- Details
- Parent Category: News Archives
- Created on Wednesday, 02 April 2008 01:00
- Last Updated on Friday, 28 December 2012 18:41
Piercing the Charitable Veil of an Association for Business
The Federal Court of Justice decided on December 10, 2007 (re II ZR 239/05) for registered associations (eingetragene Vereine) that this corporate veil can be pierced but only a case by case exceptional basis. Only by misusing the structure of juristic persons will the persons behind “the veil” of the corporation be held personally liable. The court decided the legal problem whether misusing the structure of a charitable association for a business corporation is such an exception.
[PPD_PAYTOREADMORE]
The parties of the reported case are arguing that the legal representatives of the association should be held liable because they busted up a charitable organization that was misused for a business corporation. The plaintiff is closed real-estate fund wanting to collect on its lease for the castle Schweinsburg. The defendants belong to the International Kolping Society. The local offices are structured as associations without legal personality and behind them are charitable associations (gemeinnütziger eingetragener Verein, short e.V.). One of the association’s goals was to offer measures for vocational related training for the youth and adults in general and further founding educational centers (i.e. further the “association’s school” or “school” and youth dormitories). The school turned out to be the largest supplier of state-subsidized vocational initiatives. In 1996, the e.V. running the school reorganized itself internally into a pure holding company, while the operational business was outsourced to GmbHs. Shortly before this ex officio winding up, this association had 25 subsidiary (and subsidiaries of the subsidiaries) companies. In 2000, the defendant lacked the financial capacity to pay the monthly leasing rates of € 83,000. Later that year, the association applied for bankruptcy.
The court held that at the latest by the end of 1997, beginning 1998 the formally charitable organization was factually working as a business association in terms of §22 BGB when it made a turnover of DM 30 mill., about 1/3 of the conglomerates total turnover. This negates the privilege of a secondary goal. The concept of “secondary goal” is based in association law §§21 - 23 BGB. Associations are usually expected to be charitable but this is not an obligation. The most prominent non-charitable organization is ADAC (one of the major German automobile clubs). Charitable organizations may not have commerce as their major corporate goal. However, since such organization needs financing, they are permitted to have a “Zweckbetrieb”, an income source. This permission for the secondary goal is considered as the secondary goal privilege (“Nebenzwecksprivileg“). The income source must only be secondary and exactly when secondary becomes primary is a question for the courts as there no strict rules. A critical threshold is passed when the turnover from charitable income (e.g. tithes and offerings) is lower than the commercial income.
All the members of the board knew of the relevant facts that lead to transforming the charitable association into a business. Nevertheless, such misuse of the corporate form does not lead to a personal liability of the association’s legal representatives, i.e. board members. The denial of piercing the corporate veil in this case does not violate the law on associations (§§21 ff. BGB). Piercing the corporate veil is usually legally necessary when the strict differentiation between the corporate form and the directors’ assets have been misused.
Nor did the charity have any problems in its credit worthiness, which were unlawfully kept secret from the plaintiff. There was no illegal asset transfers inside the conglomerate of companies at any time. The plaintiff alleged that this massive commercial activity of the charity and the therefore violation of the secondary goal privilege gives grounds to pierce the corporate veil and have the directors be personally liable. The law itself already gives enough protection with two measures 1.) the ex officio closing of the charitable association (§§142, 159 FGG) or 2.) depriving the charity of its legal personality) if it does not convert to commercial association (§43 II BGB). Since the lawmaker grants public registers public trust, everybody may with legal force believe what is entered in the registry – even if grounds for deprivation exist. As long as the deprivation is not entered, everybody may and is to trust that the charity is a charity. Due to this trust board members may usually rest assured that they cannot be held liable for their activities.
Published on the old CMS: 2008/4/2
Read on the old CMS till November 2008: 2,752 reads