1. Trust 2. Society, and 3. Non profit Company
In India non
profit / public charitable organisations can be registered
as trusts, societies,
or a private limited non profit company,
under section-25 companies. Non-profit organisations in India (a)
exist independently of the state; (b) are self-governed by a board
of trustees or ‘managing committee’/ governing council, comprising
individuals who generally serve in a fiduciary capacity; (c)
produce benefits for others, generally outside the membership of
the organisation; and (d), are ‘non-profit-making’, in as much as
they are prohibited from distributing a monetary residual to their
own members.
Section 2(15) of the
Income Tax Act – which is applicable uniformly
throughout the Republic of India – defines ‘charitable purpose’ to
include ‘relief of the poor, education, medical relief and the
advancement of any other object of general public utility’. A
purpose that relates exclusively to religious teaching or worship
is not considered as charitable. Thus, in ascertaining whether a
purpose is public or private, one has to see if the class to be
benefited, or from which the beneficiaries are to be selected,
constitute a substantial body of the public. A public charitable
purpose has to benefit a sufficiently large section of the public
as distinguished from specified individuals. Organisations which
lack the public element – such as trusts for the benefit of workmen
or employees of a company, however numerous – have not been held to
be charitable. As long as the beneficiaries of the organisation
comprise an uncertain and fluctuating body of the public answering
a particular description, the fact that the beneficiaries may
belong to a certain religious faith, or a sect of persons of a
certain religious persuasion, would not affect the organisation’s
‘public’ character.
Whether a trust, society
or section-25 company, the Income Tax Act gives all
categories equal treatment, in terms of exempting their income and
granting 80G certificates, whereby donors to non-profit
organisations may claim a rebate against donations made. Foreign
contributions to non-profits are governed by FC(R)A regulations and
the Home Ministry.
CAF would like to clarify that
this material provides only broad guidelines and it is recommended
that legal and or financial experts be consulted before taking any
important legal or financial decision or arriving at any
conclusion.
Formation and Registration of a Non -Profit organisations in
India
1) Trust
2) Society
3) Section-25 Company
Additional Licensing/
Registration
I.
Trusts
A public charitable trust is
usually floated when there is property involved, especially in
terms of land and building.
Legislation
: Different states in India have different Trusts
Acts in force, which govern the trusts in the state; in the absence
of a Trusts Act in any particular state or territory the general
principles of the Indian Trusts Act 1882 are applied.
Main Instrument
: The main instrument of any public charitable trust
is the trust deed, wherein the aims and objects and mode of
management (of the trust) should be enshrined. In every trust deed,
the minimum and maximum number of trustees has to be specified. The
trust deed should clearly spell out the aims and objects of the
trust, how the trust should be managed, how other trustees may be
appointed or removed, etc. The trust deed should be signed by both
the settlor/s and trustee/s in the presence of two witnesses. The
trust deed should be executed on non-judicial stamp paper, the
value of which would depend on the valuation of the trust
property.
Trustees
: A trust needs a minimum of two trustees; there is
no upper limit to the number of trustees. The Board of Management
comprises the trustees.
Application for
Registration :
The application for registration
should be made to the official having jurisdiction over the region
in which the trust is sought to be registered.
After providing details (in the
form) regarding designation by which the public trust shall be
known, names of trustees, mode of succession, etc., the applicant
has to affix a court fee stamp of Rs.2/- to the form and pay a very
nominal registration fee which may range from Rs.3/- to Rs.25/-,
depending on the value of the trust property.
The application form should be
signed by the applicant before the regional officer or
superintendent of the regional office of the charity commissioner
or a notary. The application form should be submitted, together
with a copy of the trust deed.
Two other documents which should
be submitted at the time of making an application for registration
are affidavit and consent letter.
II.
Society
According to section 20 of the
Societies Registration Act, 1860, the following societies can be
registered under the Act: ‘charitable societies, military orphan
funds or societies established at the several presidencies of
India, societies established for the promotion of science,
literature, or the fine arts, for instruction, the diffusion of
useful knowledge, the diffusion of political education, the
foundation or maintenance of libraries or reading rooms for general
use among the members or open to the public, or public museums and
galleries of paintings and other works of art, collection of
natural history, mechanical and philosophical inventions,
instruments or designs.’
Legislation
: Societies are registered under the Societies
Registration Act, 1860, which is a federal act. In certain states,
which have a charity commissioner, the society must not only be
registered under the Societies Registration Act, but also,
additionally, under the Bombay Public Trusts
Act.
Main Instrument : The main
instrument of any society is the memorandum of association and
rules and regulations (no stamp paper required), wherein the aims
and objects and mode of management (of the society) should be
enshrined.
Trustees
: A Society needs a minimum of seven managing
committee members; there is no upper limit to the number managing
committee members. The Board of Management is in the form of a
governing body or council or a managing or executive
committee
Application for
Registration :
Registration can be done either
at the state level (i.e., in the office of the Registrar of
Societies) or at the district level (in the office of the District
Magistrate or the local office of the Registrar of
Societies).(2)
The procedure varies from state
to state. However generally the application should be submitted
together with: (a) memorandum of association and rules and
regulations; (b) consent letters of all the members of the managing
committee; (c) authority letter duly signed by all the members of
the managing committee; (d) an affidavit sworn by the president or
secretary of the society on non-judicial stamp paper of Rs.20-/,
together with a court fee stamp; and (e) a declaration by the
members of the managing committee that the funds of the society
will be used only for the purpose of furthering the aims and
objects of the society.
All the aforesaid documents
which are required for the application for registration should be
submitted in duplicate, together with the required registration
fee. Unlike the trust deed, the memorandum of association and rules
and regulations need not be executed on stamp
paper.
III. Section-25
Company
According to section 25(1)(a)
and (b) of the Indian Companies Act, 1956, a section-25 company can
be established ‘for promoting commerce, art, science, religion,
charity or any other useful object’, provided the profits, if any,
or other income is applied for promoting only the objects of the
company and no dividend is paid to its members.
Legislation
: Section-25 companies are registered under
section-25 of the Indian Companies Act. 1956.
Main Instrument
: For a section-25 company, the main instrument is a
Memorandum and articles of association (no stamp paper
required)
Trustees
: A section-25 Company needs a minimum of three
trustees; there is no upper limit to the number of trustees. The
Board of Management is in the form of a Board of directors or
managing committee.
Application for Registration :
1.An application has to be made
for availability of name to the registrar of companies, which must
be made in the prescribed form no. 1A, together with a fee of
Rs.500/-. It is advisable to suggest a choice of three other names
by which the company will be called, in case the first name which
is proposed is not found acceptable by the
registrar.
2.Once the availability of name
is confirmed, an application should be made in writing to the
regional director of the company law board. The application should
be accompanied by the following documents:
Three printed or typewritten
copies of the memorandum and articles of association of the
proposed company, duly signed by all the promoters with full name,
address and occupation.
A declaration by an advocate or
a chartered accountant that the memorandum and articles of
association have been drawn up in conformity with the provisions of
the Act and that all the requirements of the Act and the rules made
thereunder have been duly complied with, in respect of registration
or matters incidental or supplementary thereto.
Three copies of a list of the
names, addresses and occupations of the promoters (and where a firm
is a promoter, of each partner in the firm), as well as of the
members of the proposed board of directors, together with the names
of companies, associations and other institutions in which such
promoters, partners and members of the proposed board of directors
are directors or hold responsible positions, if any, with
description of the positions so held.
A statement showing in detail
the assets (with the estimated values thereof) and the liabilities
of the association, as on the date of the application or within
seven days of that date.
An estimate of the future annual
income and expenditure of the proposed company, specifying the
sources of the income and the objects of the
expenditure.
A statement giving a brief
description of the work, if any, already done by the association
and of the work proposed to be done by it after registration, in
pursuance of section-25.
A statement specifying briefly
the grounds on which the application is made.
A declaration by each of the
persons making the application that he/she is of sound mind, not an
undischarged insolvent, not convicted by a court for any offence
and does not stand disqualified under section 203 of the Companies
Act 1956, for appointment as a director.
3.The
applicants must also furnish to the registrar of companies (of the
state in which the registered office of the proposed company is to
be, or is situate) a copy of the application and each of the other
documents that had been filed before the regional director of the
company law board.
4.The applicants should also,
within a week from the date of making the application to the
regional director of the company law board, publish a notice in the
prescribed manner at least once in a newspaper in a principal
language of the district in which the registered office of the
proposed company is to be situated or is situated and circulating
in that district, and at least once in an English newspaper
circulating in that district.
5.The regional director may,
after considering the objections, if any, received within 30 days
from the date of publication of the notice in the newspapers, and
after consulting any authority, department or ministry, as he may,
in his discretion, decide, determine whether the licence should or
should not be granted.
6.The regional director may also
direct the company to insert in its memorandum, or in its articles,
or in both, such conditions of the licence as may be specified by
him in this behalf.
IV. Special Licensing
In addition to registration, a
non-profit engaged in certain activities might also require special
license/permission. Some of these include (but are not limited
to):
A place of work in a restricted
area (like a tribal area or a border area requires a special permit
– the Inner Line Permit – usually issues either by the Ministry of
Home Affairs or by the relevant local authority (i.e., district
magistrate).
To open an office and employ
people, the NGO should be registered under the Shop and
Establishment Act.
To employ foreign staff, an
Indian non-profit needs to be registered as a
trust/society/company, have FCRA registration and also obtain a No
Objection Certificate. The intended employee also needs a work
visa.
A foreign non-profit setting up
an office in India and wanting staff from abroad needs to be
registered as a trust/society/company, needs permission from the
Reserve Bank of India and also a No Objection Certificate from the
Ministry of External Affairs.
Comparision among Trust, Society and Non profit Company
Trust | Society | Section-25 Comapny | |
Statute/Legislation | Relevant State Trust Act or Bombay Public Trusts Act, 1950 | Societies Registration Act, 1860 | Indian Companies Act, 1956 |
Jurisdiction | Deputy Registrar/Charity commissioner | Registrar of societies (charity commissioner in Maharashtra). | Registrar of companies |
Registration | As trust | As
Society In Maharashtra, both as a society and as a trust |
As a company u/s 25 of the Indian Companies Act. |
Registration Document | Trust deed | Memorandum of association and rules and regulations | Memorandum and articles of association. and regulations |
Stamp Duty | Trust deed to be executed on non-judicial stamp paper, vary from state to state | No stamp paper required for memorandum of association and rules and regulations. | No stamp paper required for memorandum and articles of association. |
Members Required | Minimum – two trustees. No upper limit. | Minimum – seven managing committee members. No upper limit. | Minimum three trustees. No upper limit. |
Board of Management | Trustees / Board of Trustees | Governing body or council/managing or executive committee | Board of directors/ Managing committee |
Mode of Succession on Board of Management | Appointment or Election | Appointment or Election by members of the general body | Election by
members of the general body |
A Trust is a closer system of a registered
body with limited membership. It can be a family trust
or a public trust. Election of office-bearers is not
compulsory.
Formation of the NGO as
Trust
Groups of individuals can also
deliver goods to society by forming public charitable
trusts. The concept of the trust is generally
involving endowment of some property for public
utility under certain norms. However, of late, the
practice of establishing family or public charitable trusts by
sparing certain cash amount for charitable, welfare or religious
purposes have also come into vogue. As compared to registered
societies, the set up of the trust is not open having a tendency to
keep its membership limited and form byelaws suiting to the needs
of the trustees (not necessarily on democratic lines); there is
also minimum interference of the authorities in its
functioning.
Indian Trust Act, 1882 governs private or
family trusts although various states have also enacted their own
trust acts, for example The Maharashtra Trust Act;
Bombay Public Trust Act, 1950 Punjab Trust Act; Bombay Public Trust
Act, 1950; Madhya Pradesh Public Trust Act, 1951; Rajasthan Public
Trust Act, 1959; etc. Therefore, before registration
of an NGO as trust the provisions of applicable trust act should be
studied by the promoters to suit their needs. Normally the trusts
are created by dedicating some property to a charitable purpose,
however, some cash fund may also be spared by the trust or trustees
for charitable purpose while creating a
trust.
The main instrument of declaring a trust is the Trust
Deed, which should be made on non-judicial stamp
papers pf, prescribed fee and signed by the trustee or trustees for
submission to the Registrar concerned. In case of trust the
registrar or sub-registrar having authority to register properties
has the authority to register the Trust Deed. Therefore, Trust Deed
of the proposed Trust may be registered with Tehsildar, or
registrar properties and endowment at the district collectorate. In
metropolitan cities separate offices of registrar of properties and
endowments do function.
The Trust Deed should contain
name(s) of the author(s), settler(s) of the trust; the name(s) of
the trustee(s); the name(s) if any, of the beneficiary/ies or
whether it shall be public at large; name of the trust; address of
the trust; objects of the trust; procedure of appointment, removal
or replacement of a trustee, their rights, duties and powers, etc;
the mode and method of determination of the trust etc.
The trust Deed in duplicate should be submitted for registration
along with proof of addresses of the
author(s)/settler(s)/trustee(s) of the trust. The
author(s)/settler(s) or all the trustees should sign on all the
pages of the Trust Deed before the registrar. If required passport
size photos of each of the signatory should also be pasted on the
Trust Deed. The registrar is likely to verify credentials of the
applicants and check the proof of address, photographs, proof of
the registered office, etc.
After completion of the
formality a nominal fee will be charged by the registrar (excluding
the stamp duty) and after making due marks and signature of the
registrar the original copy of the trust Deed will be handed over
to the authorised person. For any subsequent amendments in the name
and objectives of the registered trust, registration of
supplementary deed with the registrar concerned would be
required.
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