FINAL BILL REPORT

                 SHB 2320

                         C 167 L 00

                     Synopsis as Enacted

 

Brief Description:  Authorizing and applying electronic notice and proxies.

 

Sponsors:  By House Committee on Judiciary (originally sponsored by Representatives Lantz, Esser and Constantine).

 

House Committee on Judiciary

Senate Committee on Judiciary

 

Background: 

 

A business that is operated for a nonprofit purpose may organize under the Nonprofit Miscellaneous and Mutual Corporations Act.  This act sets forth the powers, duties, rights, and obligations of both the corporation and members or shareholders of the corporation.

 

The corporation is required to notify members of annual and special meetings and matters that the members or shareholders will be voting on, such as amendments to the articles of incorporation, merger plans, sale of corporation property, or dissolution of the corporation.  Any notice sent by the corporation must be in writing.

 

Members and shareholders are generally entitled to vote on corporation matters at annual and special meetings.  A person may vote in person, by mail, or by proxy.  Proxy is the practice of appointing another person to vote or otherwise act for a shareholder or a member at a meeting.  A proxy appointment must be in writing and executed by the shareholder or member, or by his or her attorney.

 

Summary of Bill: 

 

The Nonprofit Miscellaneous and Mutual Corporations Act is amended to authorize

notice and proxy appointments by electronic transmission and to authorize shareholders or members to vote by electronic transmission.

 

Notices that the corporation must send to shareholders and members may be given by electronic transmission if the corporation's bylaws or articles of incorporation permit notice by electronic transmission.

 

A shareholder or member may vote on a corporate matter by electronic transmission.  A person voting by electronic transmission is deemed present for purposes of quorum.

 

A written proxy appointment may be made by a member or shareholder, or his or her agent, by affixing his or her signature to the appointment by any reasonable means, including facsimile signature.

 

A shareholder or member may make a proxy appointment by transmitting or authorizing the transmission of an electronic transmission to the person who will hold the proxy.  A corporation that determines that an electronic proxy appointment is valid must state the information used to make that determination.  A corporation must require a person who holds a proxy received by electronic transmission to provide a copy of the transmission to the corporation.  The corporation must retain the copy for a reasonable period of time after the election.

 

"Electronic transmission" is defined to include any form of electronic communication that does not directly involve the transfer of paper and that is able to be retained, retrieved, and reproduced by the recipient, as long as the transmission includes information that shows that the transmission was authorized by the shareholder, corporation, or member.

 

Votes on Final Passage:

 

House970

Senate440

 

Effective:June 8, 2000