National Council for Osteopathic Research – draft constitution
Date of constitution: 01/03/2023 (amended by agreement of the Trustees to conform with the requirements of the Charity Commission).
1. Name
The name of the Charitable Incorporated Organisation is the National Council for Osteopathic Research.
2. National location of principal office
The principal office of the National Council for Osteopathic Research is in England.
3. Objects
The objects of the National Council for Osteopathic Research are:
- To lead and facilitate osteopathic research development in the UK, including developing a comprehensive and cohesive research strategy providing both direction and coordination of osteopathic research.
- To represent the osteopathic profession on matters relating to the osteopathic evidence base and research development. Acting on behalf of the profession, in a research context, to the media, the public and patients, policymakers, the inter-professional research community, other health professions and healthcare regulators.
- To provide a forum for osteopathic educational institutions (OEIs) through which to forge consistent standards in research governance, to share expertise, achieve economies of scale, and foster undergraduate and postgraduate research collaboration. To promote research capacity and scholarship.
- To provide osteopaths, the public and patients, healthcare professionals, and the research and academic community with a recognised, high quality and accessible resource of research-related information concerning the distinctive body of knowledge within osteopathic practice.
- To improve awareness of osteopathic research development amongst osteopaths and the wider community. To establish links and build networks within the research fraternity, nationally and internationally, with a view to development through collaboration. To formulate and foster strategies for attracting funding for osteopathic research development.
- To provide systems relevant for grants governance and research governance for the benefit of all stakeholders.
- To foster and disseminate outputs from osteopathic audit, evaluation, and research activities.
Nothing in this constitution shall authorise an application of the property of the National Council for Osteopathic Research for the purposes which are not charitable in accordance with section 7 of the Charities and Trustee Investment (Scotland) Act 2005 and section 2 of the Charities Act (Northern Ireland) 2008.
4. Powers
The National Council for Osteopathic Research has power to do anything which is calculated to further its objects or is conducive or incidental to doing so. In particular, the National Council for Osteopathic Research’s powers include power to:
- borrow money and to charge the whole or any part of its property as security for the repayment of the money borrowed. The National Council for Osteopathic Research must comply as appropriate with sections 124 and 125 of the Charities Act 2011 if it wishes to mortgage land;
- buy, take on lease or in exchange, hire or otherwise acquire any property and to maintain and equip it for use;
- sell, lease or otherwise dispose of all or any part of the property belonging to the National Council for Osteopathic Research. In exercising this power, the National Council for Osteopathic Research must comply as appropriate with sections 117 and 119-123 of the Charities Act 2011;
- employ and remunerate such staff as are necessary for carrying out the work of the National Council for Osteopathic Research. The National Council for Osteopathic Research may employ or remunerate a charity trustee only to the extent that it is permitted to do so by clause 6 (Benefits and payments to charity trustees and connected persons) and provided it complies with the conditions of those clauses;
- deposit or invest funds, employ a professional fund-manager, and arrange for the investments or other property of the National Council for Osteopathic Research to be held in the name of a nominee, in the same manner and subject to the same conditions as the trustees of a trust are permitted to do by the Trustee Act 2000.
5. Application of income and property
- The income and property of the National Council for Osteopathic Research must be applied solely towards the promotion of the objects.
- A charity trustee is entitled to be reimbursed from the property of the National Council for Osteopathic Research or may pay out of such property reasonable expenses properly incurred by him or her when acting on behalf of the National Council for Osteopathic Research.
- A charity trustee may benefit from trustee indemnity insurance cover purchased at the National Council for Osteopathic Research’s expense in accordance with, and subject to the conditions in, section 189 of the Charities Act 2011.
- None of the income or property of the National Council for Osteopathic Research may be paid or transferred directly or indirectly by way of dividend, bonus or otherwise by way of profit to any member of the National Council for Osteopathic Research. This does not prevent a member who is not also a charity trustee receiving:
- a benefit from the National Council for Osteopathic Research as a beneficiary of the National Council for Osteopathic Research;
- reasonable and proper remuneration for any goods or services supplied to the National Council for Osteopathic Research.
- Nothing in this clause shall prevent a charity trustee or connected person receiving any benefit or payment which is authorised by Clause 6.
6. Benefits and payments to charity trustees and connected persons
- General provisions
No charity trustee or connected person may:
- buy or receive any goods or services from the National Council for Osteopathic Research on terms preferential to those applicable to members of the public;
- sell goods, services, or any interest in land to the National Council for Osteopathic Research;
- be employed by, or receive any remuneration from, the National Council for Osteopathic Research;
- receive any other financial benefit from the National Council for Osteopathic Research;
unless the payment or benefit is permitted by sub-clause (2) of this clause, or authorised by the court or the Charity Commission (“the Commission”). In this clause, a “financial benefit” means a benefit, direct or indirect, which is either money or has a monetary value.
- Scope and powers permitting trustees’ or connected persons’ benefits
- A charity trustee or connected person may receive a benefit from the National Council for Osteopathic Research as a beneficiary of the National Council for Osteopathic Research provided that a majority of the trustees do not benefit in this way.
- A charity trustee or connected person may enter into a contract for the supply of services, or of goods that are supplied in connection with the provision of services, to the National Council for Osteopathic Research where that is permitted in accordance with, and subject to the conditions in, section 185 to 188 of the Charities Act 2011.
- Subject to sub-clause (3) of this clause a charity trustee or connected person may provide the National Council for Osteopathic Research with goods that are not supplied in connection with services provided to the National Council for Osteopathic Research by the charity trustee or connected person.
- A charity trustee or connected person may receive interest on money lent to the National Council for Osteopathic Research at a reasonable and proper rate which must be not more than the Bank of England bank rate (also known as the base rate).
- A charity trustee or connected person may receive rent for premises let by the trustee or connected person to the National Council for Osteopathic Research. The amount of the rent and the other terms of the lease must be reasonable and proper. The charity trustee concerned must withdraw from any meeting at which such a proposal or the rent or other terms of the lease are under discussion.
- A charity trustee or connected person may take part in the normal trading and fundraising activities of the National Council for Osteopathic Research on the same terms as members of the public.
- Payment for supply of goods only – controls
The National Council for Osteopathic Research and its charity trustees may only rely upon the authority provided by sub-clause (2)(c) of this clause if each of the following conditions is satisfied:
- The amount or maximum amount of the payment for the goods is set out in a written agreement between the National Council for Osteopathic Research and the charity trustee or connected person supplying the goods (“the supplier”).
- The amount or maximum amount of the payment for the goods does not exceed what is reasonable in the circumstances for the supply of the goods in question.
- The other charity trustees are satisfied that it is in the best interests of the National Council for Osteopathic Research to contract with the supplier rather than with someone who is not a charity trustee or connected person. In reaching that decision the charity trustees must balance the advantage of contracting with a charity trustee or connected person against the disadvantages of doing so.
- The supplier is absent from the part of any meeting at which there is discussion of the proposal to enter into a contract or arrangement with him or her or it with regard to the supply of goods to the National Council for Osteopathic Research.
- The supplier does not vote on any such matter and is not to be counted when calculating whether a quorum of charity trustees is present at the meeting.
- The reason for their decision is recorded by the charity trustees in the minute book.
- A majority of the charity trustees then in office are not in receipt of remuneration or payments authorised by clause 6.
- In sub-clauses (2) and (3) of this clause:
- “the National Council for Osteopathic Research” includes any company in which the National Council for Osteopathic Research:
- holds more than 50% of the shares; or
- controls more than 50% of the voting rights attached to the shares; or
- has the right to appoint one or more directors to the board of the company;
- “connected person” includes any person within the definition set out in clause 30 (Interpretation);
7. Conflicts of interest and conflicts of loyalty
A charity trustee must:
- declare the nature and extent of any interest, direct or indirect, which he or she has in a proposed transaction or arrangement with the National Council for Osteopathic Research or in any transaction or arrangement entered into by the National Council for Osteopathic Research which has not previously been declared; and
- absent himself or herself from any discussions of the charity trustees in which it is possible that a conflict of interest will arise between his or her duty to act solely in the interests of the National Council for Osteopathic Research and any personal interest (including but not limited to any financial interest).
Any charity trustee absenting himself or herself from any discussions in accordance with this clause must not vote or be counted as part of the quorum in any decision of the charity trustees on the matter.
8. Liability of members to contribute to the assets of the National Council for Osteopathic Research if it is wound up
If the National Council for Osteopathic Research is wound up, the members of the National Council for Osteopathic Research have no liability to contribute to its assets and no personal responsibility for settling its debts and liabilities.
9. Membership of the National Council for Osteopathic Research
- Admission of new members
- Eligibility
Membership of the National Council for Osteopathic Research is open to anyone who is interested in furthering its purposes, and who, by applying for membership, has indicated his, her or its agreement to become a member and acceptance of the duty of members set out in sub-clause (3) of this clause.
A member may be an individual, a corporate body, or an individual or corporate body representing an organisation which is not incorporated.
- Admission procedure
The charity trustees:
- may require applications for membership to be made in any reasonable way that they decide;
- may refuse an application for membership if they believe that it is in the best interests of the National Council for Osteopathic Research for them to do so;
- shall, if they decide to refuse an application for membership, give the applicant their reasons for doing so, within 21 days of the decision being taken, and give the applicant the opportunity to appeal against the refusal; and
- shall give fair consideration to any such appeal, and shall inform the applicant of their decision, but any decision to confirm refusal of the application for membership shall be final.
- Transfer of membership
Membership of the National Council for Osteopathic Research cannot be transferred to anyone else except in the case of an individual or corporate body representing an organisation which is not incorporated, whose membership may be transferred by the unincorporated organisation to a new representative. Such transfer of membership does not take effect until the National Council for Osteopathic Research has received written notification of the transfer.
- Duty of members
It is the duty of each member of the National Council for Osteopathic Research to exercise his or her powers as a member of the National Council for Osteopathic Research in the way he or she decides in good faith would be most likely to further the purposes of the National Council for Osteopathic Research.
- Termination of membership
- Membership of the National Council for Osteopathic Research comes to an end if:
- the member dies, or, in the case of an organisation (or the representative of an organisation) that organisation ceases to exist; or
- the member sends a notice of resignation to the charity trustees; or
- any sum of money owed by the member to the National Council for Osteopathic Research is not paid in full within three months of its falling due; or
- the charity trustees decide that it is in the best interests of the National Council for Osteopathic Research that the member in question should be removed from membership, and pass a resolution to that effect.
- Before the charity trustees take any decision to remove someone from membership of the National Council for Osteopathic Research they must:
- inform the member of the reasons why it is proposed to remove him, her or it from membership;
- give the member at least 21 clear days’ notice in which to make representations to the charity trustees as to why he, she or it should not be removed from membership;
- at a duly constituted meeting of the charity trustees, consider whether or not the member should be removed from membership;
- consider at that meeting any representations which the member makes as to why the member should not be removed; and
- allow the member, or the member’s representative, to make those representations in person at that meeting, if the member so chooses.
- Membership fees
The National Council for Osteopathic Research may require members to pay reasonable membership fees to the National Council for Osteopathic Research.
- Informal or associate (non-voting) membership
- The charity trustees may create associate or other classes of non-voting membership, and may determine the rights and obligations of any such members (including payment of membership fees), and the conditions for admission to, and termination of membership of any such class of members.
- Other references in this constitution to “members” and “membership” do not apply to non-voting members, and non-voting members do not qualify as members for any purpose under the Charities Acts, General Regulations or Dissolution Regulations.
10. Members’ decisions
- General provisions
Except for those decisions that must be taken in a particular way as indicated in sub-clause (4) of this clause, decisions of the members of the National Council for Osteopathic Research may be taken either by vote at a general meeting as provided in sub-clause (2) of this clause or by written resolution as provided in sub-clause (3) of this clause.
- Taking ordinary decisions by vote
Subject to sub-clause (4) of this clause, any decision of the members of the National Council for Osteopathic Research may be taken by means of a resolution at a general meeting. Such a resolution may be passed by a simple majority of votes cast at the meeting (including votes cast by postal or email ballot, proxy votes, and other authorised electronic means).
- Taking ordinary decisions by written resolution without a general meeting
- Subject to sub-clause (4) of this clause, a resolution in writing agreed by a simple majority of all the members who would have been entitled to vote upon it had it been proposed at a general meeting shall be effective, provided that:
- a copy of the proposed resolution has been sent to all the members eligible to vote; and
- a simple majority of members has signified its agreement to the resolution in a document or documents which are received at the principal office within the period of 28 days beginning with the circulation date. The document signifying a member’s agreement must be authenticated by their signature (or in the case of an organisation which is a member, by execution according to its usual procedure), by a statement of their identity accompanying the document, or in such other manner as the National Council for Osteopathic Research has specified.
- The resolution in writing may comprise several copies to which one or more members has signified their agreement.
- Eligibility to vote on the resolution is limited to members who are members of the National Council for Osteopathic Research on the date when the proposal is first circulated in accordance with paragraph above.
- Not less than 10% of the members of the National Council for Osteopathic Research may request the charity trustees to make a proposal for decision by the members.
- The charity trustees must within 21 days of receiving such a request comply with it if:
- The proposal is not frivolous or vexatious, and does not involve the publication of defamatory material;
- The proposal is stated with sufficient clarity to enable effect to be given to it if it is agreed by the members; and
- Effect can lawfully be given to the proposal if it is so agreed.
- (f) Sub-clauses (a) to (c) of this clause apply to a proposal made at the request of members.
- Decisions that must be taken in a particular way
- Any decision to remove a trustee must be taken in accordance with clause 15(2).
- Any decision to amend this constitution must be taken in accordance with clause 28 of this constitution (Amendment of Constitution).
- Any decision to wind up or dissolve the National Council for Osteopathic Research must be taken in accordance with clause 29 of this constitution (Voluntary winding up or dissolution). Any decision to amalgamate or transfer the undertaking of the National Council for Osteopathic Research to one or more other Charitable Incorporated Organisations must be taken in accordance with the provisions of the Charities Act 2011.
11. General meetings of members
- Types of general meeting
There must be an annual general meeting (AGM) of the members of the National Council for Osteopathic Research. The first AGM must be held within 18 months of the registration of the National Council for Osteopathic Research, and subsequent AGMs must be held at intervals of not more than 15 months. The AGM must receive the annual statement of accounts (duly audited or examined where applicable) and the trustees’ annual report, and must elect trustees as required under clause 13. Paper and virtual general meetings are both permitted.
Other general meetings of the members of the National Council for Osteopathic Research may be held at any time.
All general meetings must be held in accordance with the following provisions.
- Calling general meetings
- The charity trustees:
- must call the annual general meeting of the members of the National Council for Osteopathic Research in accordance with sub-clause of this clause, and identify it as such in the notice of the meeting; and
- may call any other general meeting of the members at any time.
- The charity trustees must, within 21 days, call a general meeting of the members of the National Council for Osteopathic Research if:
- they receive a request to do so from at least 10% of the members of the National Council for Osteopathic Research; and
- the request states the general nature of the business to be dealt with at the meeting, and authenticated by the member(s) making the request.
- If, at the time of any such request, there has not been any general meeting of the members of the National Council for Osteopathic Research for more than 12 months, then sub-clause (b)(i) of this clause shall have effect as if 5% were substituted for 10%.
- Any such request may include particulars of a resolution that may properly be proposed, and is intended to be proposed, at the meeting.
- A resolution may only properly be proposed if it is lawful, and is not defamatory, frivolous or vexatious.
- Any general meeting called by the charity trustees at the request of the members of the National Council for Osteopathic Research must be held within 28 days from the date on which it is called.
- If the charity trustees fail to comply with this obligation to call a general meeting at the request of its members, then the members who requested the meeting may themselves call a general meeting.
- A general meeting called in this way must be held not more than 3 months after the date when the members first requested the meeting.
- The National Council for Osteopathic Research must reimburse any reasonable expenses incurred by the members calling a general meeting by reason of the failure of the charity trustees to duly call the meeting, but the National Council for Osteopathic Research shall be entitled to be indemnified by the charity trustees who were responsible for such failure.
- Notice of general meetings
- The charity trustees, or, as the case may be, the relevant members of the National Council for Osteopathic Research, must give at least 14 clear days’ notice of any general meeting to all of the members, and to any charity trustee of the National Council for Osteopathic Research who is not a member.
- If it is agreed by not less than 90% of all members of the National Council for Osteopathic Research, any resolution may be proposed and passed at the meeting even though the requirements of sub-clause (3) (a) of this clause have not been met. This sub-clause does not apply where a specified period of notice is strictly required by another clause in this constitution, by the Charities Act 2011 or by the General Regulations.
- The notice of any general meeting must:
- state the time and date of the meeting;
- give the address at which the meeting is to take place, either the online address or the location if in-person;
- give particulars of any resolution which is to be moved at the meeting, and of the general nature of any other business to be dealt with at the meeting; and
- if a proposal to alter the constitution of the National Council for Osteopathic Research is to be considered at the meeting, include the text of the proposed alteration;
- include, with the notice for the AGM, the annual statement of accounts and trustees’ annual report, details of persons standing for election or re-election as trustee, or where allowed under clause 22 (Use of electronic communication), details of where the information may be found on the National Council for Osteopathic Research’s website.
- Proof that an envelope containing a notice was properly addressed, prepaid and posted; or that an electronic form of notice was properly addressed and sent, shall be conclusive evidence that the notice was given. Notice shall be deemed to be given 48 hours after it was posted or sent. General Regulations apply in respect of all electronic communications covered by these rules.
- The proceedings of a meeting shall not be invalidated because a member who was entitled to receive notice of the meeting did not receive it because of accidental omission by the National Council for Osteopathic Research.
- Chairing of general meetings
The person nominated as chair by the charity trustees under clause 19(2) (Chairing of meetings), shall, if present at the general meeting and willing to act, preside as chair of the meeting. Subject to that, the members of the National Council for Osteopathic Research who are present at a general meeting shall elect a chair to preside at the meeting.
- Quorum at general meetings
- No business may be transacted at any general meeting of the members of the National Council for Osteopathic Research unless a quorum is present when the meeting starts.
- Subject to the following provisions, the quorum for general meetings shall be the greater of 5% or three members. An organisation represented by a person present at the meeting in accordance with sub-clause (7) of this clause, is counted as being present in person.
- If the meeting has been called by or at the request of the members and a quorum is not present within 15 minutes of the starting time specified in the notice of the meeting, the meeting is closed.
- If the meeting has been called in any other way and a quorum is not present within 15 minutes of the starting time specified in the notice of the meeting, the chair must adjourn the meeting. The date, time and place at which the meeting will resume must either be announced by the chair or be notified to the National Council for Osteopathic Research’s members at least seven clear days before the date on which it will resume.
- If a quorum is not present within 15 minutes of the start time of the adjourned meeting, the member or members present at the meeting constitute a quorum.
- If at any time during the meeting a quorum ceases to be present, the meeting may discuss issues and make recommendations to the trustees but may not make any decisions. If decisions are required which must be made by a meeting of the members, the meeting must be adjourned.
- Voting at general meetings
- Any decision other than one falling within clause 10(4) (Decisions that must be taken in a particular way) shall be taken by a simple majority of votes cast at the meeting (including proxy and postal votes). Every member has one vote unless otherwise provided in the rights of a particular class of membership under this constitution.
- A resolution put to the vote of a meeting shall be decided on a show of hands, unless (before or on the declaration of the result of the show of hands) a poll is duly demanded. A poll may be demanded by the chair or by at least 10% of the members present in person or by proxy at the meeting.
- A poll demanded on the election of a person to chair the meeting or on a question of adjournment must be taken immediately. A poll on any other matter shall be taken, and the result of the poll shall be announced, in such manner as the chair of the meeting shall decide, provided that the poll must be taken, and the result of the poll announced, within 30 days of the demand for the poll.
- A poll may be taken:
- at the meeting at which it was demanded; or
- at some other time and place specified by the chair; or
- through the use of postal or electronic communications.
- In the event of an equality of votes, whether on a show of hands or on a poll, the chair of the meeting shall have a second, or casting vote.
- Any objection to the qualification of any voter must be raised at the meeting at which the vote is cast and the decision of the chair of the meeting shall be final.
- Proxy voting
- (a) Any member of the National Council for Osteopathic Research may appoint another person as a proxy to exercise all or any of that member’s rights to attend, speak and vote at a general meeting of the National Council for Osteopathic Research. Proxies must be appointed by a notice in writing (a “proxy notice”) which:
- states the name and address of the member appointing the proxy;
- identifies the person appointed to be that member’s proxy and the general meeting in relation to which that person is appointed;
- is signed by or on behalf of the member appointing the proxy, or is authenticated in such manner as the National Council for Osteopathic Research may determine; and
- is delivered to the National Council for Osteopathic Research in accordance with the constitution and any instructions contained in the notice of the general meeting to which they relate.
- The National Council for Osteopathic Research may require proxy notices to be delivered in a particular form and may specify different forms for different purposes.
- Proxy notices may (but do not have to) specify how the proxy appointed under them is to vote (or that the proxy is to abstain from voting) on one or more resolutions.
- Unless a proxy notice indicates otherwise, it must be treated as:
- allowing the person appointed under it as a proxy discretion as to how to vote on any ancillary or procedural resolutions put to the meeting; and
- appointing that person as a proxy in relation to any adjournment of the general meeting to which it relates as well as the meeting itself.
- A member who is entitled to attend, speak or vote (either on a show of hands or on a poll) at a general meeting remains so entitled in respect of that meeting or any adjournment of it, even though a valid proxy notice has been delivered to the National Council for Osteopathic Research by or on behalf of that member.
- An appointment under a proxy notice may be revoked by delivering to the National Council for Osteopathic Research a notice in writing given by or on behalf of the member by whom or on whose behalf the proxy notice was given.
- A notice revoking a proxy appointment only takes effect if it is delivered before the start of the meeting or adjourned meeting to which it relates.
- If a proxy notice is not signed or authenticated by the member appointing the proxy, it must be accompanied by written evidence that the person who signed or authenticated it on that member’s behalf had authority to do so.
- Postal Voting
- The National Council for Osteopathic Research may, if the charity trustees so decide, allow the members to vote by post or other authorised electronic means to elect charity trustees or to make a decision on any matter that is being decided at a general meeting of the members.
- If postal and/or the use of any authorised electronic means voting is to be allowed on a matter, the National Council for Osteopathic Research must send to members of the National Council for Osteopathic Research not less than 14 days before the deadline for receipt of votes cast in this way:
- a notice by email, if the member has agreed to receive notices in this way under clause 22 (Use of electronic communication, including an explanation of the purpose of the vote and the voting procedure to be followed by the member, and a voting form capable of being returned by email or post to the National Council for Osteopathic Research, containing details of the resolution being put to a vote, or of the candidates for election, as applicable;
- a notice by post to all other members, including a written explanation of the purpose of the postal vote and the voting procedure to be followed by the member; and a postal voting form containing details of the resolution being put to a vote, or of the candidates for election, as applicable.
- The voting procedure must require all forms returned by post to be in an envelope with the member’s name and signature, and nothing else, on the outside, inside another envelope addressed to ‘National Council for Osteopathic Research’, at the National Council for Osteopathic Research’s principal office or such other postal address as is specified in the voting procedure.
- The voting procedure for votes cast by the use of any authorised electronic means must require the member’s name to be at the top of the communication, and the electronic mean must be authenticated in the manner specified in the voting procedure.
- Authorised electronic means votes must be returned electronically.
- The voting procedure must specify the closing date and time for receipt of votes, and must state that any votes received after the closing date or not complying with the voting procedure will be invalid and not be counted.
- A member who has cast a valid postal or authorised electronic mean vote must not vote at the meeting, and must not be counted in the quorum for any part of the meeting on which he, she or it has already cast a valid vote. A member who has cast an invalid vote by post or any authorised electronic means is allowed to vote at the meeting and counts towards the quorum.
- Votes cast by post or authorised electronic means must be counted before the meeting at which the vote is to be taken.
- Any dispute about the conduct of a postal or electronic ballot must be referred initially to a panel set up by the charity trustees, to consist of two trustees and two persons independent of the National Council for Osteopathic Research. If the dispute cannot be satisfactorily resolved by the panel, it must be referred to the Electoral Reform Society.
- Representation of organisations and corporate members
An organisation or a corporate body that is a member of the National Council for Osteopathic Research may, in accordance with its usual decision-making process, authorise a person to act as its representative at any general meeting of the National Council for Osteopathic Research.
The representative is entitled to exercise the same powers on behalf of the organisation or corporate body as the organisation or corporate body could exercise as an individual member of the National Council for Osteopathic Research.
- Adjournment of meetings
The chair may with the consent of a meeting at which a quorum is present (and shall if so directed by the meeting) adjourn the meeting to another time and/or place. No business may be transacted at an adjourned meeting except business which could properly have been transacted at the original meeting.
12. Charity trustees
- Functions and duties of charity trustees
The charity trustees shall manage the affairs of the National Council for Osteopathic Research and may for that purpose exercise all the powers of the National Council for Osteopathic Research. It is the duty of each charity trustee:
- to exercise his or her powers and to perform his or her functions as a trustee of the National Council for Osteopathic Research in the way he or she decides in good faith would be most likely to further the purposes of the National Council for Osteopathic Research; and
- to exercise, in the performance of those functions, such care and skill as is reasonable in the circumstances having regard in particular to:
- any special knowledge or experience that he or she has or holds himself or herself out as having; and
- if he or she acts as a charity trustee of the National Council for Osteopathic Research in the course of a business or profession, to any special knowledge or experience that it is reasonable to expect of a person acting in the course of that kind of business or profession.
- Eligibility for trusteeship
- Every charity trustee must be a natural person.
- No one may be appointed as a charity trustee:
- if he or she is under the age of 16 years; or
- if he or she would automatically cease to hold office under the provisions of clause 15(1)(f).
- No one is entitled to act as a charity trustee whether on appointment or on any re-appointment until he or she has expressly acknowledged, in whatever way the charity trustees decide, his or her acceptance of the office of charity trustee.
- Number of charity trustees
- There must be at least three charity trustees. If the number falls below this minimum, the remaining trustee or trustees may act only to call a meeting of the charity trustees or appoint a new charity trustee.
- There is no maximum number of charity trustees that may be appointed to the National Council for Osteopathic Research.
13. Appointment of charity trustees
- Nominated charity trustees
- The following appointing bodies may each appoint one charity trustee:
- The Institute of Osteopathy
- The Council of Osteopathic Educational Institutions
- The General Osteopathic Council
- The Osteopathic Foundation.
- Any appointment must be made at a meeting held according to the ordinary practice of the appointing body.
- Each appointment must be for a term of three years.
- The appointment will be effective from the later of:
- the date of the vacancy; or
- the date on which the National Council for Osteopathic Research is informed of the appointment.
- The person appointed need not be a member of the appointing body.
- A trustee appointed by the appointing body has the same duty under Clause 12(1) as the other charity trustees to act in the way he or she decides in good faith would be most likely to further the purposes of the National Council for Osteopathic Research.
- Elected charity trustees
- The members or the charity trustees may at any time decide to appoint a new charity trustee, whether in place of a charity trustee who has retired or been removed in accordance with clause 15 (Retirement and removal of charity trustees), or as an additional charity trustee, provided that the limit specified in clause 12(3) on the number of charity trustees would not as a result be exceeded.
- One or more charity trustees may be elected by the general meeting of the members of the National Council for Osteopathic Research to serve for a term of no more than three years.
14. Information for new charity trustees
The charity trustees will make available to each new charity trustee, on or before his or her first appointment:
- a copy of this constitution and any amendments made to it; and
- a copy of the National Council for Osteopathic Research’s latest trustees’ annual report and statement of accounts.
15. Retirement and removal of charity trustees
- A charity trustee ceases to hold office if he or she:
- retires by notifying the National Council for Osteopathic Research in writing (but only if enough charity trustees will remain in office when the notice of resignation takes effect to form a quorum for meetings);
- is absent without the permission of the charity trustees from all their meetings held within a period of six months and the trustees resolve that his or her office be vacated;
- dies;
- in the written opinion, given to the company, of a registered medical practitioner treating that person, has become physically or mentally incapable of acting as a director and may remain so for more than three months;
- is removed by the members of the National Council for Osteopathic Research in accordance with sub-clause (2) of this clause;
- is disqualified from acting as a charity trustee by virtue of section 178-180 of the Charities Act 2011 (or any statutory re-enactment or modification of that provision);
- has at any time been convicted of an offence involving dishonesty or deception in the United Kingdom and the conviction is not a spent conviction;
- has at any time been convicted of an offence in the United Kingdom, and the final outcome of the proceedings was a sentence of imprisonment or detention, and the conviction is not a spent conviction;
- has at any time been removed from the office of charity trustee or trustee for a charity by an order made by the Charity Commissioners, the Charity Commission, the Charity Commission for Northern Ireland or the High Court on the grounds of any misconduct or mismanagement in the administration of the charity for which the person was responsible or to which the person was privy, or which the person by their conduct contributed to or facilitated, or under section 7 of the Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions) (Scotland) Act 1990(1) (powers of Court of Session to deal with management of charities), or section 34(5)(e) of the Charities and Trustee Investment (Scotland) Act 2005(2) (powers of the Court of Session), from being concerned with the management or control of anybody;
- has at any time been removed from office as the chair, or as a member, convenor or director, of any public body on the grounds, in terms, that it was not in the interests of, or conducive to the good management of, that body that the person should continue to hold that office;
- at any time has been adjudged bankrupt or sequestration of the person’s estate has been awarded, and the person has not been discharged, or the person is the subject of a bankruptcy restrictions order or an interim bankruptcy restrictions order under Schedule 4A to the Insolvency Act 1986(3) or Schedule 2A of the Insolvency (Northern Ireland) Order 1989(4) (which relate to bankruptcy restrictions orders and undertakings);
- has at any time made a composition or arrangement with, or granted a trust deed for, the person’s creditors and the person has not been discharged in respect of it;
- is subject to
- disqualification order or disqualification undertaking under the Company Directors Disqualification Act 1986(5),
- a disqualification order under Part 2 of the Companies (Northern Ireland) Order 1989(6) (company directors disqualification),
- a disqualification order or disqualification undertaking under the Company Directors Disqualification (Northern Ireland) Order 2002(7), or
- an order made under section 429(2) of the Insolvency Act 1986(8) (disabilities on revocation of a county court administration order);
- has been included by the Independent Barring Board in a barred list (within the meaning of the Safeguarding Vulnerable Groups Act 2006(9) or the Safeguarding Vulnerable Groups (Northern Ireland) Order 2007(10)), or the Scottish Ministers in the children’s list or the adults’ list (within the meaning of the Protection of Vulnerable Groups (Scotland) Act 2007(11));
- has at any time been subject to any investigation or proceedings concerning the person’s fitness to practise by any licensing body, the final outcome of which was the person’s suspension from a register held by the licensing body, and that suspension has not been terminated, the person’s erasure from a register held by the licensing body or a decision that had the effect of preventing the person from practising the profession licensed or regulated by the licensing body, or a decision that had the effect of only allowing the person to practise that profession subject to conditions, and those conditions have not been lifted;
- has at any time been subject to any investigation or proceedings concerning the person’s fitness to practise by the General Council, in the course of which or where the final outcome was that the person’s registration in the register was suspended (including by an interim suspension order) and the order imposing that suspension has not been lifted, the person’s name was removed from the register (for a reason connected to the person’s fitness to practise), or the person’s registration in the register was made subject to an order imposing conditions with which the person must comply (including by an interim conditions of practice order) and that order has not been lifted;
- has at any time been subject to any investigation or proceedings relating to an allegation that the person’s entry in the register was fraudulently procured in the course of which the person’s registration was suspended and that suspension has not been terminated, or the final outcome of which was the removal of the person’s name from the register;
- is or has been subject to any investigation or proceedings concerning the person’s fitness to practise by any licensing body, or the General Council, and the Privy Council is satisfied that the person’s membership of the General Council would be liable to undermine public confidence in the regulation of registered osteopaths; or
- has at any time been convicted of an offence elsewhere than in the United Kingdom and the Privy Council is satisfied that the person’s membership of the General Council would be liable to undermine public confidence in the regulation of registered osteopaths.
- is removed as a charity trustee at the instigation of their representative stakeholder.
- A charity trustee shall be removed from office if a resolution to remove that trustee is proposed at a general meeting of the members called for that purpose and properly convened in accordance with clause 11, and the resolution is passed by a two-thirds majority of votes cast at the meeting.
- A resolution to remove a charity trustee in accordance with this clause shall not take effect unless the individual concerned has been given at least 14 clear days’ notice in writing that the resolution is to be proposed, specifying the circumstances alleged to justify removal from office, and has been given a reasonable opportunity of making oral and/or written representations to the members of the National Council for Osteopathic Research.
16. Reappointment of charity trustees
Any person who retires as a charity trustee by rotation or by giving notice to the National Council for Osteopathic Research is eligible for reappointment.
17. Taking of decisions by charity trustees
Any decision may be taken either:
- at a meeting of the charity trustees; or
- by resolution in writing or electronic form agreed by all of the charity trustees, which may comprise either a single document or several documents containing the text of the resolution in like form to each of which one or more charity trustees has signified their agreement.
18. Delegation by charity trustees
- The charity trustees may delegate any of their powers or functions to a committee or committees, and, if they do, they must determine the terms and conditions on which the delegation is made. The charity trustees may at any time alter those terms and conditions, or revoke the delegation.
- This power is in addition to the power of delegation in the General Regulations and any other power of delegation available to the charity trustees, but is subject to the following requirements:
- a committee may consist of two or more persons, but at least one member of each committee must be a charity trustee;
- the acts and proceedings of any committee must be brought to the attention of the charity trustees as a whole as soon as is reasonably practicable; and
- the charity trustees shall from time to time review the arrangements which they have made for the delegation of their powers.
19. Meetings and proceedings of charity trustees
- Calling meetings
- Any charity trustee may call a meeting of the charity trustees.
- Subject to that, the charity trustees shall decide how their meetings are to be called, and what notice is required.
- Chairing of meetings
The charity trustees may appoint one of their number to chair their meetings and may at any time revoke such appointment. If no-one has been so appointed, or if the person appointed is unwilling to preside or is not present within 10 minutes after the time of the meeting, the charity trustees present may appoint one of their number to chair that meeting.
- Procedure at meetings
- No decision shall be taken at a meeting unless a quorum is present at the time when the decision is taken. The quorum is two charity trustees, or the number nearest to one third of the total number of charity trustees, whichever is greater, or such larger number as the charity trustees may decide from time to time. A charity trustee shall not be counted in the quorum present when any decision is made about a matter upon which he or she is not entitled to vote.
- Questions arising at a meeting shall be decided by a majority of those eligible to vote.
- In the case of an equality of votes, the chair shall have a second or casting vote.
- Participation in meetings by electronic means
- A meeting may be held by suitable electronic means agreed by the charity trustees in which each participant may communicate with all the other participants.
- Any charity trustee participating at a meeting by suitable electronic means agreed by the charity trustees in which a participant or participants may communicate with all the other participants shall qualify as being present at the meeting.
- Meetings held by electronic means must comply with rules for meetings, including chairing and the taking of minutes.
20. Saving provisions
- Subject to sub-clause (2) of this clause, all decisions of the charity trustees, or of a committee of charity trustees, shall be valid notwithstanding the participation in any vote of a charity trustee:
- who was disqualified from holding office;
- who had previously retired or who had been obliged by the constitution to vacate office;
- who was not entitled to vote on the matter, whether by reason of a conflict of interest or otherwise;
if, without the vote of that charity trustee and that charity trustee being counted in the quorum, the decision has been made by a majority of the charity trustees at a quorate meeting.
- Sub-clause (1) of this clause does not permit a charity trustee to keep any benefit that may be conferred upon him or her by a resolution of the charity trustees or of a committee of charity trustees if, but for clause (1), the resolution would have been void, or if the charity trustee has not complied with clause 7 (Conflicts of interest).
21. Execution of documents
- The National Council for Osteopathic Research shall execute documents by signature.
- A document is validly executed by signature if it is signed by at least two of the charity trustees.
22. Use of electronic communications
- General
The National Council for Osteopathic Research will comply with the requirements of the Communications Provisions in the General Regulations and in particular:
- the requirement to provide within 21 days to any member on request a hard copy of any document or information sent to the member otherwise than in hard copy form;
- any requirements to provide information to the Commission in a particular form or manner.
- holding proxies and meetings.
- To the National Council for Osteopathic Research
Any member or charity trustee of the National Council for Osteopathic Research may communicate electronically with the National Council for Osteopathic Research to an address specified by the National Council for Osteopathic Research for the purpose, so long as the communication is authenticated in a manner which is satisfactory to the National Council for Osteopathic Research.
- By the National Council for Osteopathic Research
- Any member or charity trustee of the National Council for Osteopathic Research, by providing the National Council for Osteopathic Research with his or her email address or similar, is taken to have agreed to receive communications from the National Council for Osteopathic Research in electronic form at that address, unless the member has indicated to the National Council for Osteopathic Research his or her unwillingness to receive such communications in that form.
- The charity trustees may, subject to compliance with any legal requirements, by means of publication on its website:
- provide the members with the notice referred to in clause 11(3) (Notice of general meetings);
- give charity trustees notice of their meetings in accordance with clause 19(1) (Calling meetings); and
- submit any proposal to the members or charity trustees for decision by written resolution or postal vote in accordance with the National Council for Osteopathic Research’s powers under clause 10 (Members’ decisions), 10(3) (Decisions taken by resolution in writing), or the provisions for postal voting, clause 11(8).
- The charity trustees must:
- take reasonable steps to ensure that members and charity trustees are promptly notified of the publication of any such notice or proposal;
- send any such notice or proposal in hard copy form to any member or charity trustee who has not consented to receive communications in electronic form.
23. Keeping of Registers
The National Council for Osteopathic Research must comply with its obligations under the General Regulations in relation to the keeping of, and provision of access to, registers of its members and charity trustees.
24. Minutes
The charity trustees must keep minutes of all:
- appointments of officers made by the charity trustees;
- proceedings at general meetings of the National Council for Osteopathic Research;
- meetings of the charity trustees and committees of charity trustees including:
- the names of the trustees present at the meeting;
- the decisions made at the meetings; and
- where appropriate the reasons for the decisions;
- decisions made by the charity trustees otherwise than in meetings.
25. Accounting records, accounts, annual reports and returns, register maintenance
- The charity trustees must comply with the requirements of the Charities Act 2011 with regard to the keeping of accounting records, to the preparation and scrutiny of statements of accounts, and to the preparation of annual reports and returns. The statements of accounts, reports and returns must be sent to the Charity Commission, regardless of the income of the National Council for Osteopathic Research, within 10 months of the financial year end.
- The charity trustees must comply with their obligation to inform the Commission within 28 days of any change in the particulars of the National Council for Osteopathic Research entered on the Central Register of Charities.
26. Rules
The charity trustees may from time to time make such reasonable and proper rules or bye laws as they may deem necessary or expedient for the proper conduct and management of the National Council for Osteopathic Research, but such rules or bye laws must not be inconsistent with any provision of this constitution. Copies of any such rules or bye laws currently in force must be made available to any member of the National Council for Osteopathic Research on request.
27. Disputes
If a dispute arises between members of the National Council for Osteopathic Research about the validity or propriety of anything done by the members under this constitution, and the dispute cannot be resolved by agreement, the parties to the dispute must first try in good faith to settle the dispute by mediation before resorting to litigation.
28. Amendment of constitution
As provided by clauses 224-227 of the Charities Act 2011:
- This constitution can only be amended:
- by resolution agreed in writing by all members of the National Council for Osteopathic Research; or
- by a resolution passed by a 75% majority of votes cast at a general meeting of the members of the National Council for Osteopathic Research.
- Any alteration of clause 3 (Objects), clause 29 (Voluntary winding up or dissolution), this clause, or of any provision where the alteration would provide authorisation for any benefit to be obtained by charity trustees or members of the National Council for Osteopathic Research or persons connected with them, requires the prior written consent of the Charity Commission.
- No amendment that is inconsistent with the provisions of the Charities Act 2011 or the General Regulations shall be valid.
- A copy of any resolution altering the constitution, together with a copy of the National Council for Osteopathic Research’s constitution as amended, must be sent to the Commission within 15 days from the date on which the resolution is passed. The amendment does not take effect until it has been recorded in the Register of Charities.
29. Voluntary winding up or dissolution
- As provided by the Dissolution Regulations, the National Council for Osteopathic Research may be dissolved by resolution of its members. Any decision by the members to wind up or dissolve the National Council for Osteopathic Research can only be made:
- at a general meeting of the members of the National Council for Osteopathic Research called in accordance with clause 11 (Meetings of Members), of which not less than 14 days’ notice has been given to those eligible to attend and vote:
- by a resolution passed by a 75% majority of those voting, or
- by a resolution passed by decision taken without a vote and without any expression of dissent in response to the question put to the general meeting; or
- by a resolution agreed in writing by all members of the National Council for Osteopathic Research.
- Subject to the payment of all the National Council for Osteopathic Research’s debts:
- Any resolution for the winding up of the National Council for Osteopathic Research, or for the dissolution of the National Council for Osteopathic Research without winding up, may contain a provision directing how any remaining assets of the National Council for Osteopathic Research shall be applied.
- If the resolution does not contain such a provision, the charity trustees must decide how any remaining assets of the National Council for Osteopathic Research shall be applied.
- In either case the remaining assets must be applied for charitable purposes the same as or similar to those of the National Council for Osteopathic Research.
- The National Council for Osteopathic Research must observe the requirements of the Dissolution Regulations in applying to the Commission for the National Council for Osteopathic Research to be removed from the Register of Charities, and in particular:
- the charity trustees must send with their application to the Commission:
- a copy of the resolution passed by the members of the National Council for Osteopathic Research;
- a declaration by the charity trustees that any debts and other liabilities of the National Council for Osteopathic Research have been settled or otherwise provided for in full; and
- a statement by the charity trustees setting out the way in which any property of the National Council for Osteopathic Research has been or is to be applied prior to its dissolution in accordance with this constitution;
(b) the charity trustees must ensure that a copy of the application is sent within seven days to every member and employee of the National Council for Osteopathic Research, and to any charity trustee of the National Council for Osteopathic Research who was not privy to the application.
- If the National Council for Osteopathic Research is to be wound up or dissolved in any other circumstances, the provisions of the Dissolution Regulations must be followed.
30. Interpretation
In this constitution:
“connected person” means:
- a child, parent, grandchild, grandparent, brother or sister of the charity trustee;
- the spouse or civil partner of the charity trustee or of any person falling within sub-clause (a) above;
- a person carrying on business in partnership with the charity trustee or with any person falling within subclause (a) or (b) above;
- an institution which is controlled –
- by the charity trustee or any connected person falling within sub-clause (a), (b), or (c) above; or
- by two or more persons falling within sub-clause (d)(i), when taken together
- a body corporate in which:
- the charity trustee or any connected person falling within sub-clauses (a) to (c) has a substantial interest; or
- two or more persons falling within sub-clause (e)(i) who, when taken together, have a substantial interest.
Section 118 of the Charities Act 2011 applies for the purposes of interpreting the terms used in this constitution.
“General Regulations” means the Charitable Incorporated Organisations (General) Regulations 2012.
“Dissolution Regulations” means the Charitable Incorporated Organisations (Insolvency and Dissolution) Regulations 2012.
The “Communications Provisions” means the Communications Provisions in Part 10, Chapter 4 of the General Regulations.
“charity trustee” means a charity trustee of the National Council for Osteopathic Research.
A “poll” means a counted vote or ballot, usually (but not necessarily)
in writing.
“writing” includes electronic and digital communications capable of being reduced to writing intelligible to reasonably literate persons.
“signature” captures electronic signatures.