State Codes and Statutes

Statutes > New-york > Ept > Article-8 > Part-1 > 8-1-4

§ 8-1.4 Supervision of trustees for charitable purposes    (a)  For  the  purposes  of  this  section,  "trustee"  means  (1) any  individual, group of  individuals,  executor,  trustee,  corporation  or  other  legal  entity  holding  and administering property for charitable  purposes, whether pursuant to  any  will,  trust,  other  instrument  or  agreement,  court  appointment, or otherwise pursuant to law, over which  the attorney general has enforcement  or  supervisory  powers,  (2)  any  non-profit  corporation  organized  under  the  laws  of  this state for  charitable purposes and (3) any non-profit foreign corporation organized  for charitable purposes, doing business  or  holding  property  in  this  state. Neither a foreign corporation nor a trustee acting under the will  of,  or  an  agreement  executed  by, a non-resident of this state shall  become subject to the provisions of this section  merely  by  reason  of  maintaining  a  bank,  custody,  investment  or  similar account in this  state.    (b) The registration and reporting provisions of this section  do  not  apply  to  (1)  the United States, any state, territory or possession of  the United States, the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of  Puerto  Rico  or  to any of their agencies or governmental subdivisions, (2) any  trustee which is required by any other provision  of  law  to  render  a  full,  complete  and itemized annual financial report to the congress of  the United States or to the legislature of  this  state,  provided  that  such  report  contains  the information required of trustees pursuant to  this  article,  (3)   corporations   organized   under   the   religious  corporations  law  and  other  religious agencies and organizations, and  charities, agencies and organizations operated, supervised or controlled  by or in connection  with  a  religious  organization,  (4)  educational  institutions incorporated under the education law or by special act, (5)  any    hospital,   (6)   fraternal,   patriotic,   veterans,   volunteer  firefighters, volunteer ambulance workers,  social,  student  or  alumni  organizations  and  historical societies chartered by the New York state  board of regents, (7) a trust for which there  is  a  corporate  trustee  acting  as  sole  trustee  or  co-trustee under the terms of a will of a  decedent who died domiciled in a state other than New York  or  a  trust  instrument  executed by a non-resident of the state of New York, (8) any  trust in which and so long as the charitable  interest  is  deferred  or  contingent,  (9)  any  person who, in his or her capacity as an officer,  director or trustee of any corporation or organization mentioned in this  paragraph, holds property for the religious, educational  or  charitable  purposes of such corporation or organization so long as such corporation  or organization is registered with the attorney general pursuant to this  section,  (10)  any  cemetery  corporation  subject to the provisions of  article fifteen of the not-for-profit corporation law,  (11)  the  state  parent   teachers   association  and  any  parent  teachers  association  affiliated with an  educational  institution  that  is  subject  to  the  jurisdiction  of  the  state  education department, (12) any corporation  organized under article forty-three of the insurance law. The provisions  of this subdivision shall apply only to the registration  and  reporting  requirements  of  this  section  and  shall not limit, impair, change or  alter  any  other  provision  of  this   article,   the   not-for-profit  corporation law or any other provision of law.    (c)  The  attorney  general shall establish and maintain a register of  all trustees containing such information as the attorney  general  deems  appropriate,  and  to  that end may conduct such investigations as he or  she  deems  necessary  and  shall  obtain  from  public  records,  court  officers,  taxing  authorities,  trustees  and other sources without the  payment  of  any  fee  or  charge,  whatever  information,   copies   ofinstruments,  reports  and  records are needed for the establishment and  maintenance of the register.    (d)  Every  trustee  shall  file with the attorney general, within six  months after any property held by him or her or any income therefrom  is  required  to be applied to charitable purposes, a copy of the instrument  providing for his or her title, powers and  duties;  provided,  however,  that  any  trustee  currently  registered  with  the  department  of law  pursuant to article 7-A of the executive law shall  be  deemed  to  have  complied  with  this paragraph. If any property held by a trustee or any  income therefrom is required to be applied to charitable purposes at the  time this section becomes effective, the filing shall be made within six  months thereafter.    (e) (1) Whenever any trustee or other person, holding property or  any  income  therefrom,  which  may  be required at any time to be devoted to  charitable purposes, shall file in any  court  in  this  state  (A)  any  petition  for instructions relating to the administration or use of such  property or income,  (B)  any  petition  for  the  construction  of  the  instrument under which such property or income is held, (C) any petition  respecting the disposition or distribution of such property or income or  (D)  any  accounting,  due  notice  of the action or proceeding shall be  served by the petitioner upon the attorney general together with a  copy  of any petition, accounting, will or trust instrument.    (2)  Whenever  any  instrument of a testamentary nature which provides  for a disposition for charitable purposes  is  the  subject  of  (A)  an  application  for  denial of probate, (B) objections to probate or (C) an  application for  approval  of  a  compromise  agreement  in  respect  of  probate,  due  notice of the action or proceeding shall be served by the  petitioner upon the  attorney  general  together  with  a  copy  of  the  instrument and of any such application, objections or agreement.    (f)  (1)  Every  trustee  shall,  in  addition to filing copies of any  instrument required under paragraph (d) of this section, file  with  the  attorney  general  and  all  identified current charitable beneficiaries  written annual financial reports, under penalties for perjury, on  forms  prescribed  by the attorney general, setting forth information as to the  nature of the assets held for charitable purposes and the administration  thereof by the trustee, and shall, file with the  attorney  general  and  all   identified  current  charitable  beneficiaries  a  notice  of  the  termination of the interest of any party in a trust that would cause all  or part of the trust assets to be applied to charitable purposes  or  to  have  the  income  therefrom  so  applied,  in accordance with rules and  regulations of the attorney general.    (2) Trustees required to report to the attorney general under  article  7-A of the executive law shall comply with this paragraph by filing with  the  attorney  general in addition to any other reports required herein,  copies of the  financial  reports  required  by  section  172-b  of  the  executive law unless such reports have been filed previously.    (g)  Unless the filing of reports is suspended as herein provided, the  first report of any trustee shall be filed  no  later  than  six  months  after  the  end of the fiscal year of the trustee during which he or she  becomes subject to this section.    (h) The attorney general shall make rules  and  regulations  necessary  for  the administration of this section, including rules and regulations  as to the time for filing reports, the contents thereof, and the  manner  of  executing  and  filing them. He or she may classify trusts, estates,  corporations and  other  trustees  as  to  purpose,  nature  of  assets,  duration,  amount  of  assets,  amounts  to  be  devoted  to  charitable  purposes, or otherwise, and may establish different rules for  different  classes  as to time and nature of the reports required, to the ends thathe or she shall receive current financial reports as to all such trusts,  estates, corporations or other trustees which will enable him or her  to  ascertain  whether  they  are  being properly administered. The attorney  general  may  suspend the filing of financial reports as to a particular  trustee for a reasonable,  specifically  designated  time  upon  written  application  of  the  trustee,  signed  under penalties for perjury, and  filed with the attorney general and after the attorney general has filed  in the register of trustees a written statement that  the  interests  of  the  beneficiaries  will  not  be  prejudiced  thereby and that periodic  reports during the term of such suspension are not required  for  proper  supervision  by  his  or her office. The filing of the financial reports  required by this section, or the  exemption  from  such  filing  or  the  suspension  therefrom,  shall  not have the effect of absolving trustees  from any responsibility for accounting for property or  income  held  by  them  for  charitable  purposes. A copy of an account or other financial  report filed by a trustee in any court in this state, if the account  or  other  financial  report  substantially  complies  with  the  rules  and  regulations of the attorney general, may be filed as a financial  report  under this section.    (i)   The   attorney   general   may   investigate   transactions  and  relationships of trustees for the purpose of determining whether or  not  property  held  for  charitable  purposes has been and is being properly  administered. The attorney general, his or her assistants,  deputies  or  such other officers as may be designated by him or her, are empowered to  subpoena   any  trustee,  agent,  fiduciary,  beneficiary,  institution,  association or corporation or other witness, examine  any  such  witness  under  oath  and,  for this purpose, administer the necessary oaths, and  require the production of any books or papers which they  deem  relevant  to the inquiry.    (j) No person shall be excused from attending such inquiry pursuant to  the  mandate  of  a subpoena, or from producing a paper or book, or from  being examined or required to answer a question on the ground of failure  of tender or payment of a witness fee or mileage, unless at the time  of  such  appearance or production, as the case may be, such witness makes a  demand for such payment as a condition precedent to the offering of  the  testimony or production required by the subpoena and such payment is not  thereupon  made.  The provisions for payment of a witness fee or mileage  do not apply to any trustee or other person holding funds for charitable  purposes, or to any person in the  employ  of  any  such  person,  whose  conduct or practices are being investigated.    (k)  If  a  person subpoenaed to attend such inquiry fails to obey the  mandate of a subpoena without  reasonable  cause,  or  if  a  person  in  attendance upon such inquiry shall without reasonable cause refuse to be  sworn or to be examined or to answer a question or to produce a paper or  book when ordered so to do by the officer conducting such inquiry, he or  she  shall  be  subject  to proceedings under subdivision (b) of section  2308 of the civil practice law and rules.    (l) The register, copies of the instruments and the reports filed with  the attorney general shall be open  to  public  inspection,  subject  to  reasonable  rules and regulations adopted by the attorney general, which  may include such limitations  as  to  type  of  information  subject  to  inspection  or  purpose of inspection as the attorney general shall deem  to be in the public interest. The attorney general shall  withhold  from  public inspection copies of any report filed with any other governmental  agency  of  this state or of the United States and required by law to be  kept confidential by  such  agency,  and  shall,  upon  request  of  the  trustee,  withhold from public inspection that portion of any instrumentfiled which does not relate to charitable  purposes  and  which  is  not  otherwise of public record.    (m)  The  attorney  general  may  institute appropriate proceedings to  secure  compliance  with  this  section  and  to   secure   the   proper  administration  of any trust, corporation or other relationship to which  this section applies. The powers and  duties  of  the  attorney  general  provided  in this section are in addition to all other powers and duties  he or she may have. No court shall modify or terminate  the  powers  and  responsibilities  of  any trust, corporation or other trustee unless the  attorney general is a party to  the  proceeding,  but  nothing  in  this  section shall otherwise impair or restrict the jurisdiction of any court  with respect to the matters covered by it. The failure of any trustee to  register  or  to  file reports as required by this section may be ground  for judicial removal of any person responsible for such failure.    (n) This section shall apply regardless of any contrary provisions  of  any  instrument and shall be liberally construed so as to effectuate its  general purpose of protecting the public interest  in  charitable  uses,  purposes and dispositions.    (o)  Every  officer,  agency,  board  or  commission  of this state or  political subdivisions of  this  state  or  agencies  thereof  receiving  applications  for exemption from taxation of any trustee subject to this  section shall annually file with the attorney  general  a  list  of  all  applications  received  during  the  year  and shall notify the attorney  general  of  any  suspension  or  revocation  of  a  tax  exempt  status  previously granted.    (p)  The  attorney general shall collect from each trustee at the time  of filing of the periodic reports required by this section a fee for the  filing of such reports as follows:    (1) Twenty-five dollars, if the net worth of the property held by such  trustee for charitable purposes is less than fifty thousand dollars,    (2) Fifty dollars if such net worth is fifty thousand dollars or  more  but less than two hundred and fifty thousand dollars,    (3)  One  hundred  dollars  if such net worth is two hundred and fifty  thousand dollars or more but less than one million dollars,    (4) Two hundred fifty dollars if such net worth is one million dollars  or more but less than ten million dollars,    (5) Seven hundred and fifty dollars if such net worth is  ten  million  dollars or more but less than fifty million dollars, and    (6)  One  thousand  five  hundred  dollars  if such net worth is fifty  million dollars or more.    (q) Any trustee shall be exempt from the annual reporting requirements  of this section by filing each year with the attorney general a verified  statement executed by such trustee  attesting  that  during  the  annual  reporting  period (1) the gross receipts received by said trustee during  such annual reporting period were less than twenty-five thousand dollars  and that (2) the total assets held by such trustee  at  no  time  during  such  annual reporting period exceeded twenty-five thousand dollars. For  the purposes of this paragraph, gross receipts mean the  total  received  during  the  financial  reporting  period  of  (A)  gifts,  grants,  and  contributions; (B) gross income and revenue from all  sources;  and  (C)  gross  amounts  from  sales  of  assets, other than inventory; and total  assets mean the total principal and the accumulated income, if any, held  by such trustee for purposes  of  charitable  distribution  on  any  day  during such annual reporting period.    (r)  A  trustee  who fails to comply with paragraph (d), (f) or (g) of  this section shall, after notice of said failure served upon him or  her  by  the attorney general by certified mail, return receipt requested, be  liable to the state of New York for a fine of ten dollars a day  not  toexceed  one  thousand  dollars  for  each  failure  to  comply after the  expiration of the thirty day period following the receipt of the  notice  from  the  attorney  general,  except  that  the  time  to comply may be  extended by the attorney general. Where the attorney general, after such  thirty  day  period  has  expired, finds that the failure to comply with  paragraph (d), (f) or (g) of this section is due to excusable  ignorance  or  inadvertence  or  other reasonable cause, the attorney general shall  waive the fine imposed by this paragraph.    (s) A trustee shall not be qualified to make application for funds  or  grants  or  to  receive  such funds from any department or agency of the  state without certifying compliance with paragraphs (d), (f) and (g)  of  this  section and all applicable registration and reporting requirements  of article seven-A of the executive law.

State Codes and Statutes

Statutes > New-york > Ept > Article-8 > Part-1 > 8-1-4

§ 8-1.4 Supervision of trustees for charitable purposes    (a)  For  the  purposes  of  this  section,  "trustee"  means  (1) any  individual, group of  individuals,  executor,  trustee,  corporation  or  other  legal  entity  holding  and administering property for charitable  purposes, whether pursuant to  any  will,  trust,  other  instrument  or  agreement,  court  appointment, or otherwise pursuant to law, over which  the attorney general has enforcement  or  supervisory  powers,  (2)  any  non-profit  corporation  organized  under  the  laws  of  this state for  charitable purposes and (3) any non-profit foreign corporation organized  for charitable purposes, doing business  or  holding  property  in  this  state. Neither a foreign corporation nor a trustee acting under the will  of,  or  an  agreement  executed  by, a non-resident of this state shall  become subject to the provisions of this section  merely  by  reason  of  maintaining  a  bank,  custody,  investment  or  similar account in this  state.    (b) The registration and reporting provisions of this section  do  not  apply  to  (1)  the United States, any state, territory or possession of  the United States, the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of  Puerto  Rico  or  to any of their agencies or governmental subdivisions, (2) any  trustee which is required by any other provision  of  law  to  render  a  full,  complete  and itemized annual financial report to the congress of  the United States or to the legislature of  this  state,  provided  that  such  report  contains  the information required of trustees pursuant to  this  article,  (3)   corporations   organized   under   the   religious  corporations  law  and  other  religious agencies and organizations, and  charities, agencies and organizations operated, supervised or controlled  by or in connection  with  a  religious  organization,  (4)  educational  institutions incorporated under the education law or by special act, (5)  any    hospital,   (6)   fraternal,   patriotic,   veterans,   volunteer  firefighters, volunteer ambulance workers,  social,  student  or  alumni  organizations  and  historical societies chartered by the New York state  board of regents, (7) a trust for which there  is  a  corporate  trustee  acting  as  sole  trustee  or  co-trustee under the terms of a will of a  decedent who died domiciled in a state other than New York  or  a  trust  instrument  executed by a non-resident of the state of New York, (8) any  trust in which and so long as the charitable  interest  is  deferred  or  contingent,  (9)  any  person who, in his or her capacity as an officer,  director or trustee of any corporation or organization mentioned in this  paragraph, holds property for the religious, educational  or  charitable  purposes of such corporation or organization so long as such corporation  or organization is registered with the attorney general pursuant to this  section,  (10)  any  cemetery  corporation  subject to the provisions of  article fifteen of the not-for-profit corporation law,  (11)  the  state  parent   teachers   association  and  any  parent  teachers  association  affiliated with an  educational  institution  that  is  subject  to  the  jurisdiction  of  the  state  education department, (12) any corporation  organized under article forty-three of the insurance law. The provisions  of this subdivision shall apply only to the registration  and  reporting  requirements  of  this  section  and  shall not limit, impair, change or  alter  any  other  provision  of  this   article,   the   not-for-profit  corporation law or any other provision of law.    (c)  The  attorney  general shall establish and maintain a register of  all trustees containing such information as the attorney  general  deems  appropriate,  and  to  that end may conduct such investigations as he or  she  deems  necessary  and  shall  obtain  from  public  records,  court  officers,  taxing  authorities,  trustees  and other sources without the  payment  of  any  fee  or  charge,  whatever  information,   copies   ofinstruments,  reports  and  records are needed for the establishment and  maintenance of the register.    (d)  Every  trustee  shall  file with the attorney general, within six  months after any property held by him or her or any income therefrom  is  required  to be applied to charitable purposes, a copy of the instrument  providing for his or her title, powers and  duties;  provided,  however,  that  any  trustee  currently  registered  with  the  department  of law  pursuant to article 7-A of the executive law shall  be  deemed  to  have  complied  with  this paragraph. If any property held by a trustee or any  income therefrom is required to be applied to charitable purposes at the  time this section becomes effective, the filing shall be made within six  months thereafter.    (e) (1) Whenever any trustee or other person, holding property or  any  income  therefrom,  which  may  be required at any time to be devoted to  charitable purposes, shall file in any  court  in  this  state  (A)  any  petition  for instructions relating to the administration or use of such  property or income,  (B)  any  petition  for  the  construction  of  the  instrument under which such property or income is held, (C) any petition  respecting the disposition or distribution of such property or income or  (D)  any  accounting,  due  notice  of the action or proceeding shall be  served by the petitioner upon the attorney general together with a  copy  of any petition, accounting, will or trust instrument.    (2)  Whenever  any  instrument of a testamentary nature which provides  for a disposition for charitable purposes  is  the  subject  of  (A)  an  application  for  denial of probate, (B) objections to probate or (C) an  application for  approval  of  a  compromise  agreement  in  respect  of  probate,  due  notice of the action or proceeding shall be served by the  petitioner upon the  attorney  general  together  with  a  copy  of  the  instrument and of any such application, objections or agreement.    (f)  (1)  Every  trustee  shall,  in  addition to filing copies of any  instrument required under paragraph (d) of this section, file  with  the  attorney  general  and  all  identified current charitable beneficiaries  written annual financial reports, under penalties for perjury, on  forms  prescribed  by the attorney general, setting forth information as to the  nature of the assets held for charitable purposes and the administration  thereof by the trustee, and shall, file with the  attorney  general  and  all   identified  current  charitable  beneficiaries  a  notice  of  the  termination of the interest of any party in a trust that would cause all  or part of the trust assets to be applied to charitable purposes  or  to  have  the  income  therefrom  so  applied,  in accordance with rules and  regulations of the attorney general.    (2) Trustees required to report to the attorney general under  article  7-A of the executive law shall comply with this paragraph by filing with  the  attorney  general in addition to any other reports required herein,  copies of the  financial  reports  required  by  section  172-b  of  the  executive law unless such reports have been filed previously.    (g)  Unless the filing of reports is suspended as herein provided, the  first report of any trustee shall be filed  no  later  than  six  months  after  the  end of the fiscal year of the trustee during which he or she  becomes subject to this section.    (h) The attorney general shall make rules  and  regulations  necessary  for  the administration of this section, including rules and regulations  as to the time for filing reports, the contents thereof, and the  manner  of  executing  and  filing them. He or she may classify trusts, estates,  corporations and  other  trustees  as  to  purpose,  nature  of  assets,  duration,  amount  of  assets,  amounts  to  be  devoted  to  charitable  purposes, or otherwise, and may establish different rules for  different  classes  as to time and nature of the reports required, to the ends thathe or she shall receive current financial reports as to all such trusts,  estates, corporations or other trustees which will enable him or her  to  ascertain  whether  they  are  being properly administered. The attorney  general  may  suspend the filing of financial reports as to a particular  trustee for a reasonable,  specifically  designated  time  upon  written  application  of  the  trustee,  signed  under penalties for perjury, and  filed with the attorney general and after the attorney general has filed  in the register of trustees a written statement that  the  interests  of  the  beneficiaries  will  not  be  prejudiced  thereby and that periodic  reports during the term of such suspension are not required  for  proper  supervision  by  his  or her office. The filing of the financial reports  required by this section, or the  exemption  from  such  filing  or  the  suspension  therefrom,  shall  not have the effect of absolving trustees  from any responsibility for accounting for property or  income  held  by  them  for  charitable  purposes. A copy of an account or other financial  report filed by a trustee in any court in this state, if the account  or  other  financial  report  substantially  complies  with  the  rules  and  regulations of the attorney general, may be filed as a financial  report  under this section.    (i)   The   attorney   general   may   investigate   transactions  and  relationships of trustees for the purpose of determining whether or  not  property  held  for  charitable  purposes has been and is being properly  administered. The attorney general, his or her assistants,  deputies  or  such other officers as may be designated by him or her, are empowered to  subpoena   any  trustee,  agent,  fiduciary,  beneficiary,  institution,  association or corporation or other witness, examine  any  such  witness  under  oath  and,  for this purpose, administer the necessary oaths, and  require the production of any books or papers which they  deem  relevant  to the inquiry.    (j) No person shall be excused from attending such inquiry pursuant to  the  mandate  of  a subpoena, or from producing a paper or book, or from  being examined or required to answer a question on the ground of failure  of tender or payment of a witness fee or mileage, unless at the time  of  such  appearance or production, as the case may be, such witness makes a  demand for such payment as a condition precedent to the offering of  the  testimony or production required by the subpoena and such payment is not  thereupon  made.  The provisions for payment of a witness fee or mileage  do not apply to any trustee or other person holding funds for charitable  purposes, or to any person in the  employ  of  any  such  person,  whose  conduct or practices are being investigated.    (k)  If  a  person subpoenaed to attend such inquiry fails to obey the  mandate of a subpoena without  reasonable  cause,  or  if  a  person  in  attendance upon such inquiry shall without reasonable cause refuse to be  sworn or to be examined or to answer a question or to produce a paper or  book when ordered so to do by the officer conducting such inquiry, he or  she  shall  be  subject  to proceedings under subdivision (b) of section  2308 of the civil practice law and rules.    (l) The register, copies of the instruments and the reports filed with  the attorney general shall be open  to  public  inspection,  subject  to  reasonable  rules and regulations adopted by the attorney general, which  may include such limitations  as  to  type  of  information  subject  to  inspection  or  purpose of inspection as the attorney general shall deem  to be in the public interest. The attorney general shall  withhold  from  public inspection copies of any report filed with any other governmental  agency  of  this state or of the United States and required by law to be  kept confidential by  such  agency,  and  shall,  upon  request  of  the  trustee,  withhold from public inspection that portion of any instrumentfiled which does not relate to charitable  purposes  and  which  is  not  otherwise of public record.    (m)  The  attorney  general  may  institute appropriate proceedings to  secure  compliance  with  this  section  and  to   secure   the   proper  administration  of any trust, corporation or other relationship to which  this section applies. The powers and  duties  of  the  attorney  general  provided  in this section are in addition to all other powers and duties  he or she may have. No court shall modify or terminate  the  powers  and  responsibilities  of  any trust, corporation or other trustee unless the  attorney general is a party to  the  proceeding,  but  nothing  in  this  section shall otherwise impair or restrict the jurisdiction of any court  with respect to the matters covered by it. The failure of any trustee to  register  or  to  file reports as required by this section may be ground  for judicial removal of any person responsible for such failure.    (n) This section shall apply regardless of any contrary provisions  of  any  instrument and shall be liberally construed so as to effectuate its  general purpose of protecting the public interest  in  charitable  uses,  purposes and dispositions.    (o)  Every  officer,  agency,  board  or  commission  of this state or  political subdivisions of  this  state  or  agencies  thereof  receiving  applications  for exemption from taxation of any trustee subject to this  section shall annually file with the attorney  general  a  list  of  all  applications  received  during  the  year  and shall notify the attorney  general  of  any  suspension  or  revocation  of  a  tax  exempt  status  previously granted.    (p)  The  attorney general shall collect from each trustee at the time  of filing of the periodic reports required by this section a fee for the  filing of such reports as follows:    (1) Twenty-five dollars, if the net worth of the property held by such  trustee for charitable purposes is less than fifty thousand dollars,    (2) Fifty dollars if such net worth is fifty thousand dollars or  more  but less than two hundred and fifty thousand dollars,    (3)  One  hundred  dollars  if such net worth is two hundred and fifty  thousand dollars or more but less than one million dollars,    (4) Two hundred fifty dollars if such net worth is one million dollars  or more but less than ten million dollars,    (5) Seven hundred and fifty dollars if such net worth is  ten  million  dollars or more but less than fifty million dollars, and    (6)  One  thousand  five  hundred  dollars  if such net worth is fifty  million dollars or more.    (q) Any trustee shall be exempt from the annual reporting requirements  of this section by filing each year with the attorney general a verified  statement executed by such trustee  attesting  that  during  the  annual  reporting  period (1) the gross receipts received by said trustee during  such annual reporting period were less than twenty-five thousand dollars  and that (2) the total assets held by such trustee  at  no  time  during  such  annual reporting period exceeded twenty-five thousand dollars. For  the purposes of this paragraph, gross receipts mean the  total  received  during  the  financial  reporting  period  of  (A)  gifts,  grants,  and  contributions; (B) gross income and revenue from all  sources;  and  (C)  gross  amounts  from  sales  of  assets, other than inventory; and total  assets mean the total principal and the accumulated income, if any, held  by such trustee for purposes  of  charitable  distribution  on  any  day  during such annual reporting period.    (r)  A  trustee  who fails to comply with paragraph (d), (f) or (g) of  this section shall, after notice of said failure served upon him or  her  by  the attorney general by certified mail, return receipt requested, be  liable to the state of New York for a fine of ten dollars a day  not  toexceed  one  thousand  dollars  for  each  failure  to  comply after the  expiration of the thirty day period following the receipt of the  notice  from  the  attorney  general,  except  that  the  time  to comply may be  extended by the attorney general. Where the attorney general, after such  thirty  day  period  has  expired, finds that the failure to comply with  paragraph (d), (f) or (g) of this section is due to excusable  ignorance  or  inadvertence  or  other reasonable cause, the attorney general shall  waive the fine imposed by this paragraph.    (s) A trustee shall not be qualified to make application for funds  or  grants  or  to  receive  such funds from any department or agency of the  state without certifying compliance with paragraphs (d), (f) and (g)  of  this  section and all applicable registration and reporting requirements  of article seven-A of the executive law.

State Codes and Statutes

State Codes and Statutes

Statutes > New-york > Ept > Article-8 > Part-1 > 8-1-4

§ 8-1.4 Supervision of trustees for charitable purposes    (a)  For  the  purposes  of  this  section,  "trustee"  means  (1) any  individual, group of  individuals,  executor,  trustee,  corporation  or  other  legal  entity  holding  and administering property for charitable  purposes, whether pursuant to  any  will,  trust,  other  instrument  or  agreement,  court  appointment, or otherwise pursuant to law, over which  the attorney general has enforcement  or  supervisory  powers,  (2)  any  non-profit  corporation  organized  under  the  laws  of  this state for  charitable purposes and (3) any non-profit foreign corporation organized  for charitable purposes, doing business  or  holding  property  in  this  state. Neither a foreign corporation nor a trustee acting under the will  of,  or  an  agreement  executed  by, a non-resident of this state shall  become subject to the provisions of this section  merely  by  reason  of  maintaining  a  bank,  custody,  investment  or  similar account in this  state.    (b) The registration and reporting provisions of this section  do  not  apply  to  (1)  the United States, any state, territory or possession of  the United States, the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of  Puerto  Rico  or  to any of their agencies or governmental subdivisions, (2) any  trustee which is required by any other provision  of  law  to  render  a  full,  complete  and itemized annual financial report to the congress of  the United States or to the legislature of  this  state,  provided  that  such  report  contains  the information required of trustees pursuant to  this  article,  (3)   corporations   organized   under   the   religious  corporations  law  and  other  religious agencies and organizations, and  charities, agencies and organizations operated, supervised or controlled  by or in connection  with  a  religious  organization,  (4)  educational  institutions incorporated under the education law or by special act, (5)  any    hospital,   (6)   fraternal,   patriotic,   veterans,   volunteer  firefighters, volunteer ambulance workers,  social,  student  or  alumni  organizations  and  historical societies chartered by the New York state  board of regents, (7) a trust for which there  is  a  corporate  trustee  acting  as  sole  trustee  or  co-trustee under the terms of a will of a  decedent who died domiciled in a state other than New York  or  a  trust  instrument  executed by a non-resident of the state of New York, (8) any  trust in which and so long as the charitable  interest  is  deferred  or  contingent,  (9)  any  person who, in his or her capacity as an officer,  director or trustee of any corporation or organization mentioned in this  paragraph, holds property for the religious, educational  or  charitable  purposes of such corporation or organization so long as such corporation  or organization is registered with the attorney general pursuant to this  section,  (10)  any  cemetery  corporation  subject to the provisions of  article fifteen of the not-for-profit corporation law,  (11)  the  state  parent   teachers   association  and  any  parent  teachers  association  affiliated with an  educational  institution  that  is  subject  to  the  jurisdiction  of  the  state  education department, (12) any corporation  organized under article forty-three of the insurance law. The provisions  of this subdivision shall apply only to the registration  and  reporting  requirements  of  this  section  and  shall not limit, impair, change or  alter  any  other  provision  of  this   article,   the   not-for-profit  corporation law or any other provision of law.    (c)  The  attorney  general shall establish and maintain a register of  all trustees containing such information as the attorney  general  deems  appropriate,  and  to  that end may conduct such investigations as he or  she  deems  necessary  and  shall  obtain  from  public  records,  court  officers,  taxing  authorities,  trustees  and other sources without the  payment  of  any  fee  or  charge,  whatever  information,   copies   ofinstruments,  reports  and  records are needed for the establishment and  maintenance of the register.    (d)  Every  trustee  shall  file with the attorney general, within six  months after any property held by him or her or any income therefrom  is  required  to be applied to charitable purposes, a copy of the instrument  providing for his or her title, powers and  duties;  provided,  however,  that  any  trustee  currently  registered  with  the  department  of law  pursuant to article 7-A of the executive law shall  be  deemed  to  have  complied  with  this paragraph. If any property held by a trustee or any  income therefrom is required to be applied to charitable purposes at the  time this section becomes effective, the filing shall be made within six  months thereafter.    (e) (1) Whenever any trustee or other person, holding property or  any  income  therefrom,  which  may  be required at any time to be devoted to  charitable purposes, shall file in any  court  in  this  state  (A)  any  petition  for instructions relating to the administration or use of such  property or income,  (B)  any  petition  for  the  construction  of  the  instrument under which such property or income is held, (C) any petition  respecting the disposition or distribution of such property or income or  (D)  any  accounting,  due  notice  of the action or proceeding shall be  served by the petitioner upon the attorney general together with a  copy  of any petition, accounting, will or trust instrument.    (2)  Whenever  any  instrument of a testamentary nature which provides  for a disposition for charitable purposes  is  the  subject  of  (A)  an  application  for  denial of probate, (B) objections to probate or (C) an  application for  approval  of  a  compromise  agreement  in  respect  of  probate,  due  notice of the action or proceeding shall be served by the  petitioner upon the  attorney  general  together  with  a  copy  of  the  instrument and of any such application, objections or agreement.    (f)  (1)  Every  trustee  shall,  in  addition to filing copies of any  instrument required under paragraph (d) of this section, file  with  the  attorney  general  and  all  identified current charitable beneficiaries  written annual financial reports, under penalties for perjury, on  forms  prescribed  by the attorney general, setting forth information as to the  nature of the assets held for charitable purposes and the administration  thereof by the trustee, and shall, file with the  attorney  general  and  all   identified  current  charitable  beneficiaries  a  notice  of  the  termination of the interest of any party in a trust that would cause all  or part of the trust assets to be applied to charitable purposes  or  to  have  the  income  therefrom  so  applied,  in accordance with rules and  regulations of the attorney general.    (2) Trustees required to report to the attorney general under  article  7-A of the executive law shall comply with this paragraph by filing with  the  attorney  general in addition to any other reports required herein,  copies of the  financial  reports  required  by  section  172-b  of  the  executive law unless such reports have been filed previously.    (g)  Unless the filing of reports is suspended as herein provided, the  first report of any trustee shall be filed  no  later  than  six  months  after  the  end of the fiscal year of the trustee during which he or she  becomes subject to this section.    (h) The attorney general shall make rules  and  regulations  necessary  for  the administration of this section, including rules and regulations  as to the time for filing reports, the contents thereof, and the  manner  of  executing  and  filing them. He or she may classify trusts, estates,  corporations and  other  trustees  as  to  purpose,  nature  of  assets,  duration,  amount  of  assets,  amounts  to  be  devoted  to  charitable  purposes, or otherwise, and may establish different rules for  different  classes  as to time and nature of the reports required, to the ends thathe or she shall receive current financial reports as to all such trusts,  estates, corporations or other trustees which will enable him or her  to  ascertain  whether  they  are  being properly administered. The attorney  general  may  suspend the filing of financial reports as to a particular  trustee for a reasonable,  specifically  designated  time  upon  written  application  of  the  trustee,  signed  under penalties for perjury, and  filed with the attorney general and after the attorney general has filed  in the register of trustees a written statement that  the  interests  of  the  beneficiaries  will  not  be  prejudiced  thereby and that periodic  reports during the term of such suspension are not required  for  proper  supervision  by  his  or her office. The filing of the financial reports  required by this section, or the  exemption  from  such  filing  or  the  suspension  therefrom,  shall  not have the effect of absolving trustees  from any responsibility for accounting for property or  income  held  by  them  for  charitable  purposes. A copy of an account or other financial  report filed by a trustee in any court in this state, if the account  or  other  financial  report  substantially  complies  with  the  rules  and  regulations of the attorney general, may be filed as a financial  report  under this section.    (i)   The   attorney   general   may   investigate   transactions  and  relationships of trustees for the purpose of determining whether or  not  property  held  for  charitable  purposes has been and is being properly  administered. The attorney general, his or her assistants,  deputies  or  such other officers as may be designated by him or her, are empowered to  subpoena   any  trustee,  agent,  fiduciary,  beneficiary,  institution,  association or corporation or other witness, examine  any  such  witness  under  oath  and,  for this purpose, administer the necessary oaths, and  require the production of any books or papers which they  deem  relevant  to the inquiry.    (j) No person shall be excused from attending such inquiry pursuant to  the  mandate  of  a subpoena, or from producing a paper or book, or from  being examined or required to answer a question on the ground of failure  of tender or payment of a witness fee or mileage, unless at the time  of  such  appearance or production, as the case may be, such witness makes a  demand for such payment as a condition precedent to the offering of  the  testimony or production required by the subpoena and such payment is not  thereupon  made.  The provisions for payment of a witness fee or mileage  do not apply to any trustee or other person holding funds for charitable  purposes, or to any person in the  employ  of  any  such  person,  whose  conduct or practices are being investigated.    (k)  If  a  person subpoenaed to attend such inquiry fails to obey the  mandate of a subpoena without  reasonable  cause,  or  if  a  person  in  attendance upon such inquiry shall without reasonable cause refuse to be  sworn or to be examined or to answer a question or to produce a paper or  book when ordered so to do by the officer conducting such inquiry, he or  she  shall  be  subject  to proceedings under subdivision (b) of section  2308 of the civil practice law and rules.    (l) The register, copies of the instruments and the reports filed with  the attorney general shall be open  to  public  inspection,  subject  to  reasonable  rules and regulations adopted by the attorney general, which  may include such limitations  as  to  type  of  information  subject  to  inspection  or  purpose of inspection as the attorney general shall deem  to be in the public interest. The attorney general shall  withhold  from  public inspection copies of any report filed with any other governmental  agency  of  this state or of the United States and required by law to be  kept confidential by  such  agency,  and  shall,  upon  request  of  the  trustee,  withhold from public inspection that portion of any instrumentfiled which does not relate to charitable  purposes  and  which  is  not  otherwise of public record.    (m)  The  attorney  general  may  institute appropriate proceedings to  secure  compliance  with  this  section  and  to   secure   the   proper  administration  of any trust, corporation or other relationship to which  this section applies. The powers and  duties  of  the  attorney  general  provided  in this section are in addition to all other powers and duties  he or she may have. No court shall modify or terminate  the  powers  and  responsibilities  of  any trust, corporation or other trustee unless the  attorney general is a party to  the  proceeding,  but  nothing  in  this  section shall otherwise impair or restrict the jurisdiction of any court  with respect to the matters covered by it. The failure of any trustee to  register  or  to  file reports as required by this section may be ground  for judicial removal of any person responsible for such failure.    (n) This section shall apply regardless of any contrary provisions  of  any  instrument and shall be liberally construed so as to effectuate its  general purpose of protecting the public interest  in  charitable  uses,  purposes and dispositions.    (o)  Every  officer,  agency,  board  or  commission  of this state or  political subdivisions of  this  state  or  agencies  thereof  receiving  applications  for exemption from taxation of any trustee subject to this  section shall annually file with the attorney  general  a  list  of  all  applications  received  during  the  year  and shall notify the attorney  general  of  any  suspension  or  revocation  of  a  tax  exempt  status  previously granted.    (p)  The  attorney general shall collect from each trustee at the time  of filing of the periodic reports required by this section a fee for the  filing of such reports as follows:    (1) Twenty-five dollars, if the net worth of the property held by such  trustee for charitable purposes is less than fifty thousand dollars,    (2) Fifty dollars if such net worth is fifty thousand dollars or  more  but less than two hundred and fifty thousand dollars,    (3)  One  hundred  dollars  if such net worth is two hundred and fifty  thousand dollars or more but less than one million dollars,    (4) Two hundred fifty dollars if such net worth is one million dollars  or more but less than ten million dollars,    (5) Seven hundred and fifty dollars if such net worth is  ten  million  dollars or more but less than fifty million dollars, and    (6)  One  thousand  five  hundred  dollars  if such net worth is fifty  million dollars or more.    (q) Any trustee shall be exempt from the annual reporting requirements  of this section by filing each year with the attorney general a verified  statement executed by such trustee  attesting  that  during  the  annual  reporting  period (1) the gross receipts received by said trustee during  such annual reporting period were less than twenty-five thousand dollars  and that (2) the total assets held by such trustee  at  no  time  during  such  annual reporting period exceeded twenty-five thousand dollars. For  the purposes of this paragraph, gross receipts mean the  total  received  during  the  financial  reporting  period  of  (A)  gifts,  grants,  and  contributions; (B) gross income and revenue from all  sources;  and  (C)  gross  amounts  from  sales  of  assets, other than inventory; and total  assets mean the total principal and the accumulated income, if any, held  by such trustee for purposes  of  charitable  distribution  on  any  day  during such annual reporting period.    (r)  A  trustee  who fails to comply with paragraph (d), (f) or (g) of  this section shall, after notice of said failure served upon him or  her  by  the attorney general by certified mail, return receipt requested, be  liable to the state of New York for a fine of ten dollars a day  not  toexceed  one  thousand  dollars  for  each  failure  to  comply after the  expiration of the thirty day period following the receipt of the  notice  from  the  attorney  general,  except  that  the  time  to comply may be  extended by the attorney general. Where the attorney general, after such  thirty  day  period  has  expired, finds that the failure to comply with  paragraph (d), (f) or (g) of this section is due to excusable  ignorance  or  inadvertence  or  other reasonable cause, the attorney general shall  waive the fine imposed by this paragraph.    (s) A trustee shall not be qualified to make application for funds  or  grants  or  to  receive  such funds from any department or agency of the  state without certifying compliance with paragraphs (d), (f) and (g)  of  this  section and all applicable registration and reporting requirements  of article seven-A of the executive law.