Nonprofit Issues

Ask the Editor
November 24

Article Archives >> To the Point

Recently the new President (and co-founder with me) of a 501(c)(3) charitable corporation has begun trying to fire the entire board of directors. The new president says our legal and financial filings are all “solely under my name” and has encouraged the directors to resign. The IRS documentation was under both names (his name as treasurer and my name as president.) Can the new president hijack the organization? The board is 6 to 2 against him, but the Bylaws do not specify how to remove a president and for which reasons? Can we fire him?

Probably.  Unless the new president is the sole member of the corporation, which does not sound likely from the information you have given, he does not control the organization no matter who signed what and is subject to the basic rules of the nonprofit corporation law of your state.  Bylaws should provide that the board has the power to remove officers (See Ready Reference Page:  “Bylaws Function as ‘Constitution’ of Nonprofit Corporations”), but if they are silent on this issue, check the state statute.  Most state laws generally provide that an officer may be removed by the board whenever in its judgment it would be in the best interests of the corporation.  Since the statute controls where the bylaws are silent, if you have such a provision in your state law, you could vote him out of office.

It may be more difficult to fire him as a member of the board entirely, assuming that the bylaws are also silent on this point, since the statutes tend to place a much higher hurdle for terminating board membership.  They usually require things such as conviction of a felony or a judicial declaration of mental incompetence.  Once he is removed from the presidency, however, he may realize he isn’t wanted and resign from everything.  If he doesn’t, you may be able to amend the bylaws, like those in the Ready Reference Page, to give the board such authority. At the worst, you tolerate him now but don’t reelect him as a director when his current term is completed.

10/16/2009

Article Archives >> To the Point


An Introduction to the Nonprofit Sector: A Practical Approach for the 21st Century

npl

By Gary M. Grobman
$34.95

Visit our Amazon bookstore for more books on nonprofit law.

Receive the weekly question by e-mail

Have a question?

If you can't find your answer, submit a question and Don will pick one question a week to answer online and to include in our weekly e-mail notice.

Other ways to
find answers:

Talk to the Editor
Next Conference Call:
Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Participate in this bi-monthly telephone seminar conference call and ask your questions directly to Editor Don Kramer.

Access the entire site
($9.95/24 hours, $17.95/3 months).

Nonprofit Issues Live
Full Day Program
A well-received full-day program that covers the current hottest topics in nonprofit law. Qualifies in Pennsylvania for Continuing Education credits.

Speaking Engagements
Don is available for programs and speaking engagements ranging from a one-hour presentation to a full-day primer on nonprofit law. Contact us if you are interested in having him speak at your program.