Arvo
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
I think it's important not to lose sight of the main issue here: that the payments to trustees were not allowed according to the Articles of Association in public and official use at the time.
(Wheter those Articles of Association were the "real" ones is a defense and secondary issue.)
It is up to them to prove that this is so. So far I have not seen convincing material that indicates their claim is true, so I'm curious how they're going to convince official institutions like the Chartity Commission and the Companies House. (They can't just send an undated text w/o proof it was approved by the members and go: "So, hey, we're being questioned on large payments to eachother, but this random doc says that we totally could, please make it our new official governing doc.")
I think their own sloppyness regarding official business could be harming them now. Following your governing doc and dated, public, documents on what you've been doing is making you accountable, which is not just great for members, but also protects the trustees with a clear paper trail.
At the moment their only clearly documented documents are those at Companies House (dated, signed, registered etc.). If the trustees want to convincingly make the claim that the official, decades-used Articles of Association -in use at the time of payments- were actually NOT the Articles of Association, then I wonder if the written approval they should have gotten in 2013 and 2014 from the Charity Commission to change Articles 4 and 28 might be key for them to prove it. (But if they did prove it, ten there's still a discussion to be had if the Articles of Association in use on their website and officially registered to consult on were not at the time legally those that should have been adhered to, and a question why they didn't consult those when making their choices.)
(Wheter those Articles of Association were the "real" ones is a defense and secondary issue.)
- The trustees of the ME Association paid eachother for services for nearly 70,000 pounds + payment for Richard Osman out of ME Association coffers.
- According to the Articles of Association in use at the time of payment, this was not possible (Article 4) - unless it was shown that there was somehow an exceptional situation that justified hiring these trustees, and written permission was given by the Charity Commission, the UK gov's charity regulator (Article 28, section (c).
- These Articles of Association were registered as the ME Association's governing document at the Companies House. They were signed by the ME Association, declaring they were "a true copy" of the document approved by the Association members as the new Articles of Association. (I expect a copy is also in the possession of the Charity Commission.)
- These Articles of Association were up on the ME Association's own website at the time the payments took place as the current governing document. The name of the PDF & link holding them was Association-of-ME-Association-11.03.2014.pdf, and these were up until just now.
- These governing documents were in active use for a decade. This is not something you put in a drawer like a transfer deed or your college diploma - normally, these would have been regularly consulted because they are a pre-chewed map of everything for ME Association issues. And for the decade they were in use, no board director ever said: "Hang on, these are not right".
It is up to them to prove that this is so. So far I have not seen convincing material that indicates their claim is true, so I'm curious how they're going to convince official institutions like the Chartity Commission and the Companies House. (They can't just send an undated text w/o proof it was approved by the members and go: "So, hey, we're being questioned on large payments to eachother, but this random doc says that we totally could, please make it our new official governing doc.")
I think their own sloppyness regarding official business could be harming them now. Following your governing doc and dated, public, documents on what you've been doing is making you accountable, which is not just great for members, but also protects the trustees with a clear paper trail.
At the moment their only clearly documented documents are those at Companies House (dated, signed, registered etc.). If the trustees want to convincingly make the claim that the official, decades-used Articles of Association -in use at the time of payments- were actually NOT the Articles of Association, then I wonder if the written approval they should have gotten in 2013 and 2014 from the Charity Commission to change Articles 4 and 28 might be key for them to prove it. (But if they did prove it, ten there's still a discussion to be had if the Articles of Association in use on their website and officially registered to consult on were not at the time legally those that should have been adhered to, and a question why they didn't consult those when making their choices.)