The New Nonstock Corporation Law
By Garth Seehawer
 Editor's Note: 
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Editor's Note: 
To view Wisconsin statutory materials referenced in this article you 
must have and/or install Adobe 
Acrobat Reader 3.0 on your computer.
 On Jan. 1, 1999, a new Nonstock Corporation 
statute, Chapter 181 of the Wisconsin Statutes, will 
become effective. For most Wisconsin nonstock corporations, it will be a 
nonevent. For others, it will be a welcome step from an "ancient" 
statute to a modern, leading edge, corporation law. For foreign nonstock 
corporations (those incorporated in another state) active in Wisconsin, 
it will bring a requirement to obtain a certificate of authority to do 
business in this state. For some foreign nonstock corporations, whether 
active in Wisconsin or not, the new law's advantages over statutes in 
their home states may be a reason to become Wisconsin corporations. For 
those corporations, the new domestication provisions will provide a 
simple way to change their "citizenship" from their home state to 
Wisconsin.
On Jan. 1, 1999, a new Nonstock Corporation 
statute, Chapter 181 of the Wisconsin Statutes, will 
become effective. For most Wisconsin nonstock corporations, it will be a 
nonevent. For others, it will be a welcome step from an "ancient" 
statute to a modern, leading edge, corporation law. For foreign nonstock 
corporations (those incorporated in another state) active in Wisconsin, 
it will bring a requirement to obtain a certificate of authority to do 
business in this state. For some foreign nonstock corporations, whether 
active in Wisconsin or not, the new law's advantages over statutes in 
their home states may be a reason to become Wisconsin corporations. For 
those corporations, the new domestication provisions will provide a 
simple way to change their "citizenship" from their home state to 
Wisconsin.
A nonstock corporation is a corporation without stock. It may or may 
not have members. It must have directors. Nonstock corporations are the 
preferred form of corporation for nonprofit entities, volunteer-type 
organizations, and other organizations where individual ownership is not 
desired. Stock corporations always require investment and ownership and 
usually are for profit.
The principal goals of the State Bar subcommittee that drafted 
Chapter 181 were to parallel Wis. Stat. 
Chapter 180, the business corporation statute, to the extent 
appropriate, to avoid disruption of existing nonstock corporations, and 
to create a nonstock corporation law to match the realities of today's 
nonstock corporations with the flexibility to adapt to tomorrow.
Chapter 
181 was last revised in 1953. The world was very different then. At 
that time, the neighborhood grocery store was about the size of the soda 
section in today's supermarket and the few supermarkets that existed 
were a couple thousand square feet. Almost all nonstock organizations 
were like the grocer - small and stand-alone. Even hospitals, usually 
the most complex nonstock organizations in a community, consisted of one 
corporation, standing by itself, having at most a few million dollars in 
revenues with a few hundred employees. For many nonstock corporations, 
that world has not changed much. They are still small, stand-alone, with 
low revenues and few employees. For others, that world vanished decades 
ago, and their ability to adapt to today's realities has been 
handicapped by the existing nonstock corporation statute. The new 
Nonstock Corporation law recognizes both worlds. It maintains existing 
law as the default law for those nonstock corporations that do not need, 
or want, to change. It removes the straitjacket for those corporations 
that do need to change.
Simplifying practice
The numbering and subject matter of the sections of Chapter 
181 parallel Chapter 180. (For example: section 180.0103 is 
"Definitions" and section 181.0103 is "Definitions.") Sections in 
Chapter 181 that do not have parallel provisions in Chapter 180 are 
numbered so that they will not disrupt the parallelism.
Filing requirements and the handling of corporate documents by the 
Department of Financial Institutions are essentially identical for 
nonstock corporations as for business corporations. There has been 
divergence since the revision of Chapter 
180. For example, business corporation articles did not have to be 
filed with the register of deeds; nonstock articles did. Under new Chapter 
181, nonstock articles will no longer be recorded with the register 
of deeds.1
Most nonstock corporations
Most Wisconsin nonstock corporations will not need to do anything in 
the transition to the new law. All will gain benefits. Many nonstock 
corporations are very small, volunteer organizations, with no paid 
staff, little institutional knowledge of corporate requirements, minimal 
or no legal advice and, often, little continuity in officers. This 
creates problems. For example, inadvertent noncompliance with filing 
requirements and the lack of actual notice (as opposed to legal notice) 
have resulted in adverse consequences such as administrative 
dissolution. New notice requirements will provide multiple notice steps 
to attempt to assure actual notice to a delinquent nonstock 
corporation.2Further, even if actual notice 
still does not occur, administrative dissolution will be curable 
retroactively with no break in corporate existence.3
| When the new Nonstock Corporation 
Statute takes effect Jan. 1, 1999, many domestic nonstock corporations 
will see little change. For others, the new law removes the constraints 
of the old law by offering the flexibility needed in today's business 
climate. Benefits under the new law also may induce foreign nonstock 
corporations to become Wisconsin corporations. | 
Protecting volunteers is important to almost all nonstock 
corporations. Volunteer protection is dealt with in two periods. Section 
181.0670 deals with limited liability of all volunteers. Section 
181.0855 et seq. deals with officers, directors, employees, and agents. 
The new law maintains current standards for liability for officers and 
directors.4 These standards provide 
exemption from liability for any breach of, or failure to, perform a 
duty resulting solely from a person's status as an officer or director. 
The exceptions to this exemption include: a willful failure to deal 
fairly where the director has a conflict of interest; a violation of 
criminal law; a transaction in which the director derived an improper 
personal profit; willful misconduct; and government enforcement 
regulatory and private action proceedings. This essentially parallels 
federal volunteer protection statutes.
Section 
180.0670 parallels federal law as to all volunteers and provides new 
protection to credentialed volunteers providing services within the 
practice of the profession, trade, or occupation in which they are 
authorized to practice.5 Previously, a 
credentialed volunteer, such as a lawyer, would be liable for his or her 
volunteer services. This discouraged volunteerism by those persons whose 
services are most often needed. That liability now is eliminated. The 
new nonstock corporation law also provides liability protection from 
operation of a vehicle for which an operator's permit, license, or 
insurance is not required (also not provided by federal law).6
Many organizations find that director or member actions by written 
consents are a useful tool when director action is required but it is 
not possible to assemble all directors in a meeting, or the action 
required is pro forma and does not justify calling together a directors 
meeting. However, any action that the directors (or members) can take in 
a meeting can be done by written consent. Director actions have required 
unanimous written consent. They now will require a two-thirds majority 
if so provided by the articles of incorporation.7The articles of incorporation or bylaws also may 
allow member action by written ballot8as 
well as written consent by a majority of members.9 Written consent is useful if there are few 
members. Written ballot is more useful with large memberships.
Complex organizations
The last two decades have seen the development of large, complex 
nonstock corporations systems. In some sectors of the economy, such as 
health care, large nonstock corporations are the dominant providers of 
services to Wisconsin residents and among the state's largest employers. 
The two largest Wisconsin health-care systems compete in the eastern 
half of Wisconsin. Together, with their affiliated organizations, they 
provide about two-thirds of nonphysician health-care services from 
Illinois to Green Bay and, in some market areas, an equal share of 
physician services. The combined annual revenues of these two systems 
total several billion dollars, their assets are measured in billions, 
and together they have 30,000 to 35,000 employees.
These systems were created, despite the then-existing nonstock 
corporation laws, through creative interpretations of that law to allow 
them to do what each has had to do. For example, in one system 
consisting of several tiers of corporations - operating entities, 
holding companies, holding company for holding companies, and a sponsor 
- certain types of decisions are made at the sponsor level to assure 
that all system entities function as a system. To accomplish this, the 
decision for the operating entity is made by its member (holding 
company) that acts through its member (holding company for holding 
companies) that acts through its members (sponsor). The new nonstock 
corporation law provides the flexibility needed by this important new 
species of nonstock organizations. Using the same example, the decision 
for the operating entity can be delegated directly to the 
sponsor,10 thereby eliminating significant 
delay.
A large system consists of multiple corporations functioning as a 
coordinated entity. A system requires three major elements. First is the 
ability to govern the system and its component organizations so that 
decisions are made at an appropriate level in the system. This means 
that some governance decisions that affect a corporation are made 
outside that corporation. Second is the ability to pool revenues and 
assets of the component corporations and use those revenues and assets 
where most needed. That means there must be the ability to transfer 
assets. Third, each corporation must function to maximize the system, 
even if that is not the best course for the particular corporation. This 
means that corporate decisions cannot be based only on what is best for 
the corporation.
Governance. For complex nonstock organizations, the 
most important phrase in various sections of Chapter 181 will be, 
"Except as set forth in or authorized by the articles of incorporation 
or bylaws,"or words of similar meaning. That phrase provides the 
corporation with the flexibility to differ from the default provisions 
provided by Chapter 181 and to write a governing provision better suited 
to its needs in its articles or bylaws. Section 
181.0801 allows the articles of incorporation or bylaws approved by 
the members to authorize a person to exercise some or all of the powers 
that otherwise would be authorized by the board. In a corporate system, 
this allows direct delegation to a centralized decision maker, such as 
the system parent or sponsor. It allows nonstock corporations to be used 
as organizational tools, without the baggage of diffused decision 
making. In fact, some system corporations exist only because of a 
regulatory or funding requirement, and are little more than 
administrative units. Delegation can make system functioning more 
efficient and effective. A collateral effect, however, probably will be 
that corporate lines will become more blurred, and potential liability 
for decisions will flow to the person to whom the decision process is 
delegated.
It is probable that the new governance provisions will give new 
meaning to old language. As an example, subsection 
181.0103(3) defines "bylaws" as the "code of rules, other than 
articles of incorporation, adopted under this chapter for the regulation 
or management of the affairs of the corporation by whatever name 
designated." Although slightly reworded, this is essentially identical 
to the existing definition in current subsection 
181.02(31). However, with the delegation of powers that is 
authorized as of Jan. 1, 1999, those bylaws could include rules adopted 
at a system level for any or all subsidiary nonstock corporations.
None of this is new in practice. The same results have been 
accomplished indirectly if tortuously. The indirect methods, however, 
have caused substantial distress to bond counsel required to opine that 
arrangements are valid and effective. Since large systems are heavy 
users of bond debt, the comfort that bond counsel should derive from the 
clear legitimization of system governance is important.
Asset transfers. Section 
181.1302 is new law. It authorizes corporate purchase of its 
memberships, distributions to nonprofit corporations, and other 
distributions. Memberships can be purchased if the corporation is 
solvent and assets equal liabilities of the purchase. Memberships 
therefore can have the same effect as stock (subject to tax law 
restrictions if the corporation is tax exempt).
A corporation, if so provided in its articles of incorporation, can 
make a distribution to another domestic or foreign corporation, if the 
distribution is in accordance with the stated purpose of the 
corporation, the corporation is solvent, assets equal liabilities, and 
the recipient is tax exempt under 25 U.S.C. 501. 
This section allows the pooling of assets of corporations within a 
system.
The key to effective use of this provision is the statement of 
corporate purposes. For example, a tax exempt corporation that has the 
purpose to provide health care clearly can shift funds directly to 
another tax exempt health-care provider. But it may not be able to 
transfer funds under this subsection to a related tax exempt elderly 
housing organization. If the corporate purposes include supporting the 
missions of the corporation system or of the sponsor of the system, the 
transfer to the housing organization is within the corporation's stated 
purposes.
The corporation may make other distributions if the articles 
authorize it, the distribution is made in accordance with the stated 
purpose of the corporation, the corporation is solvent, and assets equal 
liabilities.
Basis of decisions. Section 
181.0853 makes specific provision for consideration of interests in 
addition to members' interests. In determining what he or she believes 
is in the best interests of the corporation, a director or officer is 
specifically authorized to consider effects of an action on employees, 
suppliers, customers, and communities, and to consider any other factors 
the director or officer considers pertinent. This is important to 
systems. It is also clear recognition that nonstock corporations often 
serve important public interests, and that officers and directors may 
need to consider factors which might be improper in a business 
corporation.
| The new Nonstock Corporation law 
recognizes both worlds. It maintains existing law as the default law for 
those nonstock corporations that do not need, or want, to change. It 
removes the straitjacket for those corporations that do need to 
change. | 
Foreign corporations
Foreign corporations active within Wisconsin will be required to 
obtain a certificate of authority. The procedure and requirements 
parallel Chapter 180 that applies to foreign business corporations. 
Foreign corporations that do fundraising in Wisconsin, whether or not 
required to register, probably have sufficient presence within Wisconsin 
to require a certificate of authority.
There are sufficient advantages available to Wisconsin nonstock 
corporations under the new Nonstock Corporations Act that may influence 
some foreign corporations to become Wisconsin corporations. By becoming 
Wisconsin corporations, they can obtain the flexibility in governance, 
pooling of assets, intercorporate transferability of assets, and ability 
to consider system and community interests - not just corporate 
interests - available to Wisconsin corporations (as discussed above) not 
available in their home states. They can do business in their home 
states as foreign nonstock corporations without affecting their 
business, and can even have happy bond counsel. Section 181.1533 allows a 
foreign corporation to become a domestic corporation by filing articles 
of domestication. Articles of domestication include restated articles of 
incorporation complying with Wisconsin requirements, a statement that 
the corporation has adopted an election to domesticate, and a statement 
that the corporation will file in its current home state the appropriate 
documents to terminate its existence as a corporation of that state. The 
election to domesticate is adopted in the same way as authorization for 
a merger in the home state.
When articles of domestication are filed, the corporation becomes a 
Wisconsin corporation on the effective date of the articles of 
domestication. The date of incorporation in Wisconsin is retroactive to 
the original date of incorporation. In effect, the nonstock corporation, 
like an individual, moves into Wisconsin, declares it wants to be a 
Wisconsin corporation, and is a Wisconsin corporation. Other than 
dissolving its "citizenship" in its prior home state, that is it. The 
intent is to avoid the complexities of creating a new Wisconsin 
corporation and merging the foreign corporation into it, and to maintain 
uninterrupted the corporate existence of the corporation.
If the foreign nonstock is a nonprofit tax exempt corporation, it is 
hoped the Exempt Organizations division of the Internal Revenue Service 
will recognize the corporation as continuing its life without need for 
new determination letters. Since this statute is unique, that question 
will be one of first impression when presented to the IRS.
Conclusion
The new nonstock corporation law, effective Jan. 1, 1999, will not 
disturb existing Wisconsin nonstock corporations. It is a leading edge 
statute for those corporations that need the flexibility to adapt to an 
environment that, for them, bears little resemblance to 1953.
Foreign corporations will be required to obtain certificates of 
authority to do business in Wisconsin. If they decide that Wisconsin's 
Nonstock Corporation Act is advantageous for them, they are provided a 
simplified way to become Wisconsin corporations.
Garth Seehawer, U.W. 1961, has 
practiced corporate law since 1961. He recently retired as senior vice 
president and general counsel of Wheaton Franciscan Services, the parent 
of one of Wisconsin's major health-care and housing systems.
Endnotes
1Wis. Stat. 
§ 180.0120 et seq.
2Wis. Stat. 
§ 181.1420.
3Wis. Stat. 
§ 181.1422(3).
4Wis. Stat. 
§ 181.0855 et seq.
5Wis. Stat. 
§ 181.0670(2)(c).
6Wis. Stat. 
§ 181.0670(3)2.
7Wis. Stat. 
§ 181.0821.
8Wis. Stat. 
§ 181.0708.
9Wis. Stat. 
§ 181.0704.
10Wis. Stat. 
§ 181.0801(3).
Wisconsin Lawyer