Introduced Version
Senate Bill 374 History
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Key: Green = existing Code. Red = new code to be enacted
Senate Bill No. 374
(By Senator Unger)
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[Introduced February 26, 2013; referred to the Committee on the
Judiciary .]
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A BILL to amend the Code of West Virginia, 1931, as amended, by
adding thereto a new chapter, designated §31F-1-101,
§31F-1-102, §31F-1-103, §31F-2-201, §31F-2-202, §31F-2-203,
§31F-3-301, §31F-4-401, §31F-4-402, §31F-4-403 and §31F-5-501,
all relating to authorizing a corporation to elect to be a
benefit corporation; authorizing a corporation to amend its
articles of incorporation to include a statement that the
corporation is a benefit corporation; authorizing a
corporation to terminate status as a benefit corporation;
authorizing the articles of a benefit corporation to identify
as one of the purposes of the benefit corporation the creation
of specific public benefits; establishing that a director
shall not have a duty to a certain person; providing that a
director shall have immunity from liability under certain
circumstances; requiring a benefit corporation to deliver to each stockholder an annual report; defining terms; and
generally relating to benefit corporations.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:
That the Code of West Virginia, 1931, as amended, be amended
by adding thereto a new chapter, designated §31F-1-101, §31F-1-102,
§31F-1-103, §31F-2-201, §31F-2-202, §31F-2-203, §31F-3-301,
§31F-4-401, §31F-4-402, §31F-4-403 and §31F-5-501, all to read as
follows:
CHAPTER 31F. WEST VIRGINIA BENEFIT CORPORATION ACT.
ARTICLE 1. GENERAL PROVISIONS.
§31F-1-101. Short title.
This chapter is and may be cited as the "West Virginia Benefit
Corporation Act".
§31F-1-102. Definitions.
As used in this article:
(a) "Benefit corporation" means a corporation organized
pursuant to the provisions of this chapter:
(1) That has elected to become subject to this article; and
(2) The status of which as a benefit corporation has not been
terminated under section two hundred three, article two of this
chapter.
(b) "Benefit enforcement proceeding" means any claim or action
brought directly by a benefit corporation, or derivatively on behalf of a benefit corporation, against a director or officer for:
(i) Failure to pursue the general public benefit purpose of the
benefit corporation or any specific public benefit purpose set
forth in its articles of incorporation or bylaws or otherwise
adopted by its board of directors or (ii) a violation of a duty or
standard of conduct under this article.
(c) "General public benefit" means a material positive impact
on society and the environment taken as a whole, as measured by a
third-party standard, from the business and operations of a benefit
corporation.
(d) "Independent" means having no material relationship with
a benefit corporation or a subsidiary of the benefit corporation,
either directly as a shareholder of the benefit corporation or as
a partner, a member, or an owner of a subsidiary of the benefit
corporation or indirectly as a director, an officer, an owner, or
a manager of an entity that has a material relationship with the
benefit corporation or a subsidiary of the benefit corporation. A
material relationship between a person and a benefit corporation or
any of its subsidiaries will be conclusively presumed to exist if:
(1) The person is, or has been within the last three years, an
employee of the benefit corporation or a subsidiary of the benefit
corporation;
(2) An immediate family member of the person is, or has been
within the last three years, an executive officer of the benefit corporation or its subsidiary; or
(3) There is beneficial ownership of five percent or more of
the outstanding shares of the benefit corporation by:
(A) The person; or
(B) An entity:
(i) Of which the person is a director, an officer, or a
manager; or
(ii) In which the person owns beneficially five percent or
more of the outstanding equity interests, which percentage shall be
calculated as if all outstanding rights to acquire equity interests
in the entity had been exercised.
(e) "Specific public benefit" means a benefit that serves one
or more public welfare, religious, charitable, scientific,
literary, or educational purposes, or other purpose or benefit
beyond the strict interest of the shareholders of the benefit
corporation, including:
(1) Providing low-income or underserved individuals or
communities with beneficial products or services;
(2) Promoting economic opportunity for individuals or
communities beyond the creation of jobs in the normal course of
business;
(3) Preserving or improving the environment;
(4) Improving human health;
(5) Promoting the arts, sciences, or advancement of knowledge;
(6) Increasing the flow of capital to entities with a public
benefit purpose; and
(7) Conferring any other particular benefit on society or the
environment.
(f) "Subsidiary" means, in relation to an individual, an
entity in which the individual either: (i) Owns directly or
indirectly equity interests entitled to cast a majority of the
votes entitled to be cast generally in an election of directors or
members of the governing body of the entity; or (ii) otherwise owns
or controls voting or contractual power to exercise effective
governing control of the entity. The percentage of ownership of
equity interests or ownership or control of power to exercise
control shall be calculated as if all outstanding rights to acquire
equity interests in the entity had been exercised.
(g) "Third-party standard" means a recognized standard for
defining, reporting, and assessing corporate social and
environmental performance that:
(1) Is developed by a person that is independent of the
benefit corporation; and
(2) Is transparent because the following information about the
standard is publicly available:
(A) The factors considered when measuring the performance of
a business;
(B) The relative weightings of those factors; and
(C) The identity of the persons that develop and control
changes to the standard and the process by which those changes are
made.
§31F-1-103. Construction of chapter.
(a) This chapter shall apply to all benefit corporations.
(b) The existence of a provision of this chapter does not of
itself create an implication that a contrary or different rule of
law applies to a corporation organized pursuant to the provisions
of this code that is not a benefit corporation. This chapter does
not affect a statute or rule of law that applies to a corporation
that is not a benefit corporation.
(c) The specific provisions of this chapter control over the
general provisions of other chapters of this code.
ARTICLE 2. INCORPORATION.
§31F-2-201. Formation of benefit corporations.
A benefit corporation shall be formed in accordance with
article two, chapter thirty-one-d of this code, and its articles as
initially filed with the Secretary of State or as amended, shall
state that it is a benefit corporation.
§31F-2-202. Election of status after formation.
A corporation that was not formed as a benefit corporation may
become a benefit corporation by amending its articles so that they
contain, in addition to matters required by section two hundred two, article two, chapter thirty-one-d of this code, a statement
that the corporation is a benefit corporation. Any such amendment
to the articles of incorporation shall be adopted in accordance
with the procedures set forth in article ten, chapter thirty-one-d
of this code.
§31F-2-203. Termination of status.
A benefit corporation may terminate its status as such and
cease to be subject to this chapter by amending its articles to
delete the provision required by section two hundred one of this
article to be set forth in the articles of incorporation, which
amendment shall be adopted in accordance with the procedures set
forth in article ten, chapter thirty-one-d of this code.
ARTICLE 3. PURPOSES.
§31F-3-301. Corporate purposes.
(a) A benefit corporation shall have as one of its purposes
the purpose of creating a general public benefit. The articles of
incorporation of a benefit corporation may identify one or more
specific public benefits that it is the purpose of the benefit
corporation to create. A specific public benefit may also be
specified in the bylaws or otherwise adopted by the board of
directors. This purpose is in addition to its purpose under section
three hundred two, article three, chapter thirty-one-d of this
code.
(b) The creation of a general public benefit and one or more specific public benefits, if any, under subsection (a) is in the
best interests of the benefit corporation.
(c) A benefit corporation may amend its articles of
incorporation to add, amend, or delete the identification of a
specific public benefit that it is the purpose of the benefit
corporation to create, which amendment shall be adopted in
accordance with the procedures set forth in article ten, chapter
thirty-one-d of this code.
ARTICLE 4. DIRECTORS AND OFFICERS.
§31F-4-401. Standard of conduct for directors.
(a) Subject to article eight, chapter thirty-one-d of this
code, in discharging the duties of their respective positions and
in considering the best interests of the benefit corporation, the
board of directors, committees of the board, and individual
directors of a benefit corporation:
(1) Shall consider the effects of any corporate action upon:
(A) The shareholders of the benefit corporation;
(B) The employees and workforce of the benefit corporation,
its subsidiaries, and suppliers;
(C) The interests of customers as beneficiaries of the general
or specific public benefit purposes of the benefit corporation;
(D) Community and societal considerations, including those of
each community in which offices or facilities of the benefit
corporation, its subsidiaries, or suppliers are located;
(E) The local and global environment;
(F) The short-term and long-term interests of the benefit
corporation, including benefits that may accrue to the benefit
corporation from its long-term plans and the possibility that these
interests and the general and specific public benefit purposes of
the benefit corporation may be best served by the continued
independence of the benefit corporation; and
(G) The ability of the benefit corporation to accomplish its
general and any specific public benefit purpose;
(2) May consider:
(A) The resources; intent; and past, stated, and potential
conduct of any person seeking to acquire control of the benefit
corporation; and
(B) Other pertinent factors or the interests of any other
person that they deem appropriate; and
(3) Need not give priority to the interests of a particular
person referred to in subdivisions (1) and (2) of this section over
the interests of any other person unless the benefit corporation
has stated its intention to give priority to interests related to
a specific public benefit purpose identified in its articles.
(b) The consideration of interests and factors in the manner
required by subsection (a) does not constitute a violation of
section eight hundred thirty, article eight, chapter thirty-one-d
of this code or a director conflict of interests under section eight hundred sixty, article eight, chapter thirty-one-d of this
code.
(c) In any proceeding brought by or in the right of a benefit
corporation or brought by or on behalf of the shareholders of a
benefit corporation, a director is not personally liable for
monetary damages for:
(1) Any action taken as a director if the director performed
the duties of office in compliance with section eight hundred
thirty, article eight, chapter thirty-one-d of this code and this
section; or
(2) Failure of the benefit corporation to create general
public benefit or any specific public benefit specified in its
articles of incorporation or bylaws or otherwise adopted by the
board of directors.
§31F-4-402. Limitation upon liability of officers.
An officer of a benefit corporation has no liability for
actions taken that the officer believes, in his good faith business
judgment, are consistent with: (i) The general public benefit or
specific public benefit specified in the articles of incorporation
or bylaws or otherwise adopted by the board of directors; and (ii)
the requirements of any third-party standard then in effect for the
corporation.
§31F-4-403. Right of action.
(a) The duties of directors and officers under this chapter, the obligation of a benefit corporation to prepare and make
available the annual benefit report required under section five
hundred one, article five of this chapter, and the general and any
specific public benefit purpose of a benefit corporation may be
enforced only in a benefit enforcement proceeding. No person may
bring an action or assert a claim against a benefit corporation or
its directors or officers with respect to the duties of directors
and officers under this article and the general and any specific
public benefit purpose of the benefit corporation except in a
benefit enforcement proceeding.
(b) A benefit enforcement proceeding may be commenced or
maintained only:
(1) Directly by the benefit corporation; or
(2) Derivatively by:
(A) A shareholder of the benefit corporation;
(B) A director of the benefit corporation; or
(C) Other persons as specified in the articles of
incorporation or bylaws of the benefit corporation.
ARTICLE 5. REPORT.
§31F-5-501. Annual benefit report.
(a) A benefit corporation shall prepare an annual benefit
report that includes all of the following:
(1) A narrative description of:
(A) The ways in which the benefit corporation pursued the general public benefit during the year and the extent to which the
general public benefit was created; and
(B) Both:
(i) The ways in which the benefit corporation pursued any
specific public benefit that the articles of incorporation or
bylaws, or other action taken by the board of directors, state it
is the purpose of the benefit corporation to create; and
(ii) The extent to which that specific public benefit was
created; and
(C) Any circumstances that have hindered the creation by the
benefit corporation of the general or any specific public benefit;
(2) An assessment of the social and environmental performance
of the benefit corporation. The assessment shall be:
(A) Prepared in accordance with a third-party standard
specified in the articles of incorporation, the bylaws, or
otherwise adopted by the board of directors and applied
consistently with any application of that standard in prior benefit
reports; or
(B) Accompanied by an explanation of the reasons for any
inconsistent application; and
(3) Any other information or disclosures that may be required
under any third-party standard adopted by the directors of the
benefit corporation.
(b) The benefit report shall be made available annually to each shareholder of the benefit corporation:
(1) Within one hundred twenty days following the end of the
fiscal year of the benefit corporation; or
(2) At the same time that the benefit corporation delivers any
other annual report to its shareholders.
(c) A benefit corporation shall post its most recent benefit
report on a publicly accessible portion of its Internet website, if
any. If a benefit corporation does not have an Internet website, it
shall make a written or electronic copy of its most recent benefit
report available upon written request from any person. A benefit
corporation is not required to publically disclose to persons other
than its shareholders any proprietary, confidential, or individual
compensation information contained in its benefit report to the
extent that any third-party standard adopted by the directors of
the benefit corporation permits the omission of such information
from public disclosure.
NOTE: The purpose of this bill is to authorize the creation
and recognition of benefit corporations in this state.
This chapter is new; therefore, strike-throughs and
underscoring have been omitted.