeting but in doing so they
must comply with the provisions of this Constitution.
10. Notice
(1) The minimum
period of notice required to hold any general meeting of the Charity is
fourteen clear days from the date on which the notice is deemed to have been
given.
(2) A general
meeting may be called by shorter notice, if it is so agreed by all the members
entitled to attend and vote.
(3) The notice
must specify the date, time and place of the meeting and the general nature of
the business to be transacted. If the meeting is to be an annual general
meeting, the notice must say so.
(4) The notice
must be given to all the members and to the Trustees.
11. Quorum
(1) No business
shall be transacted at any general meeting unless a quorum is present.
(2) A quorum is;
7 members entitled to vote upon the business to be conducted at the meeting.
(3) The
authorised representative of a member organisation shall be counted in the
quorum.
(4) If:
(a) a quorum is
not present within half an hour from the time appointed for the meeting; or
(b) during a meeting
a quorum ceases to be present, the meeting shall be adjourned to such time and
place as the Trustees shall determine.
(5) The Trustees
must re-convene the meeting and must give at least seven clear days’ notice of
the re-convened meeting stating the date time and place of the meeting.
(6) If no quorum
is present at the re-convened meeting within fifteen minutes of the time
specified for the start of the meeting the members present at that time shall
constitute the quorum for that meeting.
12. Chair
(1) General
meetings shall be chaired by the person who has been elected as Chair.
(2) If there is
no such person or he or she is not present within fifteen minutes of the time
appointed for the meeting a Trustee nominated by the Trustees shall chair the
meeting.
(3) If there is
only one Trustee present and willing to act, he or she shall chair the meeting.
(4) If no Trustee
is present and willing to chair the meeting within fifteen minutes after the
time appointed for holding it, the members present and entitled to vote must
choose one of their number to chair the meeting.
13. Adjournments
(1) The members
present at a meeting may resolve that the meeting shall be adjourned.
(2) The person
who is chairing the meeting must decide the date time and place at which
meeting is to be re-convened unless those details are specified in the
resolution.
(3) No business
shall be conducted at an adjourned meeting unless it could properly have been
conducted at the meeting had the adjournment not taken place.
(4) If a meeting
is adjourned by a resolution of the members for more than seven days, at least
seven clear days’ notice shall be given of the re-convened meeting stating the
date time and place of the meeting.
14. Votes
(1) Each member
shall have one vote but if there is an equality of votes the person who is
chairing the meeting shall have a casting vote in addition to any other vote he
or she may have.
(2) A resolution
in writing signed by each member (or in the case of a member that is an
organisation, by its authorised representative) who would have been entitled to
vote upon it had it been proposed at a general meeting shall be effective. It
may comprise several copies each signed by or on behalf of one or more members.
15. Representatives of Other Bodies
(1) Any
organisation that is a member of the Charity may nominate any person to act as
its representative at any meeting of the Charity.
(2) The
organisation must give written notice to the Charity of the name of its
representative. The nominee shall not be entitled to represent the organisation
at any meeting unless the notice has been received by the Charity. The nominee
may continue to represent the organisation until written notice to the contrary
is received by the Charity.
(3) Any notice
given to the Charity will be conclusive evidence that the nominee is entitled
to represent the organisation or that his or her authority has been revoked.
The Charity shall not be required to consider whether the nominee has been
properly appointed by the organisation.
16. Officers and Trustees
(1) The Charity
and its property shall be managed and administered by a committee comprising
the Officers and other members elected in accordance with this Constitution.
The Officers and other members of the committee shall be the Trustees of the
Charity and in this constitution are together called “the Trustees”.
(2) The Charity
shall have the following Officers:
• A chair,
• A secretary,
• A treasurer.
(3) A Trustee
must be a member of the Charity or the nominated representative of an
organisation that is a member of the Charity.
(4) No one may be
appointed a Trustee if he or she would be disqualified from acting under the
provisions of Clause 19.
(5) The number of
Trustees shall be not less than three but (unless otherwise determined by a
resolution of the Charity in general meeting) shall not be subject to any
maximum.
(6) The first
Trustees (including Officers) shall be those persons elected as Trustees and
Officers at the meeting at which this constitution is adopted.
(7) A Trustee may
not appoint anyone to act on his or her behalf at meetings of the Trustees.
17. The Appointment of Trustees
(1) The Charity
in general meeting shall elect the Officers and the other Trustees.
(2) The Trustees
may appoint any person who is willing to act as a Trustee. Subject to
sub-clause 5(b) of this clause, they may also appoint Trustees to act as
officers.
(3) Each of the
Trustees shall retire with effect from the conclusion of the annual general
meeting next after his or her appointment but shall be eligible for re-election
at that annual general meeting.
(4) No-one may be
elected a Trustee or an Officer at any annual general meeting unless prior to
the meeting the Charity is given a notice that:
(a) is signed by
a member entitled to vote at the meeting;
(b) states the
member’s intention to propose the appointment of a person as a Trustee or as an
officer;
(c) is signed by
the person who is to be proposed to show his or her willingness to be
appointed.
(5) (a) The
appointment of a Trustee, whether by the Charity in general meeting or by the
other Trustees, must not cause the number of Trustees to exceed any number
fixed in accordance with this constitution as the maximum number of Trustees.
(b) The Trustees
may not appoint a person to be an Officer if a person has already been elected
or appointed to that office and has not vacated the office.
18. Powers of Trustees
(1) The Trustees
must manage the business of the Charity and have the following powers in order
to further the Objects (but not for any other purpose):
(a) to raise
funds. In doing so, the Trustees must not undertake any substantial permanent
trading activity and must comply with any relevant statutory regulations;
(b) to buy, take
on lease or in exchange, hire or otherwise acquire any property and to maintain
and equip it for use;
(c) to sell,
lease or otherwise dispose of all or any part of the property belonging to the
Charity. In exercising this power, the
Trustees must
comply as appropriate with sections 36 and 37 of the Charities Act 1993;
(d) to borrow
money and to charge the whole or any part of the property belonging to the
Charity as security for repayment of the money borrowed. The Trustees must
comply as appropriate with sections 38 and 39 of the Charities Act 1993 if they
intend to mortgage land;
(e) to co-operate
with other charities, voluntary bodies and statutory authorities and to
exchange information and advice with them;
(f) to establish
or support any charitable trusts, associations or institutions formed for any
of the charitable purposes included in the Objects;
(g) to acquire,
merge with or enter into any partnership or joint venture arrangement with any
other Charity formed for any of the Objects;
(h) to set aside
income as a reserve against future expenditure but only in accordance with a
written policy about reserves;
(j) to obtain and
pay for such goods and services as are necessary for carrying out the work of
the Charity;
(k) to open and
operate such bank and other accounts as the Trustees consider necessary and to
invest funds and to delegate the management of funds in the same manner and
subject to the same conditions as the Trustees of a trust are permitted to do
by the Trustee Act 2000;
(l) to do all
such other lawful things as are necessary for the achievement of the Objects;
(2) No alteration
of this constitution or any special resolution shall have retrospective effect
to invalidate any prior act of the Trustees;
(3) Any meeting
of Trustees at which a quorum is present at the time the relevant decision is
made may exercise all the powers exercisable by the Trustees.
19. Disqualification and Removal of Trustees
A Trustee shall
cease to hold office if he or she:
(1) is
disqualified for acting as a Trustee by virtue of section 72 of the
Charities Act
1993 (or any statutory re-enactment or modification of that provision);
(2) ceases to be
a member of the Charity;
(3) becomes
incapable by reason of mental disorder, illness or injury of managing and
administering his or her own affairs;
(4) resigns as a
Trustee by notice to the Charity (but only if at least two Trustees will remain
in office when the notice of resignation is to take effect); or
(5) is absent
without the permission of the Trustees from all their meetings held within a
period of six consecutive months and the Trustees resolve that his or her
office be vacated.
20. Proceedings of Trustees
(1) The Trustees
may regulate their proceedings as they think fit, subject to the provisions of
this constitution.
(2) Any Trustee
may call a meeting of the Trustees.
(3) The secretary
must call a meeting of the Trustees if requested to do so by a Trustee.
(4) Questions
arising at a meeting must be decided by a majority of votes.
(5) In the case
of an equality of votes, the person who chairs the meeting shall have a second
or casting vote.
(6) No decision
may be made by a meeting of the Trustees unless a quorum is present at the time
the decision is purported to be made.
(7) The quorum
shall be two or the number nearest to one third of the total number of
Trustees, whichever is the greater or such larger number as may be decided from
time to time by the Trustees.
(8) A Trustee
shall not be counted in the quorum present when any decision is made about a
matter upon which that Trustee is not entitled to vote.
(9) If the number
of Trustees is less than the number fixed as the quorum, the continuing
Trustees or Trustee may act only for the purpose of filling vacancies or of
calling a general meeting.
(10)The person
elected as the Chair shall chair meetings of the Trustees.
(11)If the Chair
is unwilling to preside or is not present within ten minutes after the time
appointed for the meeting, the Trustees present may appoint one of their number
to chair that meeting.
(12)The person
appointed to chair meetings of the Trustees shall have no functions or powers
except those conferred by this constitution or delegated to him or her in
writing by the Trustees.
(13)A resolution
in writing signed by all the Trustees entitled to receive notice of a meeting
of Trustees or of a committee of Trustees and to vote upon the resolution shall
be as valid and effectual as if it had been passed at a meeting of the Trustees
or (as the case may be) a committee of Trustees duly convened and held.
(14)The
resolution in writing may comprise several documents containing the text of the
resolution in like form each signed by one or more Trustees.
21. Delegation
(1) The Trustees
may delegate any of their powers or functions to a committee of two or more
Trustees but the terms of any such delegation must be recorded in the minute
book.
(2) The Trustees
may impose conditions when delegating, including the conditions that:
• the relevant
powers are to be exercised exclusively by the committee to whom they delegate;
• no expenditure
may be incurred on behalf of the Charity except in accordance with a budget
previously agreed with the Trustees.
(3) The Trustees
may revoke or alter a delegation.
(4) All acts and
proceedings of any committees must be fully and promptly reported to the
Trustees.
22. Irregularities in Proceedings
(1) Subject to
sub-clause (2) of this clause, all acts done by a meeting of Trustees, or of a
committee of Trustees, shall be valid notwithstanding the participation in any
vote of a Trustee:
• who was
disqualified from holding office;
• who had
previously retired or who had been obliged by the constitution to vacate
office;
• who was not
entitled to vote on the matter, whether by reason of a conflict of interest or
otherwise.
if, without:
• the vote of
that Trustee; and
• that Trustee
being counted in the quorum, the decision has been made by a majority of the
Trustees at a quorate meeting.
(2) Sub-clause
(1) of this clause does not permit a Trustee to keep any benefit that may be
conferred upon him or her by a resolution of the Trustees or of a committee of
Trustees if the resolution would otherwise have been void.
(3) No resolution
or act of
(a) the Trustees
(b) any committee
of the Trustees
(c) the Charity
in general meeting shall be invalidated by reason of the failure to give notice
to any Trustee or member or by reason of any procedural defect in the meeting
unless it is shown that the failure or defect has materially prejudiced a
member or the beneficiaries of the Charity.
23. Minutes
The Trustees must
keep minutes of all:
(1) appointments
of Officers and Trustees made by the Trustees;
(2) proceedings
at meetings of the Charity;
(3) meetings of
the Trustees and committees of Trustees including:
• the names of
the Trustees present at the meeting;
• the decisions
made at the meetings; and
• where
appropriate the reasons for the decisions.
24. Annual Report and Return and Accounts
(1) The Trustees
must comply with their obligations under the Charities
Act 1993 with
regard to:
(a) the keeping
of accounting records for the Charity;
(b) the
preparation of annual statements of account for the Charity;
(c) the
transmission of the statements of account to the Charity;
(d) the
preparation of an annual report and its transmission to the Commission;
(e) the
preparation of an annual return and its transmission to the Commission.
(2) Accounts must
be prepared in accordance with the provisions of any Statement of Recommended
Practice issued by the Commission, unless the Trustees are required to prepare
accounts in accordance with the provisions of such a Statement prepared by another
body.
25. Registered particulars
The Trustees must
notify the Commission promptly of any changes to the Charity’s entry on the
Central Register of Charities.
26. Property
(1) The Trustees
must ensure the title to:
(a) all land held
by or in trust for the Charity that is not vested in the Official Custodian of
Charities; and
(b) all
investments held by or on behalf of the Charity, is vested either in a
corporation entitled to act as custodian Trustee or in not less that three
individuals appointed by them as holding Trustees.
(2) The terms of
the appointment of any holding Trustees must provide that they may act only in
accordance with lawful directions of the
Trustees and that
if they do so they will not be liable for the acts and defaults of the Trustees
or of the members of the Charity.
(3) The Trustees
may remove the holding Trustees at any time.
27. Repair and insurance
The Trustees must
keep in repair and insure to their full value against fire and other usual
risks all the buildings of the Charity (except those buildings that are
required to be kept in repair and insured by a tenant). They must also insure
suitably in respect of public liability and employer’s liability.
28. Notices
(1) Any notice
required by this constitution to be given to or by any person must be:
(a) in writing;
or
(b) given using
electronic communications.
(2) The Charity
may give any notice to a member either:
(a) personally;
or
(b) by sending it
by post in a prepaid envelope addressed to the member at his or her address; or
(c) by leaving it
at the address of the member; or
(d) by giving it
using electronic communications to the member’s address.
(3) A member who
does not register an address with the Charity or who registers only a postal
address that is not within the United Kingdom shall not be entitled to
receive any
notice from the Charity.