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699
3-1-25
3-1-44
7-1-810
7-3-10
7-8-3
7-23-201
13-1-2
13-11-6
16-6a-102
16-6a-113
16-6a-118
16-6a-202
16-6a-203
16-6a-704
16-6a-1002
16-6a-1006
16-6a-1008.7
16-6a-1404
16-6a-1601
16-6a-1701
16-7-12
16-7-15
16-10a-102
16-10a-128
16-10a-202
16-10a-203
16-10a-1002
16-10a-1007
16-10a-1008.7
16-10a-1104
16-10a-1302
16-10a-1404
16-10a-1533.5
16-10a-1601
16-10b-402
16-11-14
16-15-104
16-15-108
16-16-113
16-16-118
16-16-302
16-16-407
16-16-502
16-16-1101
16-16-1102
16-16-1402
16-16-1405
16-16-1407
48-3a-1101
48-3a-1102
48-3a-1103
48-3a-1104
48-3a-1105
48-3a-1106
48-3a-1107
48-3a-1108
48-3a-1109
48-3a-1110
48-3a-1111
48-3a-1112
48-3a-1201
48-3a-1202
48-3a-1203
48-3a-1204
48-3a-1205
48-3a-1206
48-3a-1207
48-3a-1208
48-3a-1209
48-3a-1301
48-3a-1302
48-3a-1303
48-3a-1304
48-3a-1401
48-3a-1402
48-3a-1403
48-3a-1404
48-3a-1405
48-4-102
48-4-103
48-4-104
48-4-201
48-4-301
48-4-302
48-4-303
48-4-401
48-4-402
48-5-101
48-5-102
48-5-103
48-5-104
48-5-106
48-5-109
48-5-201
48-5-202
48-5-203
48-5-301
48-5-302
48-5-303
48-5-304
48-5-305
48-5-306
48-5-307
48-5-401
48-5-402
48-5-403
48-5-404
48-5-405
48-5-406
31A-5-201
31A-5-203
31A-5-401
31A-7-201
31A-8-202
31A-11-111
31A-14-204
31A-14-205
31A-14-210
31A-37-301
46-4-503
53-2a-1203
53-9-115
53C-1-201
57-8-55
57-8a-601
58-28-606
58-55-102
58-63-102
59-8-103
61-2c-201
61-2f-401
61-2g-103
70-3a-405
75B-2-1011
76-5c-304
78A-5a-101
78B-3-204
78B-3-205
78B-6-2601
1
Business Entity Technical Amendments
2026 GENERAL SESSION
STATE OF UTAH
Chief Sponsor: Evan J. Vickers
House Sponsor: David Shallenberger
LONG TITLE
General Description:
This bill amends provisions relating to business entities.
Highlighted Provisions:
This bill:
renumbers Title 48, Chapter 3a, Utah Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act,
to Title 16, Chapter 20, Utah Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act;
renumbers Title 48, Chapter 4, Benefit Limited Liability Company Act, to Title 16,
Chapter 21, Benefit Limited Liability Company Act;
renumbers Title 48, Chapter 5, Decentralized Autonomous Organization Act, to Title 16,
Chapter 22, Decentralized Autonomous Organization Act;
updates cross references for provisions enacted by this bill and Business Entity
Amendments; and
makes technical and conforming changes.
Money Appropriated in this Bill:
None
Other Special Clauses:
This bill provides a special effective date.
Utah Code Sections Affected:
AMENDS:
3-1-25
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2000, Chapter 300
3-1-44
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2008, Chapter 364
7-1-810
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2018, Chapter 281
7-3-10
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2018, Chapter 281
7-8-3
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2018, Chapter 281
7-23-201
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2020, Chapter 121
13-1-2
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapter 26
13-11-6
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2025, Chapter 442
16-6a-102
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2025, First Special Session, Chapter 9
16-6a-113
, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2000, Chapter 300
16-6a-118
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2006, Chapter 21
16-6a-202
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2010, Chapter 43
16-6a-203
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2024, Chapter 102
16-6a-704
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2009, Chapter 388
16-6a-1002
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2015, Chapter 240
16-6a-1006
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2015, Chapter 240
16-6a-1008.7
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2020, Chapter 354
16-6a-1404
, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2000, Chapter 300
16-6a-1601
, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2000, Chapter 300
16-6a-1701
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2015, Chapter 258
16-7-12
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2004, Chapter 16
16-7-15
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2008, Chapter 364
16-10a-102
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2008, Chapter 249
16-10a-128
, as enacted by Laws of Utah 1992, Chapter 277
16-10a-202
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2010, Chapters 43, 378
16-10a-203
, as enacted by Laws of Utah 1992, Chapter 277
16-10a-1002
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2008, Chapter 364
16-10a-1007
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2010, Chapter 378
16-10a-1008.7
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2021, Chapter 64
16-10a-1104
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 1993, Chapter 184
16-10a-1302
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2025, Chapter 302
16-10a-1404
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2010, Chapter 378
16-10a-1533.5
, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2012, Chapter 184
16-10a-1601
, as enacted by Laws of Utah 1992, Chapter 277
16-10b-402
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2015, Chapter 20
16-11-14
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2000, Chapter 261
16-15-104
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2008, Chapter 364
16-15-108
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2009, Chapter 183
16-16-113
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2014, Chapter 189
16-16-118
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2010, Chapter 378
16-16-302
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2010, Chapter 378
16-16-407
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2010, Chapter 378
16-16-502
, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2008, Chapter 363
16-16-1101
, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2008, Chapter 363
16-16-1102
, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2008, Chapter 363
16-16-1402
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2018, Chapter 149
16-16-1405
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2010, Chapter 378
16-16-1407
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2010, Chapter 378
31A-5-201
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 1995, Chapter 344
31A-5-203
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2008, Chapter 364
31A-5-401
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2008, Chapter 364
31A-7-201
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2004, Chapter 90
31A-8-202
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2008, Chapter 364
31A-11-111
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 1992, Chapter 277
31A-14-204
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2008, Chapter 364
31A-14-205
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2000, Chapter 300
31A-14-210
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2000, Chapter 300
31A-37-301
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2025, Chapter 175
46-4-503
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2021, Chapter 344
53-2a-1203
, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2014, Chapter 376
53-9-115
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2025, Chapter 359
53C-1-201
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2021, Chapter 344
57-8-55
, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2013, Chapter 152
57-8a-601
, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2013, Chapter 152
58-28-606
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2020, Chapter 354
58-55-102
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2025, Chapters 176, 268
58-63-102
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapter 223
59-8-103
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2002, Chapter 286
61-2c-201
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2019, Chapter 337
61-2f-401
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2025, Chapter 263
61-2g-103
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2018, Chapter 281
70-3a-405
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapter 401
75B-2-1011
, as renumbered and amended by Laws of Utah 2025, Chapter 310
76-5c-304
, as renumbered and amended by Laws of Utah 2025, Chapter 173
78A-5a-101
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2024, Chapter 158
78B-3-204
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2010, Chapter 43
78B-3-205
, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2025, Chapter 426
78B-6-2601
, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2024, Chapter 166
RENUMBERS AND AMENDS:
16-20-901
, (Renumbered from 48-3a-1101, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2019,
Chapter 349)
16-20-902
, (Renumbered from 48-3a-1102, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2013,
Chapter 412)
16-20-903
, (Renumbered from 48-3a-1103, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2013,
Chapter 412)
16-20-904
, (Renumbered from 48-3a-1104, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2013,
Chapter 412)
16-20-905
, (Renumbered from 48-3a-1105, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2013,
Chapter 412)
16-20-906
, (Renumbered from 48-3a-1106, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2013,
Chapter 412)
16-20-907
, (Renumbered from 48-3a-1107, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2013,
Chapter 412)
16-20-908
, (Renumbered from 48-3a-1108, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2013,
Chapter 412)
16-20-909
, (Renumbered from 48-3a-1109, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2013,
Chapter 412)
16-20-910
, (Renumbered from 48-3a-1110, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2013,
Chapter 412)
16-20-911
, (Renumbered from 48-3a-1111, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2023,
Chapter 401)
16-20-912
, (Renumbered from 48-3a-1112, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2013,
Chapter 412)
16-20-1001
, (Renumbered from 48-3a-1201, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2013,
Chapter 412)
16-20-1002
, (Renumbered from 48-3a-1202, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2015,
Chapter 227)
16-20-1003
, (Renumbered from 48-3a-1203, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2013,
Chapter 412)
16-20-1004
, (Renumbered from 48-3a-1204, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2013,
Chapter 412)
16-20-1005
, (Renumbered from 48-3a-1205, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2013,
Chapter 412)
16-20-1006
, (Renumbered from 48-3a-1206, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2013,
Chapter 412)
16-20-1007
, (Renumbered from 48-3a-1207, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2013,
Chapter 412)
16-20-1008
, (Renumbered from 48-3a-1208, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2013,
Chapter 412)
16-20-1009
, (Renumbered from 48-3a-1209, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2013,
Chapter 412)
16-20-1101
, (Renumbered from 48-3a-1301, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2013,
Chapter 412)
16-20-1102
, (Renumbered from 48-3a-1302, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2013,
Chapter 412)
16-20-1103
, (Renumbered from 48-3a-1303, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2013,
Chapter 412)
16-20-1104
, (Renumbered from 48-3a-1304, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2013,
Chapter 412)
16-20-1201
, (Renumbered from 48-3a-1401, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2013,
Chapter 412)
16-20-1202
, (Renumbered from 48-3a-1402, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2013,
Chapter 412)
16-20-1203
, (Renumbered from 48-3a-1403, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2013,
Chapter 412)
16-20-1204
, (Renumbered from 48-3a-1404, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2013,
Chapter 412)
16-20-1205
, (Renumbered from 48-3a-1405, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2024,
Chapter 165)
16-21-101
, (Renumbered from 48-4-102, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2019,
Chapter 136)
16-21-102
, (Renumbered from 48-4-103, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2018, Chapter
201)
16-21-103
, (Renumbered from 48-4-104, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2018, Chapter
201)
16-21-201
, (Renumbered from 48-4-201, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2018, Chapter
201)
16-21-301
, (Renumbered from 48-4-301, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2019,
Chapter 136)
16-21-302
, (Renumbered from 48-4-302, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2018, Chapter
201)
16-21-303
, (Renumbered from 48-4-303, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2018, Chapter
201)
16-21-401
, (Renumbered from 48-4-401, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2018, Chapter
201)
16-21-402
, (Renumbered from 48-4-402, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2018, Chapter
201)
16-22-101
, (Renumbered from 48-5-101, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapter
85)
16-22-102
, (Renumbered from 48-5-102, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapter
85)
16-22-103
, (Renumbered from 48-5-103, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2024,
Chapter 161)
16-22-104
, (Renumbered from 48-5-104, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapter
85)
16-22-105
, (Renumbered from 48-5-106, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapter
85)
16-22-106
, (Renumbered from 48-5-109, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapter
85)
16-22-201
, (Renumbered from 48-5-201, as last amended by Laws of Utah 2024,
Chapter 161)
16-22-202
, (Renumbered from 48-5-202, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapter
85)
16-22-203
, (Renumbered from 48-5-203, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapter
85)
16-22-301
, (Renumbered from 48-5-301, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapter
85)
16-22-302
, (Renumbered from 48-5-302, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapter
85)
16-22-303
, (Renumbered from 48-5-303, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapter
85)
16-22-304
, (Renumbered from 48-5-304, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapter
85)
16-22-305
, (Renumbered from 48-5-305, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapter
85)
16-22-306
, (Renumbered from 48-5-306, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapter
85)
16-22-307
, (Renumbered from 48-5-307, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapter
85)
16-22-401
, (Renumbered from 48-5-401, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapter
85)
16-22-402
, (Renumbered from 48-5-402, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapter
85)
16-22-403
, (Renumbered from 48-5-403, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapter
85)
16-22-404
, (Renumbered from 48-5-404, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapter
85)
16-22-405
, (Renumbered from 48-5-405, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapter
85)
16-22-406
, (Renumbered from 48-5-406, as enacted by Laws of Utah 2023, Chapter
85)
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the state of Utah:
Section 1. Section
3-1-25
is amended to read:
3-1-25
. Filing of annual reports.
Domestic associations and foreign associations admitted to do business in this state shall
file an annual report in accordance with Section
16-6a-1607
16-1a-212
.
Section 2. Section
3-1-44
is amended to read:
3-1-44
. Registered office and agent.
(1)
An association shall continuously maintain a registered office in this state. The
registered office may be the principal place of business of the association.
(2)
(a)
An association shall designate a registered agent.
(b)
The registered agent may be a person residing in this state, a domestic corporation,
or a foreign corporation authorized to transact business in this state.
(c)
The registered agent's address shall be the same as that of the registered office.
(3)
(a)
An association shall file a statement with the Division of Corporations and
Commercial Code designating or changing its registered office, its registered agent,
or both.
(b)
The statement in Subsection
(3)(a)
shall set forth:
(i)
the name of the association;
(ii)
the address of the association's registered office;
(iii)
the name of the association's registered agent and the registered agent's address;
and
(iv)
a statement that the designation or change was authorized by a resolution of the
board of directors.
(4)
(a)
A registered agent of an association may resign by filing with the division a
signed written notice of resignation, including a statement that a signed copy of the
notice has been given to the association at its principal place of business.
(b)
The appointment of the agent terminates 30 days after notice is filed with the
division.
(5)
Service of process, notice, or any demand upon an association shall be made as
provided in
Title 16, Chapter 17, Model Registered Agents Act
Title 16, Chapter 1a,
Part 4, Registered Agent of an Entity
.
Section 3. Section
7-1-810
is amended to read:
7-1-810
. Limited liability companies.
(1)
Notwithstanding any other provision of this title and subject to Subsection
(8)
, if the
conditions of this section are met, the following may be organized as or convert to a
limited liability company under
Title 48, Chapter 3a, Utah Revised Uniform Limited
Liability Company Act
Title 16, Chapter 20, Utah Revised Uniform Limited Liability
Company Act
:
(a)
an industrial bank chartered under
Chapter 8, Industrial Banks
;
(b)
an industrial loan company as defined in Section
7-8-21
; or
(c)
any of the following if the institution is an S Corporation, as defined in Section 1361,
Internal Revenue Code, immediately before becoming a limited liability company:
(i)
a bank chartered under
Chapter 3, Banks
; or
(ii)
a depository institution holding company.
(2)
(a)
Before an institution described in Subsection
(1)
may organize as or convert to a
limited liability company, the institution shall obtain approval of the commissioner.
(b)
(i)
To obtain the approval under this section from the commissioner, the institution
shall file a request for approval with the commissioner at least 30 days before the
day on which the institution becomes a limited liability company.
(ii)
If the commissioner does not disapprove the request for approval within 30 days
from the day on which the commissioner receives the request, the request is
considered approved.
(iii)
When taking action on a request for approval filed under this section, the
commissioner may:
(A)
approve the request;
(B)
approve the request subject to terms and conditions the commissioner
considers necessary; or
(C)
disapprove the request.
(3)
To approve a request for approval, the commissioner shall find:
(a)
for an institution described in Subsection
(1)
that is required to be insured by a
federal deposit insurance agency, that the institution:
(i)
will operate in a safe and sound manner;
(ii)
has the following characteristics:
(A)
the institution is not subject to automatic termination, dissolution, or
suspension upon the happening of some event other than the passage of time;
(B)
the exclusive authority to manage the institution is vested in a board of
managers or directors that:
(I)
is elected or appointed by the owners;
(II)
is not required to have owners of the institution included on the board;
(III)
possesses adequate independence and authority to supervise the operation
of the institution; and
(IV)
operates with substantially the same rights, powers, privileges, duties, and
responsibilities as the board of directors of a corporation;
(C)
neither state law, nor the institution's operating agreement, bylaws, or other
organizational documents provide that an owner of the institution is liable for
the debts, liabilities, and obligations of the institution in excess of the amount
of the owner's investment; and
(D)
(I)
neither state law, nor the institution's operating agreement, bylaws, or
other organizational documents require the consent of any other owner of
the institution in order for an owner to transfer an ownership interest in the
institution, including voting rights; and
(II)
the institution is able to obtain new investment funding if needed to
maintain adequate capital; and
(iii)
is able to comply with all legal and regulatory requirements for an insured
depository institution under applicable federal and state law; and
(b)
for an institution described in Subsection
(1)
that is not required to be insured by a
federal deposit insurance agency, that the institution will operate in a safe and sound
manner.
(4)
An institution described in Subsection
(3)(a)
that is organized as a limited liability
company shall maintain the characteristics listed in Subsection
(3)(a)(ii)
during such
time as it is authorized to conduct business under this title as a limited liability company.
(5)
(a)
All rights, privileges, powers, duties, and obligations of an institution described in
Subsection
(1)
that is organized as a limited liability company and its members and
managers shall be governed by
Title 48, Chapter 3a, Utah Revised Uniform Limited
Liability Company Act
Title 16, Chapter 20, Utah Revised Uniform Limited
Liability Company Act
, except:
(i)
the following do not apply to an institution that is described in Subsection
(3)(a)
:
(A)
Section
48-3a-111
16-1a-402
;
(B)
Section
48-3a-113
16-20-108
;
(C)
Section
48-3a-201
16-20-201
;
(D)
Section
48-3a-401
16-20-401
;
(E)
Subsections
48-3a-407(1)
16-20-407(1)
and
(3)(c)
;
(F)
Section
48-3a-410
16-20-410
;
(G)
Subsection
48-3a-502(1)(c)
16-20-502(1)(c)
;
(H)
Title 48, Chapter 3a, Part 6, Dissociation
Title 16, Chapter 20, Part 6,
Dissociation
;
and
(I)
Section
48-3a-701
16-20-701
; and
(J)
Title 48, Chapter 3a, Part 9, Foreign Limited Liability Companies
; and
(ii)
as otherwise provided in this title.
(b)
Notwithstanding Subsection
(5)(a)
, for an institution that is described in Subsection
(3)(a)
:
(i)
for purposes of transferring a member's interests in the institution, a member's
interest in the institution shall be treated like a share of stock in a corporation; and
(ii)
if a member's interest in the institution is transferred voluntarily or involuntarily
to another person, the person who receives the member's interest shall obtain the
member's entire rights associated with the member's interest in the institution
including:
(A)
all economic rights; and
(B)
all voting rights.
(c)
An institution described in Subsection
(3)(a)
may not by agreement or otherwise
change the application of Subsection
(5)(a)
to the institution.
(6)
Unless the context requires otherwise, for the purpose of applying this title to an
institution described in Subsection
(1)
that is organized as a limited liability company:
(a)
a citation to
Title 16, Chapter 10a, Utah Revised Business Corporation Act
, includes
the equivalent citation to
Title 48, Chapter 3a, Utah Revised Uniform Limited
Liability Company Act
Title 16, Chapter 20, Utah Revised Uniform Limited
Liability Company Act
;
(b)
"articles of incorporation" includes a limited liability company's certificate of
organization as that term is used in Section
48-3a-201
16-20-201
;
(c)
"board of directors" includes one or more persons who have, with respect to an
institution described in Subsection
(1)
, authority substantially similar to that of a
board of directors of a corporation;
(d)
"bylaws" includes a limited liability company's operating agreement as that term is
defined in Section
48-3a-201
16-20-201
;
(e)
"corporation" includes a limited liability company organized under
Title 48, Chapter
3a, Utah Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act
Title 16, Chapter 20, Utah
Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act
;
(f)
"director" includes any of the following of a limited liability company:
(i)
a manager;
(ii)
a director; or
(iii)
other person who has with respect to the institution described in Subsection
(1)
,
authority substantially similar to that of a director of a corporation;
(g)
"dividend" includes distributions made by a limited liability company under
Title
48, Chapter 3a, Part 4, Relations of Members to Each Other and to Limited Liability
Company
Title 16, Chapter 20, Part 4, Relations of Members to Each Other and to a
Limited Liability Company
;
(h)
"incorporator" includes an organizer of a limited liability company as provided in
Title 48, Chapter 3a, Part 2, Formation -- Certificate of Organization and Other
Filings
Title 16, Chapter 20, Part 2, Formation -- Certificate of Organization and
Other Filings
;
(i)
"officer" includes any of the following of an institution described in Subsection
(1)
:
(i)
an officer; or
(ii)
other person who has with respect to the institution described in Subsection
(1)
authority substantially similar to that of an officer of a corporation;
(j)
"security," "shares," or "stock" of a corporation includes:
(i)
a membership interest in a limited liability company as provided in
Title 48,
Chapter 3a, Part 4, Relations of Members to Each Other and to Limited Liability
Company
Title 16, Chapter 20, Part 4, Relations of Members to Each Other and to
a Limited Liability Company
; and
(ii)
a certificate or other evidence of an ownership interest in a limited liability
company; and
(k)
"shareholder" or "stockholder" includes an owner of an interest in an institution
described in Subsection
(1)
including a member as provided in
Title 48, Chapter 3a,
Part 4, Relations of Members to Each Other and to Limited Liability Company
Title
16, Chapter 20, Part 4, Relations of Members to Each Other and to Limited Liability
Company
.
(7)
In accordance with
Title 63G, Chapter 3, Utah Administrative Rulemaking Act
, the
commissioner shall make rules governing the form of a request for approval filed under
this section.
(8)
A depository institution organized under the laws of this state may not be organized as
or converted to a series of transferable interests in a limited liability company as
provided in
Title 48, Chapter 3a, Part 12, Series Limited Liability Companies
Title 16,
Chapter 20, Part 10, Series Limited Liability Companies
.
Section 4. Section
7-3-10
is amended to read:
7-3-10
. Organization -- Powers, rights, and privileges of banking corporation --
Other business activities.
(1)
A bank chartered under this chapter shall be:
(a)
a domestic corporation under
Title 16, Chapter 10a, Utah Revised Business
Corporation Act
; or
(b)
subject to Section
7-1-810
, including the requirement that the bank be an S
Corporation immediately before becoming a limited liability company, a limited
liability company created under
Title 48, Chapter 3a, Utah Revised Uniform Limited
Liability Company Act
Title 16, Chapter 20, Utah Revised Uniform Limited
Liability Company Act
.
(2)
A bank has all the rights, privileges, and powers necessary or incidental to carrying on
the business of banking in addition to the powers granted:
(a)
if the bank is a corporation, under
Title 16, Chapter 10a, Utah Revised Business
Corporation Act
; or
(b)
subject to Section
7-1-810
, if the bank is a limited liability company, under
Title 48,
Chapter 3a, Utah Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act
Title 16, Chapter
20, Utah Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act
.
(3)
The commissioner may, by rule or order, determine that necessary or incidental rights,
privileges, and powers include:
(a)
the rights, privileges, and powers held by national banks; or
(b)
other business activities so long as the commissioner's determination is not
inconsistent with the rules, regulations, or other actions of the board of governors of
the Federal Reserve System under Section 4(c)(8) of the Bank Holding Company Act
of 1956, 12 U.S.C. Sec. 1843(c)(8).
(4)
The commissioner shall implement this section in a manner consistent with the purposes
set forth in Section
7-1-102
.
Section 5. Section
7-8-3
is amended to read:
7-8-3
. Organization -- Authorization to conduct business -- Deposit insurance.
(1)
Subject to Subsection
(4)
, the commissioner may authorize a person described in
Subsection
(2)
to conduct business as an industrial bank.
(2)
(a)
Each person organized to conduct the business of an industrial bank in this state
shall be organized under:
(i)
Title 16, Chapter 10a, Utah Revised Business Corporation Act
; or
(ii)
in accordance with Section
7-1-810
or
Title 48, Chapter 3a, Utah Revised
Uniform Limited Liability Company Act
Title 16, Chapter 20, Utah Revised
Uniform Limited Liability Company Act
.
(b)
A person may not conduct business as an industrial bank authorized under this
chapter to conduct business as an industrial bank in any form of entity other than
those provided in Subsection
(2)(a)
.
(3)
(a)
All rights, privileges, powers, duties, and obligations of a corporation authorized
to conduct business as an industrial bank and its officers, directors, and stockholders
shall be governed by
Title 16, Chapter 10a, Utah Revised Business Corporation Act
,
except as otherwise provided in this title.
(b)
All rights, privileges, powers, duties, and obligations of a limited liability company
authorized to conduct business as an industrial bank and its members and managers
shall be governed by
Title 48, Chapter 3a, Utah Revised Uniform Limited Liability
Company Act
Title 16, Chapter 20, Utah Revised Uniform Limited Liability
Company Act
, except as otherwise provided in this title.
(4)
(a)
An industrial bank is authorized to receive and hold deposits.
(b)
An industrial bank may not conduct business under this chapter as an industrial bank
unless the industrial bank obtains insurance from the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation or a successor federal deposit insurance entity for any deposits received
or held by the industrial bank.
Section 6. Section
7-23-201
is amended to read:
7-23-201
. Registration -- Rulemaking.
(1)
(a)
It is unlawful for a person to engage in the business of cashing checks or the
business of deferred deposit lending in Utah or with a Utah resident unless the person:
(i)
registers with the department in accordance with this chapter; and
(ii)
maintains a valid registration.
(b)
It is unlawful for a person to operate a mobile facility in this state to engage in the
business of:
(i)
cashing checks; or
(ii)
deferred deposit lending.
(c)
An officer or employee of a person required to register under Subsection
(1)(a)
is not
required to register if the person for whom the individual is an officer or employee is
registered.
(2)
(a)
A registration and a renewal of a registration expires on December 31 of each year
unless on or before that date the person renews the registration.
(b)
To register under this section, a person shall:
(i)
pay an original registration fee established under Subsection
7-1-401(8)
;
(ii)
submit a registration statement containing the information described in
Subsection
(2)(d)
;
(iii)
submit evidence satisfactory to the commissioner that the person is authorized to
conduct business in this state as a domestic or foreign entity pursuant to filings
with the Division of Corporations and Commercial Code under
Title 16,
Corporations
, or
Title 48, Unincorporated Business Entity Act
Title 16, Business
Entities
; and
(iv)
if the person engages in the business of deferred deposit lending, submit
evidence satisfactory to the commissioner that the person is registered with the
nationwide database.
(c)
To renew a registration under this section, a person shall:
(i)
pay the annual fee established under Subsection
7-1-401(5)
;
(ii)
submit a renewal statement containing the information described in Subsection
(2)(d)
;
(iii)
submit evidence satisfactory to the commissioner that the person is authorized to
conduct business in this state as a domestic or foreign entity pursuant to filings
with the Division of Corporations and Commercial Code under
Title 16,
Corporations
, or
Title 48, Unincorporated Business Entity Act
Title 16, Business
Entities
;
(iv)
if the person engages in the business of deferred deposit lending, submit
evidence satisfactory to the commissioner that the person is registered with the
nationwide database; and
(v)
if the person engages in the business of deferred deposit lending, submit an
operations statement containing the information described in Subsections
(2)(e)
and
(f)
.
(d)
A registration or renewal statement shall state:
(i)
the name of the person;
(ii)
the name in which the business will be transacted if different from that required in
Subsection
(2)(d)(i)
;
(iii)
the address of the person's principal business office, which may be outside this
state;
(iv)
the addresses of all offices in this state at which the person conducts the business
of:
(A)
cashing checks; or
(B)
deferred deposit lending;
(v)
if the person conducts the business of cashing checks or the business of deferred
deposit lending in this state but does not maintain an office in this state, a brief
description of the manner in which the business is conducted;
(vi)
the name and address in this state of a designated agent upon whom service of
process may be made;
(vii)
whether there is a conviction of a crime:
(A)
involving an act of fraud, dishonesty, breach of trust, or money laundering;
and
(B)
with respect to that person, an officer, director, manager, operator, or principal
of that person, or an employee of that person engaged in the business described
in this chapter; and
(viii)
any other information required by the rules of the department.
(e)
An operations statement required for a deferred deposit lender to renew a registration
shall state for the immediately preceding calendar year:
(i)
the average principal amount of the deferred deposit loans extended by the
deferred deposit lender;
(ii)
for deferred deposit loans paid in full, the average number of days a deferred
deposit loan is outstanding for the duration of time that interest is charged;
(iii)
the total number of deferred deposit loans rescinded by the deferred deposit
lender at the request of the customer pursuant to Subsection
7-23-401(3)(b)
;
(iv)
of the persons to whom the deferred deposit lender extended a deferred deposit
loan, the percentage that entered into an extended payment plan under Section
7-23-403
;
(v)
the total dollar amount of deferred deposit loans rescinded by the deferred deposit
lender at the request of the customer pursuant to Subsection
7-23-401(3)(b)
;
(vi)
the average annual percentage rate charged on deferred deposit loans;
(vii)
the range of annual percentage rates charged on deferred deposit loans;
(viii)
the average dollar amount of extended payment plans entered into under
Section
7-23-403
by the deferred deposit lender;
(ix)
the number of deferred deposit loans carried to the maximum 10 weeks after the
day on which the deferred deposit loan is extended;
(x)
the total dollar amount of deferred deposit loans carried to the maximum 10
weeks after the day on which the deferred deposit loan is extended;
(xi)
the number of deferred deposit loans not paid in full at the end of 10 weeks after
the day on which the deferred deposit loan is extended;
(xii)
the total dollar amount of deferred deposit loans not paid in full at the end of 10
weeks after the day on which the deferred deposit loan is extended;
(xiii)
the percentage of deferred deposit loans against which the deferred deposit
lender initiates civil action to collect on the deferred deposit loan; and
(xiv)
for the civil actions described in Subsection
(2)(e)(xiii)
, the percentage of those
civil actions whose deferred deposit loans have the following payment history:
(A)
no payments;
(B)
one payment;
(C)
two payments;
(D)
three payments;
(E)
four payments;
(F)
five payments;
(G)
six payments;
(H)
seven payments;
(I)
eight payments;
(J)
nine payments; and
(K)
10 or more payments.
(f)
In addition to the information in Subsection
(2)(e)
, an operations statement required
for a deferred deposit lender to renew a registration shall state for the immediately
preceding calendar year:
(i)
the total number of deferred deposit loans extended by the deferred deposit lender;
(ii)
the total dollar amount of deferred deposit loans extended by the deferred deposit
lender;
(iii)
the total number of individuals to whom the deferred deposit lender extended a
deferred deposit loan; and
(iv)
the percentage of deferred deposit loans not repaid according to the terms of the
loan.
(g)
The commissioner may by rule, made in accordance with
Title 63G, Chapter 3, Utah
Administrative Rulemaking Act
, provide for the transition of persons registering with
the nationwide database.
(3)
(a)
Information provided by a deferred deposit lender under Subsections
(2)(e)
and
(f)
is:
(i)
confidential in accordance with Section
7-1-802
; and
(ii)
not subject to
Title 63G, Chapter 2, Government Records Access and
Management Act
.
(b)
The department shall:
(i)
only use information a deferred deposit lender provides to the department under
Subsection
(2)(f)
to determine compliance with this chapter; and
(ii)
delete or otherwise destroy information a deferred deposit lender provides to the
department under Subsection
(2)(f)
within two years after the day on which the
deferred deposit lender provides the information.
(4)
(a)
The commissioner may impose an administrative fine determined under
Subsection
(4)(b)
on a person if:
(i)
the person is required to be registered under this chapter;
(ii)
the person fails to register or renew a registration in accordance with this chapter;
(iii)
the department notifies the person that the person is in violation of this chapter
for failure to be registered; and
(iv)
the person fails to register within 30 days after the day on which the person
receives the notice described in Subsection
(4)(a)(iii)
.
(b)
Subject to Subsection
(4)(c)
, the administrative fine imposed under this section is:
(i)
$500 if the person:
(A)
has no office in this state at which the person conducts the business of:
(I)
cashing checks; or
(II)
deferred deposit lending; or
(B)
has one office in this state at which the person conducts the business of:
(I)
cashing checks; or
(II)
deferred deposit lending; or
(ii)
if the person has two or more offices in this state at which the person conducts the
business of cashing checks or the business of deferred deposit lending, $500 for
each office at which the person conducts the business of:
(A)
cashing checks; or
(B)
deferred deposit lending.
(c)
The commissioner may reduce or waive a fine imposed under this Subsection
(4)
if
the person shows good cause.
(5)
If the information in a registration, renewal, or operations statement required under
Subsection
(2)
becomes inaccurate after filing, a person is not required to notify the
department until:
(a)
that person is required to renew the registration; or
(b)
the department specifically requests earlier notification.
(6)
In accordance with
Title 63G, Chapter 3, Utah Administrative Rulemaking Act
, the
department may make rules consistent with this section providing for:
(a)
the form, content, and filing of a registration and renewal statement described in
Subsection
(2)(d)
; and
(b)
the form and filing of an operations statement described in Subsection
(2)(e)
.
(7)
A deferred deposit loan that is made by a person who is required to be registered under
this chapter but who is not registered is void, and the person may not collect, receive, or
retain any principal or other interest or fees in connection with the deferred deposit loan.
(8)
(a)
At the time a person registers under this section, the person shall disclose a
conviction of a crime described in Subsection
(2)(d)(vii)
that is:
(i)
known to the person; or
(ii)
included in:
(A)
a Utah Bureau of Criminal Identification report; or
(B)
a background check acceptable to the department that provides information
similar to a Utah Bureau of Criminal Identification report.
(b)
To comply with Subsection
(8)(a)
, a person registered under this chapter shall, for
each individual described in Subsection
(2)(d)(vii)
:
(i)
obtain a Utah Bureau of Criminal Identification report; or
(ii)
conduct a background check acceptable to the commissioner that provides
information similar to a Utah Bureau of Criminal Identification report.
(c)
A person registered under this section shall keep a record of the information
described in Subsection
(8)(b)
for the time period required by the department by rule
made in accordance with
Title 63G, Chapter 3, Utah Administrative Rulemaking Act
.
Section 7. Section
13-1-2
is amended to read:
13-1-2
. Creation and functions of department -- Divisions created -- Fees --
Commerce Service Account.
(1)
(a)
There is created the Department of Commerce.
(b)
The department shall:
(i)
execute and administer state laws regulating business activities and occupations
affecting the public interest; and
(ii)
ensure that any training or certification required of a public official or public
employee, as those terms are defined in Section
63G-22-102
, complies with
Title
63G, Chapter 22, State Training and Certification Requirements
, if the training or
certification is required:
(A)
under this title;
(B)
by the department; or
(C)
by an agency or division within the department.
(2)
Within the department the following divisions are created:
(a)
the Division of Professional Licensing;
(b)
the Division of Real Estate;
(c)
the Division of Securities;
(d)
the Division of Public Utilities;
(e)
the Division of Consumer Protection; and
(f)
the Division of Corporations and Commercial Code.
(3)
(a)
Unless otherwise provided by statute, the department may adopt a schedule of fees
assessed for services provided by the department by following the procedures and
requirements of Section
63J-1-504
.
(b)
The department shall submit each fee established in this manner to the Legislature
for the Legislature's approval as part of the department's annual appropriations
request.
(c)
(i)
There is created a restricted account within the General Fund known as the
"Commerce Service Account."
(ii)
The restricted account created in Subsection
(3)(c)(i)
consists of fees collected by
each division and by the department.
(iii)
The undesignated account balance may not exceed $1,000,000 at the end of each
fiscal year.
(iv)
At the end of each fiscal year, the director of the Division of Finance shall
transfer into the General Fund any undesignated funds in the account that exceed
the amount necessary to maintain the undesignated account balance at $1,000,000.
(d)
The department may not charge or collect a fee or expend money from the restricted
account without approval by the Legislature.
(4)
(a)
As used in this Subsection
(4)
:
(i)
"Business entity" means a sole proprietorship, partnership, limited partnership,
limited liability company, corporation, or other entity or association used to carry
on a business for profit.
(ii)
"Fund" means the Single Sign-On Expendable Special Revenue Fund, created in
Subsection
(4)(c)
.
(iii)
"Renewal fee" means a fee that the Division of Corporations and Commercial
Code, established in Section
13-1a-1
13-1a-102
, is authorized or required to
charge a business entity in connection with the business entity's periodic renewal
of the business entity's status with the Division of Corporations and Commercial
Code.
(iv)
"Single sign-on fee" means a fee described in Subsection
(4)(b)
to pay for the
establishment and maintenance of the single sign-on business portal.
(v)
"Single sign-on business portal" means the same as that term is defined in Section
63A-16-802
.
(b)
(i)
The schedule of fees adopted by the department under Subsection
(3)
shall
include a single sign-on fee, not to exceed $5, as part of a renewal fee.
(ii)
The department shall deposit all single sign-on fee revenue into the fund.
(c)
(i)
There is created the Single Sign-On Expendable Special Revenue Fund.
(ii)
The fund consists of:
(A)
money that the department collects from the single sign-on fee; and
(B)
money that the Legislature appropriates to the fund.
(d)
The department shall use the money in the fund to pay for costs:
(i)
to design, create, operate, and maintain the single sign-on business portal; and
(ii)
incurred by:
(A)
the Department of Technology Services, created in Section
63A-16-103
; or
(B)
a third-party vendor working under a contract with the Department of
Technology Services.
(e)
The department shall report on fund revenues and expenditures to the Public
Utilities, Energy, and Technology Interim Committee of the Legislature annually and
at any other time requested by the committee.
(5)
(a)
As used in this Subsection
(5)
:
(i)
"Costs of electronic payments" means:
(A)
any charge, discount fee, or processing fee that a credit card company or
processing agent charges to process an electronic payment; or
(B)
the costs associated with the purchase of equipment necessary for processing
electronic payments.
(ii)
"Electronic payment" means any form of payment processed through electronic
means, including a credit card, debit card, or automatic clearinghouse transaction.
(iii)
"Electronic payment fee" means the fee the department adopts in accordance
with this Subsection
(5)
to defray the costs of electronic payments.
(b)
As part of the schedule of fees described in Subsection
(3)(a)
, the department shall
establish an electronic payment fee.
(c)
The department:
(i)
may collect an electronic payment fee from each person who applies for or renews
a license or registration issued by the department or a division of the department;
and
(ii)
shall deposit into the Commerce Electronic Payment Fee Restricted Account
created in Section
13-1-17
each electronic payment fee the department collects.
(d)
The electronic payment fee described in this Subsection
(5)
is not subject to
Subsection
63J-1-105(3)
or
(4)
.
(e)
(i)
If the department imposes an electronic payment fee, the department shall
collect the electronic payment fee from each person described in Subsection
(5)(c)(i)
regardless of whether the person makes an electronic payment.
(ii)
The department is not required to separately identify an electronic payment
charged to a person described in Subsection
(5)(c)(i)
.
Section 8. Section
13-11-6
is amended to read:
13-11-6
. Service of process.
(1)
In addition to any other method provided by rule or statute, personal jurisdiction over a
supplier may be acquired in a civil action or proceeding instituted in a court with
jurisdiction by the service of process as provided in Subsection
(3)
.
(2)
(a)
A supplier that engages in any act or practice in this state governed by this
chapter, or engages in a consumer transaction subject to this chapter, may designate
an agent upon whom service of process may be made in the state.
(b)
A supplier shall make a designation of an agent under Subsection
(2)(a)
in writing
and file the designation with the Division of Corporations and Commercial Code.
(c)
An agent designated under this Subsection
(2)
shall be a resident of or a corporation
authorized to do business in the state.
(3)
(a)
Subject to Subsection
(3)(b)
, process upon a supplier may be served as provided
in Section
16-17-301
16-1a-412
if:
(i)
a designation is not made and filed under Subsection
(2)
; or
(ii)
process cannot be served in the state upon the designated agent.
(b)
Service upon a supplier is not effective unless the plaintiff promptly mails a copy of
the process and pleadings by registered or certified mail to the supplier at the
supplier's last reasonably ascertainable address.
(c)
The plaintiff shall file an affidavit of compliance with this section:
(i)
with the clerk of the court; and
(ii)
on or before the return day of the process, if any, or within any future time the
court allows.
Section 9. Section
16-6a-102
is amended to read:
16-6a-102
. Definitions.
As used in this chapter:
(1)
(a)
"Address" means a location where mail can be delivered by the United States
Postal Service.
(b)
"Address" includes:
(i)
a post office box number;
(ii)
a rural free delivery route number; and
(iii)
a street name and number.
(2)
"Affiliate" means a person that directly or indirectly through one or more intermediaries
controls, or is controlled by, or is under common control with, the person specified.
(3)
"Articles of incorporation" include:
(a)
amended articles of incorporation;
(b)
restated articles of incorporation;
(c)
articles of merger; and
(d)
a document of a similar import to the documents described in Subsections
(3)(a)
through
(c)
.
(4)
"Assumed corporate name" means a name assumed for use in this state:
(a)
by a:
(i)
foreign corporation
as described in Section
16-10a-1506
in accordance with
Section
16-1a-507
; or
(ii)
a
foreign nonprofit corporation
as described in Section
16-6a-1506
in
accordance with Section
16-1a-507
; and
(b)
because the corporate name of the foreign corporation described in Subsection
(4)(a)
is not available for use in this state.
(5)
(a)
Except as provided in Subsection
(5)(b)
, "board of directors" means the body
authorized to manage the affairs of a domestic or foreign nonprofit corporation.
(b)
Notwithstanding Subsection
(5)(a)
, a person may not be considered a member of the
board of directors because of a power delegated to that person under Subsection
16-6a-801(2)
.
(6)
(a)
"Bylaws" means the one or more codes of rules, other than the articles of
incorporation, adopted under this chapter for the regulation or management of the
affairs of a domestic or foreign nonprofit corporation irrespective of the one or more
names by which the codes of rules are designated.
(b)
"Bylaws" includes:
(i)
amended bylaws; and
(ii)
restated bylaws.
(7)
(a)
"Cash" or "money" means:
(i)
legal tender;
(ii)
a negotiable instrument; or
(iii)
other cash equivalent readily convertible into legal tender.
(b)
"Cash" and "money" are used interchangeably in this chapter.
(8)
"Charitable organization" means the same as that term is defined in Section
13-22-2
.
(9)
(a)
"Class" means a group of memberships that has the same right with respect to
voting, dissolution, redemption, transfer, or other characteristics.
(b)
For purposes of Subsection
(9)(a)
, a right is considered the same if it is determined
by a formula applied uniformly to a group of memberships.
(10)
(a)
"Conspicuous" means so written that a reasonable person against whom the
writing is to operate should have noticed the writing.
(b)
"Conspicuous" includes printing or typing in:
(i)
italics;
(ii)
boldface;
(iii)
contrasting color;
(iv)
capitals; or
(v)
underlining.
(11)
"Control" or a "controlling interest" means the direct or indirect possession of the
power to direct or cause the direction of the management and policies of an entity by:
(a)
the ownership of voting shares;
(b)
contract; or
(c)
a means other than those specified in Subsection
(11)(a)
or
(b)
.
(12)
Subject to Section
16-6a-207
, "cooperative nonprofit corporation" or "cooperative"
means a nonprofit corporation organized or existing under this chapter.
(13)
"Corporate name" means:
(a)
the name of a domestic corporation as stated in the domestic corporation's articles of
incorporation;
(b)
the name of a domestic nonprofit corporation as stated in the domestic nonprofit
corporation's articles of incorporation;
(c)
the name of a foreign corporation as stated in the foreign corporation's:
(i)
articles of incorporation; or
(ii)
document of similar import to articles of incorporation; or
(d)
the name of a foreign nonprofit corporation as stated in the foreign nonprofit
corporation's:
(i)
articles of incorporation; or
(ii)
document of similar import to articles of incorporation.
(14)
(a)
"Corporate records" means the records described in Section
16-6a-1601
.
(b)
"Corporate records" does not include correspondence, communications, notes, or
other similar information, regardless of format or method of storage, that are not an
official decision, published document, or record of the corporation.
(15)
"Corporation" or "domestic corporation" means a corporation for profit that:
(a)
is not a foreign corporation; and
(b)
is incorporated under or subject to Chapter 10a, Utah Revised Business Corporation
Act.
(16)
"Delegate" means a person elected or appointed to vote in a representative assembly:
(a)
for the election of a director; or
(b)
on matters other than the election of a director.
(17)
"Deliver" includes delivery by mail or another means of transmission authorized by
Section
16-6a-103
, except that delivery to the division means actual receipt by the
division.
(18)
"Director" means a member of the board of directors.
(19)
(a)
"Distribution" means the payment of a dividend or any part of the income or
profit of a nonprofit corporation to the nonprofit corporation's:
(i)
members;
(ii)
directors; or
(iii)
officers.
(b)
"Distribution" does not include a fair-value payment for:
(i)
a good sold; or
(ii)
a service received.
(20)
"Division" means the Division of Corporations and Commercial Code.
(21)
"Effective date," when referring to a document filed by the division, means the time
and date determined in accordance with Section
16-6a-108
16-1a-204
.
(22)
"Effective date of notice" means the date notice is effective as provided in Section
16-6a-103
.
(23)
"Electronic transmission" or "electronically transmitted" means a process of
communication not directly involving the physical transfer of paper that is suitable for
the receipt, retention, retrieval, and reproduction of information by the recipient,
whether by email, texting, facsimile, or otherwise.
(24)
(a)
"Employee" includes an officer of a nonprofit corporation.
(b)
(i)
Except as provided in Subsection
(24)(b)(ii)
, "employee" does not include a
director of a nonprofit corporation.
(ii)
Notwithstanding Subsection
(24)(b)(i)
, a director may accept one or more duties
that make that director an employee of a nonprofit corporation.
(25)
"Entity" includes:
(a)
a domestic or foreign corporation;
(b)
a domestic or foreign nonprofit corporation;
(c)
a limited liability company;
(d)
a profit or nonprofit unincorporated association;
(e)
a business trust;
(f)
an estate;
(g)
a partnership;
(h)
a trust;
(i)
two or more persons having a joint or common economic interest;
(j)
a state;
(k)
the United States; or
(l)
a foreign government.
(26)
"Executive director" means the executive director of the Department of Commerce.
(27)
"Foreign corporation" means a corporation for profit incorporated under a law other
than the laws of this state.
(28)
"Foreign nonprofit corporation" means an entity:
(a)
incorporated under a law other than the laws of this state; and
(b)
that would be a nonprofit corporation if formed under the laws of this state.
(29)
"Governmental entity" means:
(a)
(i)
the executive branch of the state;
(ii)
the judicial branch of the state;
(iii)
the legislative branch of the state;
(iv)
an independent entity, as defined in Section
63E-1-102
;
(v)
a political subdivision of the state;
(vi)
an institution of higher education, as defined in Section
53H-1-101
;
(vii)
an entity within the state system of public education; or
(viii)
the National Guard; or
(b)
any of the following that is established or controlled by a governmental entity listed
in Subsection
(29)(a)
to carry out the public's business:
(i)
an office;
(ii)
a division;
(iii)
an agency;
(iv)
a board;
(v)
a bureau;
(vi)
a committee;
(vii)
a department;
(viii)
an advisory board;
(ix)
an administrative unit; or
(x)
a commission.
(30)
"Governmental subdivision" means:
(a)
a county;
(b)
a city;
(c)
a town; or
(d)
another type of governmental subdivision authorized by the laws of this state.
(31)
"Individual" means:
(a)
a natural person;
(b)
the estate of an incompetent individual; or
(c)
the estate of a deceased individual.
(32)
"Internal Revenue Code" means the federal "Internal Revenue Code of 1986," as
amended from time to time, or to corresponding provisions of subsequent internal
revenue laws of the United States of America.
(33)
(a)
"Mail," "mailed," or "mailing" means deposit, deposited, or depositing in the
United States mail, properly addressed, first-class postage prepaid.
(b)
"Mail," "mailed," or "mailing" includes registered or certified mail for which the
proper fee is paid.
(34)
(a)
"Member" means one or more persons identified or otherwise appointed as a
member of a domestic or foreign nonprofit corporation as provided:
(i)
in the articles of incorporation;
(ii)
in the bylaws;
(iii)
by a resolution of the board of directors; or
(iv)
by a resolution of the members of the nonprofit corporation.
(b)
"Member" includes:
(i)
"voting member"; and
(ii)
a shareholder in a water company.
(35)
"Membership" refers to the rights and obligations of a member or members.
(36)
"Mutual benefit corporation" means a nonprofit corporation:
(a)
that issues shares of stock to its members evidencing a right to receive distribution of
water or otherwise representing property rights; or
(b)
all of whose assets are contributed or acquired by or for the members of the nonprofit
corporation or the members' predecessors in interest to serve the mutual purposes of
the members.
(37)
"Nonprofit corporation" or "domestic nonprofit corporation" means an entity that:
(a)
is not a foreign nonprofit corporation; and
(b)
is incorporated under or subject to this chapter.
(38)
"Notice" means the same as that term is defined in Section
16-6a-103
.
(39)
"Party related to a director" means:
(a)
the spouse of the director;
(b)
a child of the director;
(c)
a grandchild of the director;
(d)
a sibling of the director;
(e)
a parent of the director;
(f)
the spouse of an individual described in Subsections
(39)(b)
through
(e)
;
(g)
an individual having the same home as the director;
(h)
a trust or estate of which the director or another individual specified in this
Subsection
(39)
is a substantial beneficiary; or
(i)
any of the following of which the director is a fiduciary:
(i)
a trust;
(ii)
an estate;
(iii)
an incompetent;
(iv)
a conservatee; or
(v)
a minor.
(40)
"Person" means an:
(a)
individual; or
(b)
entity.
(41)
"Principal office" means:
(a)
the office, in or out of this state, designated by a domestic or foreign nonprofit
corporation as its principal office in the most recent document on file with the
division providing that information, including:
(i)
an annual report;
(ii)
an application for a certificate of authority; or
(iii)
a notice of change of principal office; or
(b)
if no principal office can be determined, a domestic or foreign nonprofit
corporation's registered office.
(42)
"Proceeding" includes:
(a)
a civil suit;
(b)
arbitration;
(c)
mediation;
(d)
a criminal action;
(e)
an administrative action; or
(f)
an investigatory action.
(43)
"Receive," when used in reference to receipt of a writing or other document by a
domestic or foreign nonprofit corporation, means the writing or other document is
actually received:
(a)
by the domestic or foreign nonprofit corporation at:
(i)
its registered office in this state; or
(ii)
its principal office;
(b)
by the secretary of the domestic or foreign nonprofit corporation, wherever the
secretary is found; or
(c)
by another person authorized by the bylaws or the board of directors to receive the
writing or other document, wherever that person is found.
(44)
(a)
"Record date" means the date established under Part
6, Members
, or Part
7,
Member Meetings and Voting
, on which a nonprofit corporation determines the
identity of the nonprofit corporation's members.
(b)
The determination described in Subsection
(44)(a)
shall be made as of the close of
business on the record date unless another time for doing so is specified when the
record date is fixed.
(45)
"Registered agent" means the registered agent of:
(a)
a domestic nonprofit corporation; or
(b)
a foreign nonprofit corporation.
(46)
"Registered office" means the office within this state designated by a domestic or
foreign nonprofit corporation as its registered office in the most recent document on file
with the division providing that information, including:
(a)
articles of incorporation;
(b)
an application for a certificate of authority; or
(c)
a notice of change of registered office.
(47)
"Secretary" means the corporate officer to whom the bylaws or the board of directors
delegates responsibility under Subsection
16-6a-818(3)
for:
(a)
the preparation and maintenance of:
(i)
minutes of the meetings of:
(A)
the board of directors; or
(B)
the members; and
(ii)
the other records and information required to be kept by the nonprofit corporation
as described in Section
16-6a-1601
; and
(b)
authenticating records of the nonprofit corporation.
(48)
"Share" means a unit of interest in a nonprofit corporation.
(49)
"Shareholder" means a person in whose name a share is registered in the records of a
nonprofit corporation.
(50)
"State," when referring to a part of the United States, includes:
(a)
a state;
(b)
a commonwealth;
(c)
the District of Columbia;
(d)
an agency or governmental and political subdivision of a state, commonwealth, or
District of Columbia;
(e)
territory or insular possession of the United States; or
(f)
an agency or governmental and political subdivision of a territory or insular
possession of the United States.
(51)
"Street address" means:
(a)
(i)
street name and number;
(ii)
city or town; and
(iii)
United States post office zip code designation; or
(b)
if, by reason of rural location or otherwise, a street name, number, city, or town does
not exist, an appropriate description other than that described in Subsection
(51)(a)
fixing as nearly as possible the actual physical location, but only if the information
includes:
(i)
the rural free delivery route;
(ii)
the county; and
(iii)
the United States post office zip code designation.
(52)
"Tribal nonprofit corporation" means a nonprofit corporation:
(a)
incorporated under the law of a tribe; and
(b)
that is at least 51% owned or controlled by the tribe.
(53)
"Tribe" means a tribe, band, nation, pueblo, or other organized group or community of
Indians, including an Alaska Native village, that is legally recognized as eligible for and
is consistent with a special program, service, or entitlement provided by the United
States to Indians because of the tribe's status as Indians.
(54)
"United States" includes a district, authority, office, bureau, commission, department,
and another agency of the United States of America.
(55)
"Vote" includes authorization by:
(a)
written ballot; and
(b)
written consent.
(56)
(a)
"Voting group" means all the members of one or more classes of members or
directors that, under this chapter, the articles of incorporation, or the bylaws, are
entitled to vote and be counted together collectively on a matter.
(b)
All members or directors entitled by this chapter, the articles of incorporation, or the
bylaws to vote generally on a matter are for that purpose a single voting group.
(57)
(a)
"Voting member" means a person entitled to vote for all matters required or
permitted under this chapter to be submitted to a vote of the members, except as
otherwise provided in the articles of incorporation or bylaws.
(b)
A person is not a voting member solely because of:
(i)
a right the person has as a delegate;
(ii)
a right the person has to designate a director; or
(iii)
a right the person has as a director.
(c)
Except as the bylaws may otherwise provide, "voting member" includes a
"shareholder" if the nonprofit corporation has shareholders.
(58)
"Water company" means:
(a)
the same as that term is defined in Subsection
16-4-102(5)
; or
(b)
a mutual benefit corporation, when the stock in the mutual benefit corporation
represents a right to receive a distribution of water for beneficial use.
Section 10. Section
16-6a-113
is amended to read:
16-6a-113
. Certificates issued by the division.
(1)
Any person may apply to the division for:
(a)
a certificate of existence for a domestic nonprofit corporation;
(b)
a certificate of authorization for a foreign nonprofit corporation; or
(c)
a certificate that sets forth any facts of record in the division.
(2)
A certificate of existence or certificate of authorization sets forth:
(a)
(i)
the domestic nonprofit corporation's corporate name; or
(ii)
the foreign nonprofit corporation's corporate name registered in this state;
(b)
that:
(i)
(A)
the domestic nonprofit corporation is incorporated under the law of this
state; and
(B)
the date of its incorporation; or
(ii)
the foreign nonprofit corporation is authorized to conduct affairs in this state;
(c)
that all fees, taxes, and penalties owed to this state have been paid, if:
(i)
payment is reflected in the records of the division; and
(ii)
nonpayment affects the existence or authorization of the domestic or foreign
nonprofit corporation;
(d)
that the domestic or foreign nonprofit corporation's most recent annual report
required by Section
16-6a-1607
16-1a-212
has been filed by the division;
(e)
that articles of dissolution have not been filed by the division; and
(f)
other facts of record in the division that may be requested by the applicant.
(3)
Subject to any qualification stated in the certificate, a certificate issued by the division
may be relied upon as conclusive evidence of the facts set forth in the certificate.
Section 11. Section
16-6a-118
is amended to read:
16-6a-118
. Electronic documents.
(1)
Notwithstanding the other requirements of this chapter except subject to Section
16-6a-106
16-1a-203
, the division may by rule permit a writing required or permitted to
be filed with the division under this chapter:
(a)
to be delivered, mailed, or filed:
(i)
in an electronic medium; or
(ii)
by electronic transmission; or
(b)
to be signed by photographic, electronic, or other means prescribed by rule, except
that a writing signed in an electronic medium shall be signed by electronic signature
in accordance with
Title 46, Chapter 4, Uniform Electronic Transactions Act
.
(2)
The division may by rule provide for any writing required or permitted to be prepared,
delivered, or mailed by the division under this chapter to be prepared, delivered, or
mailed:
(a)
in an electronic medium; or
(b)
by electronic transmission.
Section 12. Section
16-6a-202
is amended to read:
16-6a-202
. Articles of incorporation.
(1)
The articles of incorporation shall set forth:
(a)
one or more purposes for which the nonprofit corporation is organized;
(b)
a corporate name for the nonprofit corporation that satisfies the requirements of
Section
16-6a-401
16-1a-302
;
(c)
the information required by
Subsection
16-17-203(1)
Section
16-1a-404
;
(d)
the name and address of each incorporator;
(e)
whether or not the nonprofit corporation will have voting members;
(f)
if the nonprofit corporation is to issue shares of stock evidencing membership in the
nonprofit corporation or interests in water or other property rights:
(i)
the aggregate number of shares that the nonprofit corporation has authority to
issue; and
(ii)
if the shares are to be divided into classes:
(A)
the number of shares of each class;
(B)
the designation of each class; and
(C)
a statement of the preferences, limitations, and relative rights of the shares of
each class; and
(g)
provisions not inconsistent with law regarding the distribution of assets on
dissolution.
(2)
The articles of incorporation may but need not set forth:
(a)
the names and addresses of the individuals who are to serve as the initial directors;
(b)
provisions not inconsistent with law regarding:
(i)
managing the business and regulating the affairs of the nonprofit corporation;
(ii)
defining, limiting, and regulating the powers of:
(A)
the nonprofit corporation;
(B)
the board of directors of the nonprofit corporation; and
(C)
the members of the nonprofit corporation or any class of members;
(iii)
whether cumulative voting will be permitted; and
(iv)
the characteristics, qualifications, rights, limitations, and obligations attaching to
each or any class of members; and
(c)
any provision that under this chapter is permitted to be in the articles of incorporation
or required or permitted to be set forth in the bylaws, including elective provisions
that in accordance with this chapter shall be included in the articles of incorporation
to be effective.
(3)
(a)
It is sufficient under Subsection
(1)(a)
to state, either alone or with other purposes,
that the purpose of the nonprofit corporation is to engage in any lawful act for which
a nonprofit corporation may be organized under this chapter.
(b)
If the articles of incorporation include the statement described in Subsection
(3)(a)
,
all lawful acts and activities shall be within the purposes of the nonprofit corporation,
except for express limitations, if any.
(4)
The articles of incorporation need not set forth any corporate power enumerated in this
chapter.
(5)
The articles of incorporation shall:
(a)
be signed by each incorporator; and
(b)
meet the filing requirements of Section
16-6a-105
16-1a-202
.
(6)
(a)
If this chapter conditions any matter upon the presence of a provision in the
bylaws, the condition is satisfied if the provision is present either in:
(i)
the articles of incorporation; or
(ii)
the bylaws.
(b)
If this chapter conditions any matter upon the absence of a provision in the bylaws,
the condition is satisfied only if the provision is absent from both:
(i)
the articles of incorporation; and
(ii)
the bylaws.
Section 13. Section
16-6a-203
is amended to read:
16-6a-203
. Incorporation -- Required filings.
(1)
A nonprofit corporation is incorporated, and its corporate existence begins:
(a)
when the articles of incorporation are filed by the division; or
(b)
if a delayed effective date is specified as described in
Subsection 16-6a-108(2)
Section
16-1a-204
, on the delayed effective date, unless a certificate of withdrawal is
filed prior to the delayed effective date.
(2)
Notwithstanding
Subsection
16-6a-110
(4)
Section
16-1a-207
, the filing of the articles
of incorporation by the division is conclusive proof that all conditions precedent to
incorporation have been satisfied, except in a proceeding by the state to:
(a)
cancel or revoke the incorporation; or
(b)
involuntarily dissolve the nonprofit corporation.
(3)
Beginning January 1, 2025, a nonprofit corporation that is a charitable organization,
unless exempted by Section
13-22-15
, shall file with the division the information
described by Section
13-22-15
in the form described in Section
13-22-15
.
Section 14. Section
16-6a-704
is amended to read:
16-6a-704
. Notice of meeting.
(1)
A nonprofit corporation shall give to each member entitled to vote at the meeting notice
consistent with its bylaws of meetings of members in a fair and reasonable manner.
(2)
Any notice that conforms to the requirements of Subsection
(3)
is fair and reasonable,
but other means of giving notice may also be fair and reasonable when all the
circumstances are considered.
(3)
Notice is fair and reasonable if:
(a)
the nonprofit corporation notifies its members of the place, date, and time of each
annual, regular, and special meeting of members:
(i)
no fewer than 10 days before the meeting;
(ii)
if notice is mailed by other than first-class or registered mail, no fewer than 30
days, nor more than 60 days before the meeting date; and
(iii)
if notice is given:
(A)
by newspaper as provided in Subsection
16-6a-103(2)(b)(i)(A)
, by publication
three separate times with:
(I)
the first of the publications no more than 60 days before the meeting date;
and
(II)
the last of the publications no fewer than 10 days before the meeting date;
and
(B)
(I)
by publication in accordance with Section
45-1-101
; and
(II)
as provided in Subsection
16-6a-103(2)(b)(i)(B)
, for 60 days before the
meeting date;
(b)
the notice of an annual or regular meeting includes a description of any matter or
matters that:
(i)
must be approved by the members; or
(ii)
for which the members' approval is sought under Sections
16-1a-703
,
16-6a-825
,
16-6a-910
,
16-6a-1003
,
16-6a-1010
,
16-6a-1102
,
16-6a-1202
, and
16-6a-1402
;
and
(c)
unless otherwise provided by this chapter or the bylaws, the notice of a special
meeting includes a description of the purpose or purposes for which the meeting is
called.
(4)
(a)
Unless otherwise provided by the bylaws, if an annual, regular, or special meeting
of members is adjourned to a different date, time, or place, notice need not be given
of the new date, time, or place, if the new date, time, or place is announced at the
meeting before adjournment.
(b)
Notwithstanding Subsection
(4)(a)
, if a new record date for the adjourned meeting is
or shall be fixed under Section
16-6a-706
, notice of the adjourned meeting shall be
given under this section to the members of record as of the new record date.
(5)
When giving notice of an annual, regular, or special meeting of members, a nonprofit
corporation shall give notice of a matter a member intends to raise at the meeting if:
(a)
requested in writing to do so by a person entitled to call a special meeting; and
(b)
the request is received by the secretary or president of the nonprofit corporation at
least 10 days before the nonprofit corporation gives notice of the meeting.
Section 15. Section
16-6a-1002
is amended to read:
16-6a-1002
. Amendment of articles of incorporation by board of directors or
incorporators.
(1)
Unless otherwise provided in the articles of incorporation, the board of directors may
adopt, without member approval, one or more amendments to the articles of
incorporation to:
(a)
delete the names and addresses of the initial directors;
(b)
change the information required by
Subsection
16-17-203(1)
Section
16-1a-404
, but
an amendment is not required to change the information;
(c)
change the corporate name by:
(i)
substituting the word "corporation," "incorporated," "company," "limited," or an
abbreviation of any such word for a similar word or abbreviation in the name; or
(ii)
adding, deleting, or changing a geographical attribution; or
(d)
make any other change expressly permitted by this chapter to be made without
member action.
(2)
The board of directors may adopt, without member action, one or more amendments to
the articles of incorporation to change the corporate name, if necessary, in connection
with the reinstatement of a nonprofit corporation pursuant to Section
16-6a-1412
16-1a-604
.
(3)
(a)
Subject to any approval required pursuant to Section
16-6a-1013
, if a nonprofit
corporation has no members, no members entitled to vote on amendments, or no
members yet admitted to membership, one or more amendments to the nonprofit
corporation's articles of incorporation may be adopted by:
(i)
its incorporators until directors have been chosen; or
(ii)
its directors after the directors have been chosen.
(b)
A nonprofit corporation described in Subsection
(3)(a)
shall provide notice of any
meeting at which an amendment is to be voted upon.
(c)
The notice required by Subsection
(3)(b)
shall:
(i)
be in accordance with Section
16-6a-814
;
(ii)
state that the purpose, or one of the purposes, of the meeting is to consider a
proposed amendment to the articles of incorporation; and
(iii)
(A)
contain or be accompanied by a copy or summary of the amendment; or
(B)
state the general nature of the amendment.
(d)
An amendment described in Subsection
(3)(a)
shall be approved:
(i)
by a majority of the incorporators, until directors have been chosen; or
(ii)
after directors are chosen by a majority of the directors in office at the time the
amendment is adopted or such greater number as is set forth in the bylaws.
Section 16. Section
16-6a-1006
is amended to read:
16-6a-1006
. Restated articles of incorporation.
(1)
(a)
The board of directors may restate the articles of incorporation at any time with or
without member action.
(b)
The incorporators of a nonprofit corporation may restate the articles of incorporation
at any time if the nonprofit corporation:
(i)
has no members; and
(ii)
no directors have been chosen.
(2)
(a)
The restatement may include one or more amendments to the articles of
incorporation.
(b)
Notwithstanding Subsection
(1)
, if the restatement includes an amendment requiring
member approval, it shall be adopted as provided in Section
16-6a-1003
.
(3)
(a)
If the board of directors submits a restatement for member action, the nonprofit
corporation shall give notice, in accordance with Section
16-6a-704
, to each member
entitled to vote on the restatement of the members' meeting at which the restatement
will be voted upon.
(b)
The notice required by Subsection
(3)(a)
shall:
(i)
state that the purpose, or one of the purposes, of the meeting is to consider the
restatement; and
(ii)
contain or be accompanied by a copy of the restatement that identifies any
amendment or other change it would make in the articles of incorporation.
(4)
A nonprofit corporation restating its articles of incorporation shall deliver to the division
for filing articles of restatement setting forth:
(a)
the name of the nonprofit corporation;
(b)
the text of the restated articles of incorporation;
(c)
if the restatement contains an amendment to the articles of incorporation that was
adopted by the members, the information required by Subsection
16-6a-1005(5)
;
(d)
if the restatement was adopted by the board of directors or incorporators without
member action, a statement to that effect and that member action was not required;
and
(e)
the restatement does not need to contain the name or address of the incorporator or
incorporators that were included in the articles of incorporation when originally filed.
(5)
Upon filing by the division or at any later effective date determined pursuant to Section
16-6a-108
16-1a-204
, restated articles of incorporation supersede the original articles of
incorporation and all prior amendments to the original articles of incorporation.
Section 17. Section
16-6a-1008.7
is amended to read:
16-6a-1008.7
. Conversion to or from a domestic limited liability company.
(1)
(a)
A domestic nonprofit corporation may convert to a domestic limited liability
company subject to
Title 48, Chapter 3a, Utah Revised Uniform Limited Liability
Company Act
Chapter 20, Utah Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act
,
pursuant to Section
48-3a-1405
16-20-1205
, by complying with:
(i)
this Subsection
(1)
; and
(ii)
Section
48-3a-1041
16-1a-902
.
(b)
If a domestic nonprofit corporation converts to a domestic limited liability company
in accordance with this Subsection
(1)
, the articles of conversion or statement of
conversion, as applicable, shall:
(i)
comply with Sections
48-3a-1042
16-1a-903
and
48-3a-1045
16-1a-906
; and
(ii)
if the corporation has any members, provide for:
(A)
the cancellation of any membership; or
(B)
the conversion of any membership in the domestic nonprofit corporation to a
membership interest in the domestic limited liability company.
(c)
Before articles of conversion or statement of conversion may be filed with the
division, the conversion shall be approved:
(i)
in the manner provided for the articles of incorporation or bylaws of the domestic
nonprofit corporation; or
(ii)
if the articles of incorporation or bylaws of the domestic nonprofit corporation do
not provide the method for approval:
(A)
if the domestic nonprofit corporation has voting members, by all of the
members of the domestic nonprofit corporation regardless of limitations or
restrictions on the voting rights of the members; or
(B)
if the nonprofit domestic corporation does not have voting members, by a
majority of:
(I)
the directors in office at the time the conversion is approved by the board of
directors; or
(II)
if directors have not been appointed or elected, the incorporators.
(2)
A domestic limited liability company may convert to a domestic nonprofit corporation
subject to this chapter by:
(a)
filing articles of incorporation in accordance with this chapter; and
(b)
complying with Section
48-3a-1041
16-1a-902
, pursuant to Section
48-3a-1405
16-20-1205
.
(3)
Any conversion under this section may not result in a violation, directly or indirectly, of:
(a)
Section
16-6a-1301
; or
(b)
any other provision of this chapter.
Section 18. Section
16-6a-1404
is amended to read:
16-6a-1404
. Revocation of dissolution.
(1)
A nonprofit corporation may revoke its dissolution within 120 days after the effective
date of the dissolution.
(2)
(a)
Except as provided in Subsection
(2)(b)
, revocation of dissolution shall be
authorized in the same manner as the dissolution was authorized.
(b)
The board of directors may revoke the dissolution without member action if:
(i)
the dissolution is authorized pursuant to Section
16-6a-1402
; and
(ii)
the authorization permitted revocation by action of the board of directors alone.
(3)
(a)
After the revocation of dissolution is authorized, the nonprofit corporation may
revoke the dissolution by delivering to the division for filing, within 120 days after
the effective date of dissolution:
(i)
articles of revocation of dissolution; and
(ii)
a copy of its articles of dissolution.
(b)
The articles of revocation of dissolution shall set forth:
(i)
the name of the nonprofit corporation;
(ii)
the effective date of the dissolution that was revoked;
(iii)
the date that the revocation of dissolution was authorized;
(iv)
if, pursuant to Subsection
(2)
, the directors or the incorporators revoked a
dissolution authorized under Section
16-6a-1401
, a statement that the revocation
of dissolution was authorized by the directors or the incorporators, as the case may
be;
(v)
if, pursuant to Subsection
(2)
, the directors revoked a dissolution approved by the
members, a statement that the revocation was permitted by action of the directors
pursuant to that approval; and
(vi)
if the revocation of dissolution was approved pursuant to Subsection
(2)
by the
members, a statement that the number of votes cast for revocation of dissolution
by each voting group entitled to vote separately on the proposal to dissolve was
sufficient for approval by that voting group.
(4)
(a)
Revocation of dissolution is effective as provided in
Subsection
16-6a-108(1)
Section
16-1a-205
.
(b)
A delayed effective date may not be specified pursuant to
Subsection
16-6a-108(2)
Section
16-1a-204
.
(5)
When the revocation of dissolution is effective:
(a)
the revocation relates back to and takes effect as of the effective date of the
dissolution; and
(b)
the nonprofit corporation may carry on its activities and use its corporate name as if
dissolution had never occurred.
Section 19. Section
16-6a-1601
is amended to read:
16-6a-1601
. Corporate records.
(1)
A nonprofit corporation shall keep as permanent records:
(a)
minutes of all meetings of its members and board of directors;
(b)
a record of all actions taken by the members or board of directors without a meeting;
(c)
a record of all actions taken by a committee of the board of directors in place of the
board of directors on behalf of the nonprofit corporation; and
(d)
a record of all waivers of notices of meetings of members and of the board of
directors or any committee of the board of directors.
(2)
A nonprofit corporation shall maintain appropriate accounting records.
(3)
A nonprofit corporation or its agent shall maintain a record of its members in a form
that permits preparation of a list of the name and address of all members:
(a)
in alphabetical order, by class; and
(b)
showing the number of votes each member is entitled to vote.
(4)
A nonprofit corporation shall maintain its records in written form or in another form
capable of conversion into written form within a reasonable time.
(5)
A nonprofit corporation shall keep a copy of each of the following records at its
principal office:
(a)
its articles of incorporation;
(b)
its bylaws;
(c)
resolutions adopted by its board of directors relating to the characteristics,
qualifications, rights, limitations, and obligations of members or any class or
category of members;
(d)
the minutes of all members' meetings for a period of three years;
(e)
records of all action taken by members without a meeting, for a period of three years;
(f)
all written communications to members generally as members for a period of three
years;
(g)
a list of the names and business or home addresses of its current directors and
officers;
(h)
a copy of its most recent annual report delivered to the division under Section
16-6a-1607
16-1a-212
; and
(i)
all financial statements prepared for periods ending during the last three years that a
member could have requested under Section
16-6a-1606
.
Section 20. Section
16-6a-1701
is amended to read:
16-6a-1701
. Application to existing domestic nonprofit corporations -- Reports
of domestic and foreign nonprofit corporation.
(1)
Except as otherwise provided in Section
16-6a-1704
, this chapter applies to domestic
nonprofit corporations as follows:
(a)
domestic nonprofit corporations in existence on April 30, 2001, that were
incorporated under any general statute of this state providing for incorporation of
nonprofit corporations, including all nonprofit corporations organized under any
former provisions of
Title 16, Chapter 6
;
(b)
mutual irrigation, canal, ditch, reservoir, and water companies and water users'
associations organized and existing under the laws of this state on April 30, 2001;
(c)
corporations organized under the provisions of
Title 16, Chapter 7, Corporations Sole
,
for purposes of applying all provisions relating to merger or consolidation; and
(d)
to actions taken by the directors, officers, and members of the entities described in
Subsections
(1)(a)
,
(b)
, and
(c)
after April 30, 2001.
(2)
Domestic nonprofit corporations to which this chapter applies, that are organized and
existing under the laws of this state on April 30, 2001:
(a)
shall continue in existence with all the rights and privileges applicable to nonprofit
corporations organized under this chapter; and
(b)
from April 30, 2001, shall have all the rights and privileges and shall be subject to all
the remedies, restrictions, liabilities, and duties prescribed in this chapter except as
otherwise specifically provided in this chapter.
(3)
Every existing domestic nonprofit corporation and foreign nonprofit corporation
qualified to conduct affairs in this state on April 30, 2001, shall file an annual report
with the division setting forth the information prescribed by Section
16-6a-1607
16-1a-212
. The annual report shall be filed at such time as would have been required
had this chapter not taken effect and shall be filed annually thereafter as required in
Section
16-6a-1607
16-1a-212
.
Section 21. Section
16-7-12
is amended to read:
16-7-12
. Dissolution of corporation sole.
(1)
A corporation sole may be dissolved and its affairs wound up voluntarily by filing with
the Division of Corporations and Commercial Code articles of dissolution, fully
executed and signed under penalty of perjury, by the chief officer of the corporation. If
any corporation sole ceases to have assets, has failed to function, or desires to terminate
its existence, the articles of dissolution may be filed by any officer of the corporation
authorized to administer the affairs and property of the corporation.
(2)
An original and a copy of the articles of dissolution shall be submitted to the Division of
Corporations and Commercial Code. If it conforms to law, the division shall file it and
issue a certificate of dissolution. After the issuance of this certificate, the corporation
shall cease to carry on business, except for the purpose of adjusting and winding up its
affairs.
(3)
The articles of dissolution shall set forth:
(a)
the name of the corporation;
(b)
the reason for its dissolution or winding up;
(c)
that dissolution of the corporation has been duly authorized by the organization
governed by the corporation sole;
(d)
the names and addresses of the persons who are to supervise the winding up of the
affairs of the corporation;
(e)
that all debts, obligations, and liabilities of the corporation sole have been paid and
discharged or that adequate provision has been made therefor;
(f)
that all the remaining property and assets of the corporation sole have been
transferred, conveyed, or distributed in accordance with the purposes of Section
16-7-1
; and
(g)
that there are no suits pending against the corporation sole in any court, or that
adequate provision has been made for the satisfaction of any judgment, order, or
decree which may be entered against it in any pending suit.
(4)
The Division of Corporations and Commercial Code may administratively dissolve a
corporation sole that does not comply with Subsection
16-7-15(1)
in accordance with the
relevant procedures for administrative dissolution of a nonprofit corporation under
Sections
16-6a-1411
16-6a-1411
,
16-6a-1412
16-6a-1412
, and
16-6a-1413
16-6a-1413
.
Section 22. Section
16-7-15
is amended to read:
16-7-15
. Official representative -- Registered office -- Registered agent.
(1)
(a)
A corporation sole altering, amending, or restating its articles of incorporation on
or after May 3, 2004
,
shall continuously maintain with the Division of Corporations
and Commercial Code the name, title, and Utah street address of an official
representative for the corporation sole.
(b)
The official representative described in Subsection
(1)(a)
shall, on behalf of the
corporation sole, receive communication, notices, or demands from:
(i)
the Division of Corporations and Commercial Code; or
(ii)
any other state or federal authority, agency, or official.
(c)
If a corporation sole appoints a registered agent pursuant to Subsection
(2)
, that
registered agent is the official representative of the corporation sole for purposes of
this Subsection
(1)
.
(2)
(a)
A corporation sole formed under this chapter may maintain a registered office and
registered agent in Utah by complying with
Title 16, Chapter 17, Model Registered
Agents Act
Chapter 1a, Part 4, Registered Agent of an Entity
.
(b)
A corporation sole maintaining registered agent may change the registered agent by
complying with the requirements of
Title 16, Chapter 17, Model Registered Agents
Act
Chapter 1a, Part 4, Registered Agent of an Entity
.
(c)
A registered agent of a corporation sole may resign by complying with the
requirements imposed on a registered agent under
Title 16, Chapter 17, Model
Registered Agents Act
Chapter 1a, Part 4, Registered Agent of an Entity
.
(d)
A registered agent described in this Subsection
(2)
is the agent of the corporation
sole for service of:
(i)
process;
(ii)
notice;
(iii)
demand; or
(iv)
any type required or permitted by law to be served on the corporation sole.
Section 23. Section
16-10a-102
is amended to read:
16-10a-102
. Definitions.
As used in this chapter:
(1)
(a)
"Address" means a location where mail can be delivered by the United States
Postal Service.
(b)
"Address" includes:
(i)
a post office box number;
(ii)
a rural free delivery route number; and
(iii)
a street name and number.
(2)
"Affiliate" means a person that directly or indirectly through one or more intermediaries
controls, or is controlled by, or is under common control with, the person specified.
(3)
"Assumed corporate name" means a name assumed for use in this state by a foreign
corporation pursuant to Section
16-10a-1506
16-1a-507
because its corporate name is
not available for use in this state.
(4)
"Articles of incorporation" include:
(a)
amended and restated articles of incorporation;
(b)
articles of merger; and
(c)
a document of a similar import to those described in Subsections
(4)(a)
and
(b)
.
(5)
"Authorized shares" means the shares of all classes a domestic or foreign corporation is
authorized to issue.
(6)
"Bylaws" includes amended bylaws and restated bylaws.
(7)
"Cash" and "money" are used interchangeably in this chapter and mean:
(a)
legal tender;
(b)
a negotiable instrument; and
(c)
a cash equivalent readily convertible into legal tender.
(8)
"Conspicuous" means so written that a reasonable person against whom the writing is to
operate should have noticed it, including printing or typing in:
(a)
italics;
(b)
boldface;
(c)
contrasting color;
(d)
capitals; or
(e)
underlining.
(9)
"Control" or a "controlling interest" means the direct or indirect possession of the power
to direct or cause the direction of the management and policies of an entity, whether
through the ownership of voting shares, by contract, or otherwise.
(10)
"Corporate name" means:
(a)
the name of a domestic corporation or a domestic nonprofit corporation as stated in
its articles of incorporation; or
(b)
the name of a foreign corporation or a foreign nonprofit corporation as stated in its
articles of incorporation or document of similar import.
(11)
"Corporation" or "domestic corporation" means a corporation for profit that:
(a)
is not a foreign corporation; and
(b)
is incorporated under or subject to this chapter.
(12)
"Deliver" includes delivery by mail or another means of transmission authorized by
Section
16-10a-103
, except that delivery to the division means actual receipt by the
division.
(13)
(a)
"Distribution" means the following by a corporation to or for the benefit of its
shareholders in respect of any of the corporation's shares:
(i)
a direct or indirect transfer of money or other property, other than a corporation's
own shares; or
(ii)
incurrence of indebtedness by the corporation.
(b)
A distribution may be in the form of:
(i)
a declaration or payment of a dividend;
(ii)
a purchase, redemption, or other acquisition of shares;
(iii)
distribution of indebtedness; or
(iv)
another form.
(14)
"Division" means the Division of Corporations and Commercial Code.
(15)
"Effective date," when referring to a document filed by the division, means the time
and date determined in accordance with Section
16-10a-123
16-1a-204
.
(16)
"Effective date of notice" means the date notice is effective as provided in Section
16-10a-103
.
(17)
"Electronic transmission" or "electronically transmitted" means a process of
communication not directly involving the physical transfer of paper that is suitable for
the receipt, retention, retrieval, and reproduction of information by the recipient,
whether by e-mail, facsimile, or otherwise.
(18)
"Employee" includes an officer but not a director, unless the director accepts a duty
that makes that director also an employee.
(19)
"Entity" includes:
(a)
a domestic and foreign corporation;
(b)
a nonprofit corporation;
(c)
a limited liability company;
(d)
a profit or nonprofit unincorporated association;
(e)
a business trust;
(f)
an estate;
(g)
a partnership;
(h)
a trust;
(i)
two or more persons having a joint or common economic interest;
(j)
a state;
(k)
the United States; and
(l)
a foreign government.
(20)
"Foreign corporation" means a corporation for profit incorporated under a law other
than the law of this state.
(21)
"Governmental subdivision" means:
(a)
county;
(b)
municipality; or
(c)
another type of governmental subdivision authorized by the laws of this state.
(22)
"Individual" means:
(a)
a natural person;
(b)
the estate of an incompetent individual; or
(c)
the estate of a deceased individual.
(23)
"Mail," "mailed," or "mailing" means deposit, deposited, or depositing in the United
States mail, properly addressed, first class postage prepaid, and includes registered or
certified mail for which the proper fee is paid.
(24)
"Notice"
is as provided
means the same as that term is defined
in Section
16-10a-103
.
(25)
"Principal office" means the office, in or out of this state, designated by a domestic or
foreign corporation as its principal office in the most recent document on file with the
division providing the information, including:
(a)
an annual report;
(b)
an application for a certificate of authority; or
(c)
a notice of change of principal office.
(26)
"Proceeding" includes:
(a)
a civil suit;
(b)
arbitration or mediation; and
(c)
a criminal, administrative, or investigatory action.
(27)
"Qualified shares" means, with respect to a director's conflicting interest transaction
pursuant to Section
16-10a-853
, one or more shares entitled to vote on the transaction,
except a share:
(a)
that, to the knowledge, before the vote, of the secretary, other officer, or agent of the
corporation authorized to tabulate votes, is beneficially owned; or
(b)
the voting of which is controlled, by:
(i)
a director who has a conflicting interest respecting the transaction;
(ii)
a related person of that director; or
(iii)
a person referred to in Subsections
(27)(b)(i)
and
(ii)
.
(28)
"Receive," when used in reference to receipt of a writing or other document by a
domestic or foreign corporation, means the writing or other document is actually
received by:
(a)
the corporation at its:
(i)
registered office in this state; or
(ii)
principal office;
(b)
the secretary of the corporation, wherever the secretary is found; or
(c)
another person authorized by the bylaws or the board of directors to receive the
writing or other document, wherever that person is found.
(29)
(a)
"Record date" means the date established under
Part 6, Shares and Distributions
,
or
Part 7, Shareholders
, on which a corporation determines the identity of its
shareholders.
(b)
The determination under Subsection
(29)(a)
shall be made as of the close of business
on the record date unless another time for doing so is specified when the record date
is fixed.
(30)
"Registered office" means the office within this state designated by a domestic or
foreign corporation as its registered office in the most recent document on file with the
division providing that information, including:
(a)
articles of incorporation;
(b)
an application for a certificate of authority; or
(c)
a notice of change of registered office.
(31)
"Related person" of a director means:
(a)
the spouse of the director;
(b)
a child, grandchild, sibling, or parent of the director;
(c)
the spouse of a child, grandchild, sibling, or parent of the director;
(d)
an individual having the same home as the director;
(e)
a trust or estate of which the director or any other individual specified in this
Subsection
(31)
is a substantial beneficiary; or
(f)
a trust, estate, incompetent, conservatee, or minor of which the director is a fiduciary.
(32)
"Secretary" means the corporate officer to whom the bylaws or the board of directors
delegates responsibility under Subsection
16-10a-830(3)
for:
(a)
the preparation and maintenance of:
(i)
minutes of the meetings of the board of directors and of the shareholders; and
(ii)
the other records and information required to be kept by the corporation by
Section
16-10a-830
; and
(b)
authenticating records of the corporation.
(33)
" Share" means the unit into which the proprietary interests in a corporation are
divided.
(34)
(a)
"Shareholder" means:
(i)
the person in whose name a share is registered in the records of a corporation; or
(ii)
the beneficial owner of a share to the extent recognized pursuant to Section
16-10a-723
.
(b)
For purposes of this chapter:
(i)
the following, identified as a shareholder in a corporation's current record of
shareholders, constitute one shareholder:
(A)
(I)
three or fewer coowners; or
(II)
in the case of more than three coowners, each coowner in excess of the first
three is counted as a separate shareholder;
(B)
a corporation, limited liability company, partnership, trust, estate, or other
entity; and
(C)
the trustees, guardians, custodians, or other fiduciaries of a single trust, estate,
or account;
(ii)
shareholdings registered in substantially similar names constitute one shareholder
if it is reasonable to believe that the names represent the same person; and
(iii)
if the record of a shareholder is not maintained in accordance with accepted
practice, an additional person who would be identified as an owner on that record
if it had been maintained in accordance with accepted practice shall be included as
a holder of record.
(35)
"Subscriber" means a person who subscribes for shares in a corporation, whether
before or after incorporation.
(36)
"Tribe" means a tribe, band, nation, pueblo, or other organized group or community of
Indians, including an Alaska Native village, that is legally recognized as eligible for and
is consistent with a special program, service, or entitlement provided by the United
States to Indians because of their status as Indians.
(37)
"Tribal corporation" means a corporation:
(a)
incorporated under the law of a tribe; and
(b)
that is at least 51% owned or controlled by the tribe.
(38)
(a)
"Voting group" means all shares of one or more classes or series that under the
articles of incorporation or this chapter are entitled to vote and be counted together
collectively on a matter at a meeting of shareholders.
(b)
All shares entitled by the articles of incorporation or this chapter to vote generally on
the matter are for that purpose a single voting group.
Section 24. Section
16-10a-128
is amended to read:
16-10a-128
. Certificates issued by the division.
(1)
Anyone may apply to the division for a certificate of existence for a domestic
corporation, a certificate of authorization for a foreign corporation, or a certificate that
sets forth any facts of record in the office of the division.
(2)
A certificate of existence or authorization sets forth:
(a)
the domestic corporation's corporate name or the foreign corporation's corporate
name registered in this state;
(b)
that:
(i)
the domestic corporation is duly incorporated under the law of this state and the
date of its incorporation; or
(ii)
the foreign corporation is authorized to transact business in this state;
(c)
that all fees, taxes, and penalties owed to this state have been paid, if:
(i)
payment is reflected in the records of the division; and
(ii)
nonpayment affects the existence or authorization of the domestic or foreign
corporation;
(d)
that its most recent annual report required by Section
16-10a-1607
16-1a-212
has
been filed by the division;
(e)
that articles of dissolution have not been filed; and
(f)
other facts of record in the office of the division that may be requested by the
applicant.
(3)
Subject to any qualification stated in the certificate, a certificate issued by the division
may be relied upon as conclusive evidence of the facts set forth in the certificate.
Section 25. Section
16-10a-202
is amended to read:
16-10a-202
. Articles of incorporation.
(1)
The articles of incorporation shall set forth:
(a)
the purpose or purposes for which the corporation is organized;
(b)
a corporate name for the corporation that satisfies the requirements of Section
16-10a-401
16-1a-302
;
(c)
the number of shares the corporation is authorized to issue;
(d)
the information required by Section
16-10a-601
with respect to each class of shares
the corporation is authorized to issue;
(e)
the information required by
Subsection
16-17-203(1)
Section
16-1a-404
; and
(f)
the name and address of each incorporator.
(2)
The articles of incorporation may set forth:
(a)
the names and addresses of the individuals who are to serve as the initial directors;
(b)
provisions not inconsistent with law regarding:
(i)
managing the business and regulating the affairs of the corporation;
(ii)
defining, limiting, and regulating the powers of the corporation, its board of
directors, and its shareholders;
(iii)
a par value for authorized shares or classes of shares; and
(iv)
the imposition of personal liability on shareholders for the debts of the
corporation to a specified extent and upon specified conditions; and
(c)
any provision that under this chapter is permitted to be in the articles of incorporation
or required or permitted to be set forth in the bylaws including elective provisions
which, to be effective, shall be included in the articles of incorporation, as provided
in this chapter.
(3)
It shall be sufficient under Subsection
(1)(a)
to state, either alone or with other purposes,
that the purpose of the corporation is to engage in any lawful act or activity for which
corporations may be organized under this chapter, and by such statement all lawful acts
and activities shall be within the purposes of the corporation, except for express
limitations, if any.
(4)
The articles of incorporation need not set forth any of the corporate powers enumerated
in this chapter.
(5)
The articles of incorporation shall be signed by each incorporator and meet the filing
requirements of Section
16-10a-120
16-1a-202
.
(6)
(a)
If this chapter conditions any matter upon the presence of a provision in the
bylaws, the condition is satisfied if the provision is present either in the articles of
incorporation or the bylaws.
(b)
If this chapter conditions any matter upon the absence of a provision in the bylaws,
the condition is satisfied only if the provision is absent from both the articles of
incorporation and the bylaws.
Section 26. Section
16-10a-203
is amended to read:
16-10a-203
. Incorporation.
(1)
A corporation is incorporated, and its corporate existence begins, when the articles of
incorporation are filed by the division, unless a delayed effective date is specified
pursuant to
Subsection
16-10a-123(2)
Section
16-1a-204
, in which case the
incorporation is effective, and the corporate existence begins, on the delayed effective
date, unless a certificate of withdrawal is filed prior to the delayed effective date.
(2)
The filing of the articles of incorporation by the division is conclusive proof that all
conditions precedent to incorporation have been satisfied, except in a proceeding by the
state to cancel or revoke the incorporation or involuntarily dissolve the corporation.
Section 27. Section
16-10a-1002
is amended to read:
16-10a-1002
. Amendment by board of directors.
(1)
Unless otherwise provided in the articles of incorporation, a corporation's board of
directors may adopt, without shareholder action, one or more amendments to the
corporation's articles of incorporation to:
(a)
delete the names and addresses of incorporators or initial directors or both from the
articles of incorporation;
(b)
change the information required by
Subsection
16-17-203(1)
Section
16-1a-404
, but
an amendment is not required to change the information;
(c)
change each issued and unissued authorized share of a class into a greater number of
whole shares if the corporation has only shares of that class outstanding;
(d)
change the corporate name by adding the word "corporation," "incorporated," or
"company," or an abbreviation of these words, or by substituting any such word or
abbreviation for a similar word or abbreviation in the name; or
(e)
make any other change expressly permitted by this chapter to be made without
shareholder action.
(2)
The board of directors may adopt, without shareholder action, one or more amendments
to the articles of incorporation to change the corporate name, if necessary, in connection
with the reinstatement of a corporation pursuant to Section
16-10a-1422
16-1a-604
.
Section 28. Section
16-10a-1007
is amended to read:
16-10a-1007
. Restated articles of incorporation.
(1)
A corporation's board of directors may restate its articles of incorporation at any time
with or without shareholder action. A corporation's incorporators may restate its articles
of incorporation at any time if the corporation has not issued shares and if no directors
have been appointed.
(2)
The restatement may include one or more amendments to the articles of incorporation.
If the restatement includes an amendment requiring shareholder approval, it must be
adopted as provided in Section
16-10a-1003
.
(3)
If the board of directors submits a restatement for shareholder action, the corporation
shall give notice, in accordance with Section
16-10a-705
, to each shareholder entitled to
vote on the restatement, of the proposed shareholders' meeting at which the restatement
will be voted upon. The notice shall state that the purpose, or one of the purposes, of the
meeting is to consider the proposed restatement and the notice shall contain or be
accompanied by a copy of the restatement that identifies any amendment or other
change it would make in the articles of incorporation.
(4)
A corporation restating its articles of incorporation shall deliver to the division for filing
articles of restatement setting forth:
(a)
the name of the corporation;
(b)
the text of the restated articles of incorporation;
(c)
if the restatement contains an amendment to the articles of incorporation, the
information required to be set forth in articles of amendment by Section
16-10a-1006
;
(d)
if the restatement does not contain an amendment to the articles of incorporation, a
statement to that effect; and
(e)
if the restatement was adopted by the board of directors or incorporators without
shareholder action, a statement as to how the restatement was adopted and that
shareholder action was not required.
(5)
Upon filing by the division or at any later effective date determined pursuant to Section
16-10a-123
16-1a-204
, restated articles of incorporation supersede the original articles
of incorporation and all prior amendments to them.
Section 29. Section
16-10a-1008.7
is amended to read:
16-10a-1008.7
. Conversion to or from a domestic limited liability company.
(1)
(a)
A corporation may convert to a domestic limited liability company subject to
Title 48, Chapter 3a, Utah Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act
Chapter
20, Utah Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act
, as appropriate pursuant
to Section
48-3a-1405
16-20-1205
by complying with:
(i)
this Subsection
(1)
; and
(ii)
Section
48-3a-1041
16-1a-902
.
(b)
If a corporation converts to a domestic limited liability company in accordance with
this Subsection
(1)
, the articles of conversion shall:
(i)
comply with Sections
48-3a-1045
16-1a-906
and
48-3a-1046
16-1a-907
; and
(ii)
if the corporation has issued shares, provide for:
(A)
the cancellation of any issued share; or
(B)
the conversion of any issued share to a membership interest in the domestic
limited liability company.
(c)
Before a statement of conversion, in accordance with Section
48-3a-1045
16-1a-906
,
may be filed with the division, the conversion shall be approved:
(i)
in the manner provided for the articles of incorporation or bylaws of the
corporation; or
(ii)
if the articles of incorporation or bylaws of the corporation do not provide the
method for approval:
(A)
if the corporation has issued shares, by all of the outstanding shares of all
classes of shares of the corporation regardless of limitations or restrictions on
the voting rights of the shares; or
(B)
if the corporation has not issued shares, by a majority of:
(I)
the directors in office at the time that the conversion is approved by the
board of directors; or
(II)
if directors have not been appointed or elected, the incorporators.
(2)
A domestic limited liability company may convert to a corporation subject to this
chapter by:
(a)
filing articles of incorporation in accordance with this chapter; and
(b)
complying with Section
48-3a-1041
16-1a-902
, as appropriate pursuant to Section
48-3a-1405
16-20-1205
.
Section 30. Section
16-10a-1104
is amended to read:
16-10a-1104
. Merger of parent and subsidiary.
(1)
By complying with the provision of this section, a parent corporation owning at least
90% of the outstanding shares of each class of a subsidiary corporation may either
merge the subsidiary into itself or merge itself into the subsidiary.
(2)
The board of directors of the parent shall adopt and its shareholders, if required by
Subsection
(3)
, shall approve a plan of merger that sets forth:
(a)
the names of the parent and subsidiary and the name of the surviving entity;
(b)
the terms and conditions of the merger;
(c)
the manner and basis of converting the shares of each corporation into shares,
obligations, or other securities of the surviving or any other corporation or into
money or other property in whole or part;
(d)
any amendments to the articles of incorporation of the surviving corporation to be
effected by the merger; and
(e)
any other provisions relating to the merger as may be determined to be necessary or
desirable.
(3)
A vote of the shareholders of the subsidiary is not required with respect to the merger. If
the subsidiary will be the surviving corporation, the approval of the shareholders of the
parent shall be sought in the manner provided in
Subsections
16-10a-1103(1)
through
(6)
Section
16-1a-704
. If the parent will be the surviving corporation, no vote of its
shareholders is required if all of the provisions of
Subsection
16-10a-1103(7)
Section
16-1a-704
are met with respect to the merger. If all the provisions are not met, the
approval of the shareholders of the parent shall be sought in the manner provided in
Subsections
16-10a-1103(1)
through
(6)
Section
16-1a-704
.
(4)
The parent shall mail a copy or summary of the plan of merger to each shareholder of
the subsidiary (other than the parent) who does not waive this mailing requirement in
writing.
(5)
The effective date of the merger may not be earlier than the date on which all
shareholders of the subsidiary waived the mailing requirement of Subsection
(4)
or 10
days after the date the parent mailed a copy or summary of the plan of merger to each
shareholder of the subsidiary who did not waive the mailing requirement.
Section 31. Section
16-10a-1302
is amended to read:
16-10a-1302
. Right to dissent.
(1)
A shareholder, whether or not entitled to vote, is entitled to dissent from, and obtain
payment of the fair value of shares held by the shareholder in the event of, any of the
following corporate actions:
(a)
consummation of a plan of merger to which the corporation is a party if:
(i)
shareholder approval is required for the merger by Section
16-10a-1103
16-1a-703
or the articles of incorporation; or
(ii)
the corporation is a subsidiary that is merged with its parent under Section
16-10a-1104
;
(b)
consummation of a plan of share exchange to which the corporation is a party as the
corporation whose shares will be acquired;
(c)
consummation of a sale, lease, exchange, or other disposition of all, or substantially
all, of the property of the corporation for which a shareholder vote is required under
Subsection
16-10a-1202(1)
, but not including a sale for cash pursuant to a plan by
which all or substantially all of the net proceeds of the sale will be distributed to the
shareholders within one year after the date of sale; and
(d)
consummation of a sale, lease, exchange, or other disposition of all, or substantially
all, of the property of an entity controlled by the corporation if the shareholders of the
corporation were entitled to vote upon the consent of the corporation to the
disposition pursuant to Subsection
16-10a-1202(2)
.
(2)
A shareholder is entitled to dissent and obtain payment of the fair value of the
shareholder's shares in the event of any other corporate action to the extent the articles of
incorporation, bylaws, or a resolution of the board of directors so provides.
(3)
Notwithstanding the other provisions of this part, except to the extent otherwise
provided in the articles of incorporation, bylaws, or a resolution of the board of
directors, and subject to the limitations set forth in Subsection
(4)
, a shareholder is not
entitled to dissent and obtain payment under Subsection
(1)
of the fair value of the
shares of any class or series of shares which either were listed on a national securities
exchange registered under the federal Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, or
on the National Market System of the National Association of Securities Dealers
Automated Quotation System, or were held of record by more than 2,000 shareholders,
at the time of:
(a)
the record date fixed under Section
16-10a-707
to determine the shareholders entitled
to receive notice of the shareholders' meeting at which the corporate action is
submitted to a vote;
(b)
the record date fixed under Section
16-10a-704
to determine shareholders entitled to
sign writings consenting to the proposed corporate action; or
(c)
the effective date of the corporate action if the corporate action is authorized other
than by a vote of shareholders.
(4)
The limitation set forth in Subsection
(3)
does not apply if the shareholder will receive
for the shareholder's shares, pursuant to the corporate action, anything except:
(a)
shares of the corporation surviving the consummation of the plan of merger or share
exchange;
(b)
shares of a corporation which at the effective date of the plan of merger or share
exchange either will be listed on a national securities exchange registered under the
federal Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, or on the National Market
System of the National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotation
System, or will be held of record by more than 2,000 shareholders;
(c)
cash in lieu of fractional shares; or
(d)
any combination of the shares described in Subsection
(4)
, or cash in lieu of
fractional shares.
(5)
A shareholder entitled to dissent and obtain payment for the shareholder's shares under
this part may not challenge the corporate action creating the entitlement unless the
action is unlawful or fraudulent with respect to the shareholder or to the corporation.
Section 32. Section
16-10a-1404
is amended to read:
16-10a-1404
. Revocation of dissolution.
(1)
A corporation may revoke its dissolution within 120 days after the effective date of the
dissolution.
(2)
Revocation of dissolution shall be authorized in the same manner as the dissolution was
authorized unless, in the case of authorization pursuant to Section
16-10a-1402
, that
authorization permitted revocation by action of the board of directors alone, in which
event the board of directors may revoke the dissolution without shareholder action.
(3)
After the revocation of dissolution is authorized, the corporation may revoke the
dissolution by delivering to the division for filing articles of revocation of dissolution,
together with a copy of its articles of dissolution, that set forth:
(a)
the name of the corporation;
(b)
the effective date of the dissolution that was revoked;
(c)
the date that the revocation of dissolution was authorized;
(d)
if pursuant to Subsection
(2)
the corporation's board of directors or incorporators
revoked the dissolution authorized under Section
16-10a-1401
, a statement to that
effect;
(e)
if pursuant to Subsection
(2)
the corporation's board of directors revoked a
dissolution approved by the shareholders, a statement that the revocation was
permitted by action by the board of directors alone pursuant to that authorization; and
(f)
if the revocation of dissolution was approved pursuant to Subsection
(2)
by the
shareholders, the information required by Subsection
16-10a-1403(1)(e)
.
(4)
Revocation of dissolution is effective as provided in
Subsection
16-10a-123(1)
Section
16-1a-204
. A provision may not be made for a delayed effective date for revocation
pursuant to Subsection
16-10a-123(2)
in accordance with Section
16-1a-204
.
(5)
When the revocation of dissolution is effective, it relates back to and takes effect as of
the effective date of the dissolution and the corporation may carry on its business as if
dissolution had never occurred.
Section 33. Section
16-10a-1533.5
is amended to read:
15. Transfer to Another State
16-10a-1533.5
. Transfer to another state.
(1)
A domestic corporation may transfer to or domesticate in a jurisdiction other than this
state if:
(a)
that jurisdiction permits the transfer to or domestication of the corporation in the
jurisdiction; and
(b)
the transfer is approved by the shareholders as provided in the corporation's bylaws
or, if the bylaws do not so provide, by all of the shareholders.
(2)
(a)
A domestic corporation transfers to or domesticates in a jurisdiction other than
this state by delivering to the division for filing articles of transfer meeting the
requirements of Subsection
(2)(b)
.
(b)
Articles of transfer shall state:
(i)
the name of the corporation;
(ii)
the date of filing of the corporation's original articles of incorporation with the
division;
(iii)
the jurisdiction to which the corporation is to be transferred or in which it is to be
domesticated;
(iv)
the future effective date, which shall be a date certain, of the transfer or
domestication if it is not to be effective upon the filing of the articles of transfer;
(v)
that the transfer or domestication has been approved by the shareholders;
(vi)
that the existence of the corporation as a domestic corporation of this state shall
cease when the articles of transfer become effective;
(vii)
the agreement of the corporation that it may be served with process in this state
in any proceeding for enforcement of any obligation of the corporation arising
while it was a corporation under the laws of this state; and
(viii)
if the corporation does not apply for authority to transact business in this state
as a foreign corporation pursuant to Section
16-10a-1503
16-1a-504
, the address
to which a copy of service of process may be made under Subsection
(2)(b)(vii)
.
(3)
When the articles of transfer are filed with the division, or upon the future, delayed
effective date of the articles of transfer, and after payment to the division of the fees
prescribed under this chapter, the corporation shall cease to exist as a domestic
corporation of this state. Thereafter, a certificate of the division as to the transfer is
prima facie evidence of the transfer or domestication by the corporation out of this state.
(4)
Transfer or domestication of a corporation out of this state in accordance with this
section and the resulting cessation of its existence as a domestic corporation of this state
may not be considered to affect:
(a)
an obligation or liability of the corporation incurred before the transfer or
domestication or the personal liability of any person incurred before the transfer or
domestication, including, any taxes owing to this state; or
(b)
the choice of law applicable to the corporation with respect to matters arising before
the transfer or domestication.
Section 34. Section
16-10a-1601
is amended to read:
16-10a-1601
. Corporate records.
(1)
A corporation shall keep as permanent records minutes of all meetings of its
shareholders and board of directors, a record of all actions taken by the shareholders or
board of directors without a meeting, and a record of all actions taken on behalf of the
corporation by a committee of the board of directors in place of the board of directors,
and a record of all waivers of notices of meetings of shareholders, meetings of the board
of directors, or any meetings of committees of the board of directors.
(2)
A corporation shall maintain appropriate accounting records.
(3)
A corporation or its agent shall maintain a record of the names and addresses of its
shareholders, in a form that permits preparation of a list of shareholders:
(a)
that is arranged by voting group and within each voting group by class or series of
shares;
(b)
that is in alphabetical order within each class or series; and
(c)
that shows the address of and the number of shares of each class and series held by
each shareholder.
(4)
A corporation shall maintain its records in written form or in any form capable of
conversion into written form within a reasonable time.
(5)
A corporation shall keep a copy of the following records at its principal office:
(a)
its articles of incorporation currently in effect;
(b)
its bylaws currently in effect;
(c)
the minutes of all shareholders' meetings, and records of all action taken by
shareholders without a meeting, for the past three years;
(d)
all written communications within the past three years to shareholders as a group or
to the holders of any class or series of shares as a group;
(e)
a list of the names and business addresses of its current officers and directors;
(f)
its most recent annual report delivered to the division under Section
16-10a-1607
16-1a-212
; and
(g)
all financial statements prepared for periods ending during the last three years that a
shareholder could request under Section
16-10a-1605
.
Section 35. Section
16-10b-402
is amended to read:
16-10b-402
. Availability of annual benefit report.
(1)
A benefit corporation shall send its annual benefit report required by Section
16-10b-401
to each shareholder on the earlier of:
(a)
120 days following the end of the fiscal year of the benefit corporation; or
(b)
the same time that the benefit corporation delivers another annual report to its
shareholders.
(2)
A benefit corporation shall post all of its annual benefit reports on the public portion of
its Internet website, if any, but financial or proprietary information included in the
annual benefit reports may be omitted from the annual benefit reports as posted.
(3)
If a benefit corporation does not have an Internet website, the benefit corporation shall
provide a copy of its most recent annual benefit report, without charge, to a person that
requests a copy, but financial or proprietary information included in the annual benefit
report may be omitted from the copy of the benefit report provided.
(4)
(a)
At the same time that the benefit corporation files its annual report with the
division in accordance with Section
16-10a-1607
16-1a-212
, the benefit corporation
shall deliver the most recent copy of the annual benefit report to the division for
filing, but financial or proprietary information included in the annual benefit report
may be omitted from the annual benefit report as delivered to the division.
(b)
The division shall charge a fee established by the division in accordance with Section
63J-1-504
for filing an annual benefit report.
(c)
The benefit corporation shall file the annual benefit report in addition to the annual
report required by Section
16-10a-1607
16-1a-212
.
Section 36. Section
16-11-14
is amended to read:
16-11-14
. Annual certificate -- Filing -- Contents -- Filing fee.
During the month of the anniversary date of incorporation, each professional corporation
shall file with the division an annual report as specified by Section
16-10a-1607
16-1a-212
,
giving the names and residence addresses of all shareholders of the professional corporation as
of its anniversary date of incorporation next preceding, and certifying that all of the
shareholders are duly licensed to render the same specific professional services as those for
which the corporation was organized or otherwise qualify to be shareholders pursuant to the
applicable licensing act for the profession for which the corporation was organized.
Section 37. Section
16-15-104
is amended to read:
16-15-104
. Registration required -- Certificate of registration.
(1)
A business trust shall register with the division before doing business in the state.
(2)
The certificate of registration of a business trust shall set forth:
(a)
the name of the business trust;
(b)
the period of its duration;
(c)
the business purpose for which the business trust is organized;
(d)
the information required by
Subsection
16-17-203(1)
Section
16-1a-404
; and
(e)
the name, signature, and street address of all trustees of the business trust.
Section 38. Section
16-15-108
is amended to read:
16-15-108
. When amendments are required.
(1)
An amended certificate shall be filed with the division not later than 30 days after any
change in:
(a)
any person acting as a trustee of the trust, or the address of any trustee;
(b)
the registered agent of the trust;
(c)
the registered office of the business trust; or
(d)
in any information required to be filed with the division under this chapter.
(2)
The amended certificate shall be signed by each trustee of the business trust and filed in
the same manner as
a certificate of registration under Section
16-15-105
an entity filing
under Section
16-1a-202
.
(3)
The division may charge a fee in accordance with Section
63J-1-504
for amending a
certificate of registration.
Section 39. Section
16-16-113
is amended to read:
16-16-113
. Effect of organic rules.
(1)
The relations between a limited cooperative association and its members are consensual.
Unless required, limited, or prohibited by this chapter, the organic rules may provide for
any matter concerning the relations among the members of the association and between
the members and the association, the activities of the association, and the conduct of its
activities.
(2)
The matters referred to in Subsections
(2)(a)
through
(i)
may be varied only in the
articles of organization. The articles may:
(a)
state a term of existence for the association under Subsection
16-16-105(3)
;
(b)
limit or eliminate the acceptance of new or additional members by the initial board
of directors under Subsection
16-16-303(2)
;
(c)
vary the limitations on the obligations and liability of members for association
obligations under Section
16-16-504
;
(d)
require a notice of an annual members meeting to state a purpose of the meeting
under Subsection
16-16-508(2)
;
(e)
vary the board of directors meeting quorum under Subsection
16-16-815(1)
;
(f)
vary the matters the board of directors may consider in making a decision under
Section
16-16-820
;
(g)
specify causes of dissolution under Subsection
16-16-1202(1)
;
(h)
delegate amendment of the bylaws to the board of directors pursuant to Subsection
16-16-405(6)
;
(i)
provide for member approval of asset dispositions under Section
16-16-1501
; and
(j)
provide for any matters that may be contained in the organic rules, including those
under Subsection
(3)
.
(3)
The matters referred to in Subsections
(3)(a)
through
(y)
may be varied only in the
organic rules. The organic rules may:
(a)
require more information to be maintained under Section
16-16-114
or provided to
members under Subsection
16-16-505(11)
;
(b)
provide restrictions on transactions between a member and an association under
Section
16-16-115
;
(c)
provide for the percentage and manner of voting on amendments to the organic rules
by district, class, or voting group under Subsection
16-16-404(1)
;
(d)
provide for the percentage vote required to amend the bylaws concerning the
admission of new members under Subsection
16-16-405(5)(e)
;
(e)
provide for terms and conditions to become a member under Section
16-16-502
;
(f)
restrict the manner of conducting members meetings under Subsections
16-16-506(3)
and
16-16-507(5)
;
(g)
designate the presiding officer of members meetings under Subsections
16-16-506(5)
and
16-16-507(7)
;
(h)
require a statement of purposes in the annual meeting notice under Subsection
16-16-508(2)
;
(i)
increase quorum requirements for members meetings under Section
16-16-510
and
board of directors meetings under Section
16-16-815
;
(j)
allocate voting power among members, including patron members and investor
members, and provide for the manner of member voting and action as permitted by
Sections
16-16-511
through
16-16-517
;
(k)
authorize investor members and expand or restrict the transferability of members'
interests to the extent provided in Sections
16-16-602
through
16-16-604
;
(l)
provide for enforcement of a marketing contract under Subsection
16-16-704(1)
;
(m)
provide for qualification, election, terms, removal, filling vacancies, and member
approval for compensation of directors in accordance with Sections
16-16-803
through
16-16-805
,
16-16-807
,
16-16-809
, and
16-16-810
;
(n)
restrict the manner of conducting board meetings and taking action without a
meeting under Sections
16-16-811
and
16-16-812
;
(o)
provide for frequency, location, notice and waivers of notice for board meetings
under Sections
16-16-813
and
16-16-814
;
(p)
increase the percentage of votes necessary for board action under Subsection
16-16-816(2)
;
(q)
provide for the creation of committees of the board of directors and matters related to
the committees in accordance with Section
16-16-817
;
(r)
provide for officers and their appointment, designation, and authority under Section
16-16-822
;
(s)
provide for forms and values of contributions under Section
16-16-1002
;
(t)
provide for remedies for failure to make a contribution under Subsection
16-16-1003(2)
;
(u)
provide for the allocation of profits and losses of the association, distributions, and
the redemption or repurchase of distributed property other than money in accordance
with Sections
16-16-1004
through
16-16-1007
;
(v)
specify when a member's dissociation is wrongful and the liability incurred by the
dissociating member for damage to the association under Subsections
16-16-1101(2)
and
(3)
;
(w)
provide the personal representative, or other legal representative of, a deceased
member or a member adjudged incompetent with additional rights under Section
16-16-1103
;
(x)
increase the percentage of votes required for board of director approval of:
(i)
a resolution to dissolve under Subsection
16-16-1205(1)(a)
;
(ii)
a proposed amendment to the organic rules under Subsection
16-16-402(1)(a)
;
(iii)
a plan of conversion under
Subsection
16-16-1603(1)
Section
16-1a-904
;
(iv)
a plan of merger under
Subsection
16-16-1607(1)
Section
16-1a-704
; and
(v)
a proposed disposition of assets under Subsection
16-16-1503(1)
; and
(y)
vary the percentage of votes required for members' approval of:
(i)
a resolution to dissolve under Section
16-16-1205
;
(ii)
an amendment to the organic rules under Section
16-16-405
;
(iii)
a plan of conversion under Section
16-16-1603
16-1a-904
;
(iv)
a plan of merger under Section
16-16-1608
16-1a-704
; and
(v)
a disposition of assets under Section
16-16-1504
.
(4)
The organic rules shall address members' contributions pursuant to Section
16-16-1001
.
Section 40. Section
16-16-118
is amended to read:
16-16-118
. Change of designated office or agent for service of process.
(1)
Except as otherwise provided in
Subsection
16-16-207(5)
Section
16-1a-407
, to change
its designated office, its agent for service of process, or the street address or, if different,
mailing address of its principal office, a limited cooperative association shall deliver to
the division for filing a statement of change containing:
(a)
the name of the limited cooperative association;
(b)
the street address and, if different, mailing address of its designated office;
(c)
if the designated office is to be changed, the street address and, if different, mailing
address of the new designated office;
(d)
the name of its agent for service of process; and
(e)
if the agent for service of process is to be changed, the name of the new agent.
(2)
Except as otherwise provided in
Subsection
16-16-207(5)
Section
16-1a-407
, to change
its agent for service of process, the address of its designated office, or the street address
or, if different, mailing address of its principal office, a foreign cooperative shall deliver
to the division for filing a statement of change containing:
(a)
the name of the foreign cooperative;
(b)
the name, street address and, if different, mailing address of its designated office;
(c)
if the current agent for service of process or an address of the designated office is to
be changed, the new information;
(d)
the street address and, if different, mailing address of its principal office; and
(e)
if the street address or, if different, the mailing address of its principal office is to be
changed, the street address and, if different, the mailing address of the new principal
office.
(3)
Except as otherwise provided in Section
16-16-204
, a statement of change is effective
when filed by the division.
Section 41. Section
16-16-302
is amended to read:
16-16-302
. Formation of limited cooperative association -- Articles of
organization.
(1)
To form a limited cooperative association, an organizer of the association shall deliver
articles of organization to the division for filing. The articles shall state:
(a)
the name of the association;
(b)
the purposes for which the association is formed;
(c)
the street address and, if different, mailing address of the association's initial
designated office and the name of the association's initial agent for service of process
at the designated office;
(d)
the street address and, if different, mailing address of the initial principal office;
(e)
the name and street address and, if different, mailing address of each organizer; and
(f)
the term for which the association is to exist if other than perpetual.
(2)
Subject to Subsection
16-16-113(1)
, articles of organization may contain any other
provisions in addition to those required by Subsection
(1)
.
(3)
A limited cooperative association is formed after articles of organization that
substantially comply with Subsection
(1)
are delivered to the division, are filed, and
become effective under
Subsection
16-16-203(3)
Section
16-1a-204
.
(4)
If articles of organization filed by the division state a delayed effective date, a limited
cooperative association is not formed if, before the articles take effect, an organizer
signs and delivers to the division for filing a statement of cancellation.
Section 42. Section
16-16-407
is amended to read:
16-16-407
. Amendment or restatement of articles of organization -- Filing.
(1)
To amend its articles of organization, a limited cooperative association shall deliver to
the division for filing an amendment of the articles, or restated articles of organization or
articles of conversion or merger pursuant to
Part 16, Conversion and Merger
Chapter
1a, Part 7, Merger, or Chapter 1a, Part 9, Conversion
, which contain one or more
amendments of the articles of organization, stating:
(a)
the name of the association;
(b)
the date of filing of the association's initial articles; and
(c)
the changes the amendment makes to the articles as most recently amended or
restated.
(2)
Before the beginning of the initial meeting of the board of directors, an organizer who
knows that information in the filed articles of organization was inaccurate when the
articles were filed or has become inaccurate due to changed circumstances shall
promptly:
(a)
cause the articles to be amended; or
(b)
if appropriate, deliver an amendment to the division for filing pursuant to Section
16-16-203
16-1a-206
.
(3)
If restated articles of organization are adopted, the restated articles may be delivered to
the division for filing in the same manner as an amendment.
(4)
Upon filing, an amendment of the articles of organization or other record containing an
amendment of the articles which has been properly adopted by the members is effective
as provided in
Subsection
16-16-203(3)
Section
16-1a-206
.
Section 43. Section
16-16-502
is amended to read:
16-16-502
. Becoming a member.
A person becomes a member:
(1)
as provided in the organic rules;
(2)
as the result of a merger or conversion under
Part 16, Conversion and Merger
Chapter
1a, Part 7, Merger, or Chapter 1a, Part 9, Conversion
; or
(3)
with the consent of all the members.
Section 44. Section
16-16-1101
is amended to read:
16-16-1101
. Member's dissociation.
(1)
A person has the power to dissociate as a member at any time, rightfully or wrongfully,
by express will.
(2)
Unless the organic rules otherwise provide, a member's dissociation from a limited
cooperative association is wrongful only if the dissociation:
(a)
breaches an express provision of the organic rules; or
(b)
occurs before the termination of the limited cooperative association and:
(i)
the person is expelled as a member under Subsection
(4)(c)
or
(d)
; or
(ii)
in the case of a person that is not an individual, trust other than a business trust, or
estate, the person is expelled or otherwise dissociated as a member because it
dissolved or terminated in bad faith.
(3)
Unless the organic rules otherwise provide, a person that wrongfully dissociates as a
member is liable to the limited cooperative association for damages caused by the
dissociation. The liability is in addition to any other debt, obligation, or liability of the
person to the association.
(4)
A member is dissociated from the limited cooperative association as a member when:
(a)
the association receives notice in a record of the member's express will to dissociate
as a member, or if the member specifies in the notice an effective date later than the
date the association received notice, on that later date;
(b)
an event stated in the organic rules as causing the member's dissociation as a member
occurs;
(c)
the member is expelled as a member under the organic rules;
(d)
the member is expelled as a member by the board of directors because:
(i)
it is unlawful to carry on the association's activities with the member as a member;
(ii)
there has been a transfer of all the member's financial rights in the association,
other than:
(A)
a creation or perfection of a security interest; or
(B)
a charging order in effect under Section
16-16-505
which has not been
foreclosed;
(iii)
the member is a limited liability company, association, or partnership, it has been
dissolved, and its business is being wound up;
(iv)
the member is a corporation or cooperative and:
(A)
the member filed a certificate of dissolution or the equivalent, or the
jurisdiction of formation revoked the association's charter or right to conduct
business;
(B)
the association sends a notice to the member that it will be expelled as a
member for a reason described in Subsection
(4)(d)(iv)(A)
; and
(C)
not later than 90 days after the notice was sent under Subsection
(4)(d)(iv)(B)
,
the member did not revoke the member's certificate of dissolution or the
equivalent, or the jurisdiction of formation did not reinstate the association's
charter or right to conduct business; or
(v)
the member is an individual and is adjudged incompetent;
(e)
in the case of a member who is an individual, the individual dies;
(f)
in the case of a member that is a trust or is acting as a member by virtue of being a
trustee of a trust, all the trust's financial rights in the association are distributed;
(g)
in the case of a member that is an estate, the estate's entire financial interest in the
association is distributed;
(h)
in the case of a member that is not an individual, partnership, limited liability
company, cooperative, corporation, trust, or estate, the member is terminated; or
(i)
the association's participation in a merger if, under the plan of merger as approved
under
Part 16, Conversion and Merger
Chapter 1a, Part 7, Merger
, the member
ceases to be a member.
Section 45. Section
16-16-1102
is amended to read:
16-16-1102
. Effect of dissociation as member.
(1)
Upon a member's dissociation:
(a)
subject to Section
16-16-1103
, the person has no further rights as a member; and
(b)
subject to Section
16-16-1103
and
Part 16, Conversion and Merger
Chapter 1a, Part
7, Merger, and Chapter 1a, Part 9, Conversion
, any financial rights owned by the
person in the person's capacity as a member immediately before dissociation are
owned by the person as a transferee.
(2)
A person's dissociation as a member does not of itself discharge the person from any
debt, obligation, or liability to the limited cooperative association which the person
incurred under the organic rules, by contract, or by other means while a member.
Section 46. Section
16-16-1402
is amended to read:
16-16-1402
. Application for certificate of authority.
(1)
A foreign cooperative may apply for a certificate of authority by delivering an
application to the division for filing. The application shall state:
(a)
the name of the foreign cooperative and, if the name does not comply with Section
16-16-111
16-1a-302
, an alternative name adopted pursuant to Section
16-16-1405
;
(b)
the name of the state or other jurisdiction under whose law the foreign cooperative is
organized;
(c)
the street address and, if different, mailing address of the principal office and, if the
law of the jurisdiction under which the foreign cooperative is organized requires the
foreign cooperative to maintain another office in that jurisdiction, the street address
and, if different, mailing address of the required office;
(d)
the street address and, if different, mailing address of the foreign cooperative's
designated office in this state, and the name of the foreign cooperative's agent for
service of process at the designated office; and
(e)
the name, street address and, if different, mailing address of each of the foreign
cooperative's current directors and officers.
(2)
A foreign cooperative shall deliver with a completed application under Subsection
(1)
a
certificate of existence or a similar record signed by the division or other official having
custody of the foreign cooperative's publicly filed records in the state or other
jurisdiction under whose law the foreign cooperative is organized.
Section 47. Section
16-16-1405
is amended to read:
16-16-1405
. Noncomplying name of foreign cooperative.
(1)
(a)
A foreign cooperative whose name does not comply with Section
16-16-111
16-1a-302
may not obtain a certificate of authority until it adopts, for the purpose of
transacting business in this state, an alternative name that complies with Section
16-16-111
16-1a-302
.
(b)
A foreign cooperative that adopts an alternative name under this Subsection
(1)
and
then obtains a certificate of authority with that name need not also comply with
Section
42-2-5
42-2-201
.
(c)
After obtaining a certificate of authority with an alternative name, a foreign
cooperative's business in this state shall be transacted under that name unless the
foreign cooperative is authorized under Section
42-2-5
42-2-201
to transact business
in this state under another name.
(2)
If a foreign cooperative authorized to transact business in this state changes its name to
one that does not comply with Section
16-16-111
16-1a-302
, it may not thereafter
transact business in this state until it complies with Subsection
(1)
and obtains an
amended certificate of authority.
Section 48. Section
16-16-1407
is amended to read:
16-16-1407
. Cancellation of certificate of authority -- Effect of failure to have
certificate.
(1)
To cancel its certificate of authority, a foreign cooperative shall deliver to the division
for filing a notice of cancellation. The certificate is canceled when the notice becomes
effective under Section
16-16-203
16-1a-204
.
(2)
A foreign cooperative transacting business in this state may not maintain an action or
proceeding in this state unless it has a certificate of authority.
(3)
The failure of a foreign cooperative to have a certificate of authority does not impair the
validity of a contract or act of the foreign cooperative or prevent the foreign cooperative
from defending an action or proceeding in this state.
(4)
A member of a foreign cooperative is not liable for the obligations of the foreign
cooperative solely by reason of the foreign cooperative's having transacted business in
this state without a certificate of authority.
(5)
If a foreign cooperative transacts business in this state without a certificate of authority
or cancels its certificate, it appoints the division as its agent for service of process for an
action arising out of the transaction of business in this state.
Section 49. Section
16-20-901
, which is renumbered from Section 48-3a-1101 is renumbered
and amended to read:
9. Professional Services Companies
48-3a-1101
16-20-901
. Definitions.
As used in this part:
(1)
"Professional services" means a personal service provided by:
(a)
a public accountant holding a license under
Title 58, Chapter 26a, Certified Public
Accountant Licensing Act
, or a subsequent law regulating the practice of public
accounting;
(b)
an architect holding a license under
Title 58, Chapter 3a, Architects Licensing Act
,
or a subsequent law regulating the practice of architecture;
(c)
an attorney granted the authority to practice law by the:
(i)
Utah Supreme Court; or
(ii)
one or more of the following that licenses or regulates the authority to practice
law in a state or territory of the United States other than Utah:
(A)
a supreme court;
(B)
a court other than a supreme court;
(C)
an agency;
(D)
an instrumentality; or
(E)
a regulating board;
(d)
a chiropractor holding a license under
Title 58, Chapter 73, Chiropractic Physician
Practice Act
, or any subsequent law regulating the practice of chiropractics;
(e)
a doctor of dentistry holding a license under
Title 58, Chapter 69, Dentist and Dental
Hygienist Practice Act
, or a subsequent law regulating the practice of dentistry;
(f)
a professional engineer registered under
Title 58, Chapter 22, Professional Engineers
and Professional Land Surveyors Licensing Act
, or a subsequent law regulating the
practice of engineers and land surveyors;
(g)
a naturopath holding a license under
Title 58, Chapter 71, Naturopathic Physician
Practice Act
, or a subsequent law regulating the practice of naturopathy;
(h)
a nurse licensed under
Title 58, Chapter 31b, Nurse Practice Act
, or
Title 58, Chapter
44a, Nurse Midwife Practice Act
, or a subsequent law regulating the practice of
nursing;
(i)
an optometrist holding a license under
Title 58, Chapter 16a, Utah Optometry
Practice Act
, or a subsequent law regulating the practice of optometry;
(j)
an osteopathic physician or surgeon holding a license under
Title 58, Chapter 68,
Utah Osteopathic Medical Practice Act
, or a subsequent law regulating the practice of
osteopathy;
(k)
a pharmacist holding a license under
Title 58, Chapter 17b, Pharmacy Practice Act
,
or a subsequent law regulating the practice of pharmacy;
(l)
a physician, surgeon, or doctor of medicine holding a license under
Title 58, Chapter
67, Utah Medical Practice Act
, or a subsequent law regulating the practice of
medicine;
(m)
a physician assistant holding a license under
Title 58, Chapter 70a, Utah Physician
Assistant Act
, or a subsequent law regulating the practice as a physician assistant;
(n)
a physical therapist holding a license under
Title 58, Chapter 24b, Physical Therapy
Practice Act
, or a subsequent law regulating the practice of physical therapy;
(o)
a podiatric physician holding a license under
Title 58, Chapter 5a, Podiatric
Physician Licensing Act
, or a subsequent law regulating the practice of podiatry;
(p)
a psychologist holding a license under
Title 58, Chapter 61, Psychologist Licensing
Act
, or any subsequent law regulating the practice of psychology;
(q)
a principal broker, associate broker, or sales agent holding a license under
Title 61,
Chapter 2f, Real Estate Licensing and Practices Act
, or a subsequent law regulating
the sale, exchange, purchase, rental, or leasing of real estate;
(r)
a clinical or certified social worker holding a license under
Title 58, Chapter 60, Part
2, Social Worker Licensing Act
, or a subsequent law regulating the practice of social
work;
(s)
a mental health therapist holding a license under
Title 58, Chapter 60, Mental Health
Professional Practice Act
, or a subsequent law regulating the practice of mental
health therapy;
(t)
a veterinarian holding a license under
Title 58, Chapter 28, Veterinary Practice Act
,
or a subsequent law regulating the practice of veterinary medicine; or
(u)
an individual licensed, certified, or registered under
Title 61, Chapter 2g, Real Estate
Appraiser Licensing and Certification Act
, or a subsequent law regulating the
practice of appraising real estate.
(2)
"Regulating board" means the entity organized pursuant to state law that licenses and
regulates the practice of the profession that a limited liability company is organized to
provide.
Section 50. Section
16-20-902
, which is renumbered from Section 48-3a-1102 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-3a-1102
16-20-902
. Application of this part.
(1)
If a conflict arises between this part and another provision of this chapter, this part
controls.
(2)
Notwithstanding the other provisions of this part, on and after January 1, 2016:
(a)
a professional services company may not designate series of transferable interests;
and
(b)
a limited liability company may not form a professional services company as a series
of the limited liability company.
Section 51. Section
16-20-903
, which is renumbered from Section 48-3a-1103 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-3a-1103
16-20-903
. Additional requirements for certificate of organization.
The certificate of organization of a professional services company shall:
(1)
comply with Section
48-3a-201
16-20-201
; and
(2)
contain the following:
(a)
a name consistent with Section
48-3a-1104
16-20-904
;
(b)
a description of the profession to be practiced through the professional services
company; and
(c)
notwithstanding Section
48-3a-201
16-20-201
, the name and street address of each
member or manager of the professional services company.
Section 52. Section
16-20-904
, which is renumbered from Section 48-3a-1104 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-3a-1104
16-20-904
. Name limitations.
(1)
The name of a domestic professional services company and of a foreign professional
services company authorized to transact business in this state, in addition to complying
with Sections
48-3a-108
16-1a-302
and
48-3a-906
16-1a-507
:
(a)
may not contain language stating or implying that
it
the domestic professional
services company or foreign professional services company
is formed for a purpose
other than that authorized by:
(i)
its
the domestic professional services company's or foreign professional services
company's
certificate of organization; or
(ii)
Section
48-3a-1106
16-20-906
;
(b)
must conform with any rule made by the regulating board having jurisdiction over a
professional service described in the professional services company's certificate of
organization; and
(c)
in lieu of the requirement of Subsection
48-3a-108(1)
16-1a-303(5)
, must contain
the words "professional limited liability company" or the abbreviations "P.L.L.C." or
"PLLC" in:
(i)
its certificate of organization; and
(ii)
a report or document filed with the division.
(2)
Notwithstanding Subsection
(1)(c)
, a professional services company may hold
itself
the
professional service company
out to the public under a name that does not contain the
words "professional limited liability company" or the abbreviations "P.L.L.C." or
"PLLC" if that name complies with Subsection
48-3a-108(1)
16-1a-303(5)
.
(3)
Sections
48-3a-108
16-1a-302
and
48-3a-906
16-1a-507
do not prevent the use of a
name otherwise prohibited by those sections if the name is:
(a)
the personal name of an individual member or individual former member of the
professional services company; or
(b)
the name of an individual who was associated with a predecessor of the professional
services company.
Section 53. Section
16-20-905
, which is renumbered from Section 48-3a-1105 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-3a-1105
16-20-905
. Providing a professional service.
(1)
Subject to Section
48-3a-1106
16-20-906
, a professional services company may
provide a professional service in this state only through an individual licensed or
otherwise authorized in this state to provide the professional service.
(2)
Subsection
(1)
does not:
(a)
require an individual employed by a professional services company to be licensed to
perform a service for the professional services company if a license is not otherwise
required;
(b)
prohibit a licensed individual from providing a professional service in the
individual's professional capacity although the individual is a member, manager,
employee, or agent of a professional services company; or
(c)
prohibit an individual licensed in another state from providing a professional service
for a professional services company in this state if not prohibited by the regulating
board.
Section 54. Section
16-20-906
, which is renumbered from Section 48-3a-1106 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-3a-1106
16-20-906
. Limit of one profession.
(1)
A professional services company organized to provide a professional service under this
part may provide only:
(a)
one specific type of professional service; and
(b)
services ancillary to the professional service described in Subsection
(1)(a)
.
(2)
A professional services company organized to provide a professional service under this
part may not engage in a business other than to provide:
(a)
the professional service that
it
the professional services company
was organized to
provide; and
(b)
services ancillary to the professional service described in Subsection
(2)(a)
.
(3)
Notwithstanding Subsections
(1)
and
(2)
, a professional services company may:
(a)
own real and personal property necessary or appropriate for providing the type of
professional service
it
the professional services company
was organized to provide;
and
(b)
invest the professional services company's money in one or more of the following:
(i)
real estate;
(ii)
mortgages;
(iii)
stocks;
(iv)
bonds; or
(v)
another type of investment.
Section 55. Section
16-20-907
, which is renumbered from Section 48-3a-1107 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-3a-1107
16-20-907
. Activity limitations.
A professional services company may not do anything that an individual licensed to
practice the profession that the professional services company is organized to provide is
prohibited from doing.
Section 56. Section
16-20-908
, which is renumbered from Section 48-3a-1108 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-3a-1108
16-20-908
. This part does not limit regulating board.
This part does not restrict the authority or duty of a regulating board to license an
individual providing a professional service or the practice of the profession that is within the
jurisdiction of the regulating board, notwithstanding that the individual:
(1)
is a member, manager, or employee of a professional services company; or
(2)
provides the professional service or engages in the practice of the profession through a
professional services company.
Section 57. Section
16-20-909
, which is renumbered from Section 48-3a-1109 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-3a-1109
16-20-909
. Member or manager of a professional services company.
A professional services company organized to provide a professional service:
(1)
may include a member, manager, or employee who is authorized under the laws of the
jurisdiction where the member, manager, or employee resides to provide a similar
professional service;
(2)
may include a member who is not licensed or registered by the state to provide the
professional service to the extent allowed by the applicable licensing or registration act
relating to the professional service; and
(3)
may render a professional service in this state only through a member, manager, or
employee who is licensed or registered by this state to render the professional service.
Section 58. Section
16-20-910
, which is renumbered from Section 48-3a-1110 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-3a-1110
16-20-910
. Restriction on transfer by member.
(1)
Except as provided in Subsections
(2)
and
(3)
, a member of a professional services
company may sell or transfer the member's interest in the professional services company
only to:
(a)
the professional services company; or
(b)
an individual who is licensed or registered by this state to provide the same type of
professional service as the professional service for which the professional services
company is organized, or who otherwise satisfies the requirements of
Subsection
48-3a-1109(1)
or
(2)
Subsection
16-20-909(1)
or
(2)
.
(2)
Upon the death or incapacity of a member of a professional services company, the
member's interest in the professional services company may be transferred to the
personal representative or estate of the deceased or incapacitated member.
(3)
The person to whom an interest is transferred under Subsection
(2)
may continue to hold
the interest for a reasonable period, but may not participate in a decision concerning the
providing of a professional service.
Section 59. Section
16-20-911
, which is renumbered from Section 48-3a-1111 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-3a-1111
16-20-911
. Purchase of interest upon death, incapacity, or
disqualification of member.
(1)
Subject to this part, one or more of the following may provide for the purchase of a
member's interest in a professional services company upon the death, incapacity, or
disqualification of the member:
(a)
the certificate of organization;
(b)
the operating agreement; or
(c)
a private agreement.
(2)
In the absence of a provision described in Subsection
(1)
, a professional services
company shall purchase the interest of a member who is deceased, incapacitated, or no
longer qualified to own an interest in the professional services company within 90 days
after the day on which the professional services company is notified of the death,
incapacity, or disqualification.
(3)
If a professional services company purchases a member's interest under Subsection
(2)
,
the professional services company shall purchase the interest at a price that is the
reasonable fair market value as of the date of death, incapacity, or disqualification.
(4)
If a professional services company fails to purchase a member's interest as required by
Subsection
(2)
at the end of the 90-day period described in Subsection
(2)
, the following
persons may bring an action in a court with jurisdiction under
Title 78A, Judiciary and
Judicial Administration
, to enforce Subsection
(2)
:
(a)
the personal representative of a deceased member;
(b)
the guardian or conservator of an incapacitated member; or
(c)
the disqualified member.
(5)
A court in which an action is brought under Subsection
(4)
may:
(a)
award the person bringing the action the reasonable fair market value of the interest;
or
(b)
within the court's jurisdiction, order the liquidation of the professional services
company.
(6)
If a person described in Subsections
(4)(a)
through
(c)
is successful in an action under
Subsection
(4)
, the court shall award the person reasonable attorney's fees and costs.
Section 60. Section
16-20-912
, which is renumbered from Section 48-3a-1112 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-3a-1112
16-20-912
. Conversion to nonprofessional company.
(1)
A professional services company subject to this part converts into a limited liability
company subject to this chapter, but not subject to this part on the day on which:
(a)
no member of the professional services company is licensed or registered for the
professional service for which the professional services company is organized; or
(b)
all members entitled to vote on or consent to any matter consent not to be a
professional services company subject to this part.
(2)
A professional services company converted as provided in Subsection
(1)
shall upon the
event described in Subsection
(1)
operate as and be treated as a limited liability company
subject to this chapter, but not subject to this part.
(3)
A limited liability company resulting from a conversion under this section may
reconvert to a professional services company:
(a)
upon at least one member of the limited liability company being licensed or
registered for the professional service for which the limited liability company is
organized; and
(b)
each member of the limited liability company entitled to vote on or consent to any
matter consents to reconvert the limited liability company to a professional services
company subject to this part.
(4)
If a professional services company is converted or reconverted under this section, the
professional services company shall file a certificate of amendment to the certificate of
organization with the division within a reasonable time after the conversion or
reconversion to reflect the changes.
Section 61. Section
16-20-1001
, which is renumbered from Section 48-3a-1201 is renumbered
and amended to read:
10. Series Limited Liability Companies
48-3a-1201
16-20-1001
. Series of transferable interests.
(1)
(a)
An operating agreement may establish or provide for the establishment of a
designated series of transferable interests having separate rights, powers, or duties
with respect to specified property or obligations of the limited liability company or
profits and losses associated with specified property or obligations, and, to the extent
provided in the operating agreement, any such series may have a separate business
purpose or investment objective.
(b)
The name of each series must contain the name of the limited liability company and
be distinguishable from the name of any other series.
(2)
Notwithstanding contrary provisions of this chapter, the debts, liabilities, and
obligations incurred, contracted for, or otherwise existing with respect to a particular
series shall be enforceable against the assets of that series only, and not against the
assets of the limited liability company generally or any other series, if all of the
following apply:
(a)
the series is established by or in accordance with the operating agreement;
(b)
separate and distinct records are maintained for the series;
(c)
the assets associated with the series are held and accounted for separately from the
other assets of the limited liability company, including another series;
(d)
the operating agreement or the agreement establishing the series provides for the
limitation on liabilities of the series; and
(e)
notice of the limitation on liability of the series is set forth in the limited liability
company's certificate of organization in accordance with Section
48-3a-1202
16-20-1002
.
(3)
A series meeting all of the conditions of Subsection
(2)
shall:
(a)
be treated as a separate entity to the extent set forth in the certificate of organization;
and
(b)
have the power and capacity to, in its own name, contract, hold title to property,
grant liens and security interests, and sue and be sued.
(4)
Notwithstanding the other provisions of this section:
(a)
property and assets of a series may not be transferred to the limited liability company
generally or another series if the transfer impairs the ability of the series releasing the
property or assets to pay its debts existing at the time of the transfer unless fair value
is given to the transferring series for the property or assets transferred; and
(b)
a tax or other liability of the limited liability company generally or of a series may
not be assigned by the series against which the tax or other liability is imposed to the
limited liability company generally or to another series within the limited liability
company if the assignment impairs a creditor's right and ability to fully collect an
amount due when owed.
(5)
Notwithstanding the other provisions of this part:
(a)
a professional services company may not designate a series of transferable interests;
and
(b)
a limited liability company may not form a professional services company as a series
of the limited liability company.
(6)
Except to the extent modified by this part, the provisions of this chapter which are
generally applicable to a limited liability company, and
its
the limited liability
company's
managers, members, and transferees, shall be applicable to each series with
respect to the operations of such a series.
Section 62. Section
16-20-1002
, which is renumbered from Section 48-3a-1202 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-3a-1202
16-20-1002
. Notice of limitation on liability of a series.
(1)
(a)
Notice in a limited liability company's certificate of organization of the limitation
on liabilities of a series as referenced in Subsection
48-3a-1201(2)(e)
16-20-1001(2)(e)
is sufficient for all purposes of this part whether or not the limited
liability company has established a series at the time the notice is included in the
certificate of organization.
(b)
For a certificate of organization or an amendment to a certificate of organization
made to include notice of series that is filed on or after May 12, 2015, notice in a
company's certificate of organization is sufficient for purposes of Subsection
(1)
only
if the notice of series appears immediately following the provision stating the name
of the company.
(2)
The notice of a limitation on liability of a series as referenced in Subsection
48-3a-1201(2)(e)
16-20-1001(2)(e)
is not required to reference a specific series.
(3)
The filing by the division of the certificate of organization containing a notice of the
limitation on liabilities of a series constitutes notice of the limitation on liabilities of the
series.
Section 63. Section
16-20-1003
, which is renumbered from Section 48-3a-1203 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-3a-1203
16-20-1003
. Agreement to be liable.
Notwithstanding Section
48-3a-304
16-20-304
, or a contrary provision in an operating
agreement, a member or manager may agree to be obligated personally for any or all of the
debts, obligations, or liabilities of one or more series.
Section 64. Section
16-20-1004
, which is renumbered from Section 48-3a-1204 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-3a-1204
16-20-1004
. Series related provisions in operating agreement.
(1)
An operating agreement may provide for classes or groups of members or managers
associated with a series having such relative rights, powers, and duties as the operating
agreement may provide.
(2)
The operating agreement may provide for the future creation of additional classes or
groups of members or managers associated with the series having such relative rights,
powers, and duties as may from time to time be established, including rights, powers,
and duties senior to existing classes and groups of members or managers associated with
the series.
(3)
An operating agreement may provide for the taking of an action, including the
amendment of the operating agreement, without the vote or approval of any member or
manager or class or group of members or managers, including all action to create under
the provisions of the operating agreement a class or group of the series of membership
interests that was not previously outstanding.
(4)
An operating agreement may provide that any member or class or group of members
associated with a series does not have voting rights.
(5)
(a)
An operating agreement may grant to all or certain identified members or
managers or a specified class or group of the members or managers associated with a
series the right to vote on any matter separately or with all or any class or group of
the members or managers associated with the series.
(b)
Voting by members or managers associated with a series may be on any basis
including:
(a)
(i)
a per capita basis;
(b)
(ii)
a number basis;
(c)
(iii)
on the basis of a financial interest; or
(d)
(iv)
by class or group.
Section 65. Section
16-20-1005
, which is renumbered from Section 48-3a-1205 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-3a-1205
16-20-1005
. Management of a series.
(1)
A series is member-managed unless the operating agreement:
(a)
expressly provides that:
(i)
the series is or will be "manager-managed";
(ii)
the series is or will be "managed by managers"; or
(iii)
management of the series is or will be "vested in managers"; or
(b)
includes words of similar import.
(2)
In a member-managed series, unless modified pursuant to Section
48-3a-1204
16-20-1004
, the following rules apply:
(a)
The management and conduct of the series are vested in the members of the series.
(b)
Each series member has equal rights in the management and conduct of the series'
activities.
(c)
A difference arising among series members as to a matter in the ordinary course of
the activities of the series shall be decided by a majority of the series members.
(d)
An act outside the ordinary course of the activities of the series may be undertaken
only with the consent of all members of the series.
(e)
The operating agreement may be amended only with the consent of all members of
the series.
(3)
In a manager-managed series, the following rules apply:
(a)
Except as otherwise expressly provided in this chapter, any matter relating to the
activities of the series is decided exclusively by the managers of the series.
(b)
Each series manager has equal rights in the management and conduct of the activities
of the series.
(c)
A difference arising among managers of a series as to a matter in the ordinary course
of the activities of the series shall be decided by a majority of the managers of the
series.
(d)
Unless modified pursuant to Section
48-3a-1204
16-20-1004
, the consent of all
members of the series is required to:
(i)
sell, lease, exchange, or otherwise dispose of all, or substantially all, of the series'
property, with or without the goodwill, outside the ordinary course of the series'
activities;
(ii)
approve a transaction under
Part 10, Merger, Interest Exchange, Conversion, and
Domestication
:
(A)
Chapter 1a, Part 7, Merger;
(B)
Chapter 1a, Part 8, Interest Exchange;
(C)
Chapter 1a, Part 9, Conversion; or
(D)
Chapter 1a, Part 10, Domestication
;
(iii)
undertake any other act outside the ordinary course of the series' activities; and
(iv)
amend the operating agreement as it pertains to the series.
(e)
(i)
A manager of the series may be chosen at any time by the consent of a majority
of the members of the series and remains a manager of the series until a successor
has been chosen, unless the series manager at an earlier time resigns, is removed,
or
dies, or, in the case of a series manager that is not an individual, terminates.
(ii)
A series manager may be removed at any time by the consent of a majority of the
members without notice or cause.
(f)
(i)
A person need not be a series member to be a manager of a series, but the
dissociation of a series member that is also a series manager removes the person
as a manager of the series.
(ii)
If a person that is both a series manager and a series member ceases to be a
manager of the series, that cessation does not by itself dissociate the person as a
member of the series.
(g)
A person's ceasing to be a series manager does not discharge any debt, obligation, or
other liability to the series or members of the series which the person incurred while a
manager of the series.
(4)
An action requiring the consent of members of a series under this chapter may be taken
without a meeting, and a member of a series may appoint a proxy or other agent to
consent or otherwise act for the series member by signing an appointing record,
personally or by the series member's agent.
(5)
The dissolution of a series does not affect the applicability of this section. However, a
person that wrongfully causes dissolution of the series loses the right to participate in
management as a series member and a series manager.
(6)
This chapter does not entitle a member of a series to remuneration for services
performed for a member-managed series, except for reasonable compensation for
services rendered in winding up the activities of the series.
Section 66. Section
16-20-1006
, which is renumbered from Section 48-3a-1206 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-3a-1206
16-20-1006
. Series distributions.
(1)
Any distribution made by a series before its dissolution and winding up must be in equal
shares among the series members and dissociated series members, except to the extent
necessary to comply with any transfer effective under Section
48-3a-502
16-20-502
and
any charging order in effect under Section
48-3a-503
16-20-503
.
(2)
(a)
A person has a right to a distribution before the dissolution and winding up of a
series only if the series decides to make an interim distribution.
(b)
A person's dissociation with respect to a series does not entitle the person to a
distribution.
(3)
(a)
A person does not have a right to demand or receive a distribution from a series in
any form other than money.
(b)
Except as otherwise provided in Subsection
48-3a-711(3)
16-20-708(3)
, a series
may distribute an asset in kind if each part of the asset is fungible with each other
part and each person receives a percentage of the asset equal in value to the person's
share of distributions.
(4)
(a)
If a series member or transferee becomes entitled to receive a distribution, the
series member or transferee has the status of, and is entitled to all remedies available
to, a creditor of the series with respect to the distribution.
(b)
However, the series' obligation to make a distribution is subject to offset for any
amounts owed to the series by the member or a person dissociated as a member on
whose account the distribution is made.
(5)
A series may not make a distribution if after the distribution:
(a)
the series would not be able to pay its debts as they become due in the ordinary
course of the series' activities; or
(b)
the series' total assets would be less than the sum of its total liabilities plus the
amount that would be needed, if the series were to be dissolved, wound up, and
terminated at the time of the distribution, to satisfy the preferential rights upon
dissolution, winding up, and termination of members whose preferential rights are
superior to those of persons receiving the distribution.
(6)
A series may base a determination that a distribution is not prohibited under Subsection
(5)
on financial statements prepared on the basis of accounting practices and principles
that are reasonable in the circumstances or on a fair valuation or other method that is
reasonable under the circumstances.
(7)
Except as otherwise provided in Subsection
(9)
, the effect of a distribution under
Subsection
(5)
is measured:
(a)
in the case of a distribution by purchase, redemption, or other acquisition of a
transferable interest in the series, as of the date money or other property is transferred
or debt incurred by the series; or
(b)
in all other cases, as of the date:
(i)
the distribution is authorized, if the payment occurs within 120 days after that
date; or
(ii)
the payment is made, if the payment occurs more than 120 days after the
distribution is authorized.
(8)
A series' indebtedness to a series member incurred by reason of a distribution made in
accordance with this section is at parity with the series' indebtedness to its general,
unsecured creditors.
(9)
(a)
A series' indebtedness, including indebtedness issued in connection with or as part
of a distribution, is not a liability for purposes of Subsection
(5)
if the terms of the
indebtedness provide that payment of principal and interest are made only to the
extent that a distribution could be made to members of the series under this section.
(b)
If such indebtedness is issued as a distribution, each payment of principal or interest
on the indebtedness is treated as a distribution, the effect of which is measured on the
date the payment is made.
(10)
Except as otherwise provided in Subsection
(11)
, if a member of a member-managed
series or manager of a manager-managed series consents to a distribution made in
violation of this section and in consenting to the distribution fails to comply with Section
48-3a-409
16-20-409
, the member or manager is personally liable to the series for the
amount of the distribution that exceeds the amount that could have been distributed
without the violation of this section.
(11)
To the extent the operating agreement of a member-managed series expressly relieves
a series member of the authority and responsibility to consent to distributions and
imposes that authority and responsibility on one or more other members of the series,
the liability stated in Subsection
(10)
applies to the other members of the series and not
the member of the series that the operating agreement relieves of authority and
responsibility.
(12)
A person that receives a distribution from a series knowing that the distribution to that
person was made in violation of this section is personally liable to the limited liability
company but only to the extent that the distribution received by the person exceeded the
amount that could have been properly paid under this section.
(13)
A person against which an action is commenced because the person is liable under
Subsection
(10)
may:
(a)
implead any other person that is liable under Subsection
(10)
and seek to compel
contribution from the person; and
(b)
implead any person that received a distribution in violation of Subsection
(12)
and
seek to compel contribution from the person in the amount the person received in
violation of Subsection
(12)
.
(14)
An action under this section is barred if not commenced within two years after the
distribution.
Section 67. Section
16-20-1007
, which is renumbered from Section 48-3a-1207 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-3a-1207
16-20-1007
. Events causing dissociation from a series.
(1)
Unless otherwise provided in the operating agreement, a member ceases to be
associated with a series and to have the power to exercise a right or power of a member
with respect to the series upon the assignment of all of the member's transferable interest
in the limited liability company with respect to the series.
(2)
Unless otherwise provided in an operating agreement, an event under this chapter or the
operating agreement that causes a member to cease to be associated with a series does
not, by itself:
(a)
cause the member to cease to be associated with another series;
(b)
terminate the continued membership of a member in the limited liability company; or
(c)
cause the termination of the series, regardless of whether the member is the last
remaining member associated with the series.
Section 68. Section
16-20-1008
, which is renumbered from Section 48-3a-1208 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-3a-1208
16-20-1008
. Dissolution of a series.
(1)
Except to the extent otherwise provided in the operating agreement, a series may be
dissolved and its affairs wound up without causing the dissolution of the limited liability
company.
(2)
The dissolution of a series does not affect the limitation on liabilities of the series under
Section
48-3a-1201
16-20-1001
.
(3)
A series is dissolved and its affairs shall be wound up upon the dissolution of the limited
liability company under Section
48-3a-701
16-20-701
or upon the occurrence of any of
the events described in Section
48-3a-701
16-20-701
, as applied to the series.
(4)
Notwithstanding Section
48-3a-703
16-20-703
, unless otherwise provided in the
operating agreement, any of the following persons may wind up the affairs of a
dissolved series:
(a)
a manager associated with a series who has not wrongfully caused the dissolution of
the series;
(b)
if there is no manager that satisfies the requirements of Subsection
(4)(a)
, the
members associated with the series who have not wrongfully caused the dissolution
of the series or a person approved by the members associated with the series who
have not wrongfully caused the dissolution of the series; or
(c)
if there is more than one class or group of members associated with the series, then
by each class or group of members associated with the series, in either case, by
members who have not wrongfully caused the dissolution of the series, and either:
(i)
own more than 50% of the transferable interests of the series owned by members
associated with the series who have not wrongfully caused the dissolution of the
series; or
(ii)
own more than 50% of the transferable interests of each class or group associated
with the series owned by members associated with the series who have not
wrongfully caused the dissolution of the series.
(5)
(a)
The persons winding up the affairs of a series, in the name of the series and for
and on behalf of the series, may take all actions with respect to the series as are
permitted under Section
48-3a-703
12-20-703
for a limited liability company.
(b)
The persons winding up the affairs of a series shall provide for the claims and
obligations of the series as provided in Section
48-3a-711
16-20-708
for a limited
liability company and distribute the assets of the series as provided in Section
48-3a-711
16-20-708
for a limited liability company.
(c)
An action taken pursuant to this Subsection
(5)
may not affect the liability of a
member and may not impose liability on a liquidating trustee.
Section 69. Section
16-20-1009
, which is renumbered from Section 48-3a-1209 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-3a-1209
16-20-1009
. Foreign limited liability company -- Series.
(1)
A foreign limited liability company that is registered to do business in this state
that is governed by an operating agreement that establishes or provides for the
establishment of a series of transferable interests having separate rights, powers, or
duties with respect to specified property or obligations of the foreign limited liability
company, or profits and losses associated with the specified property or obligations,
shall indicate that fact on the foreign registration statement filed by the division.
(2)
In addition, the
The
foreign limited liability company shall state on the foreign
registration statement whether the debts, liabilities, and obligations incurred, contracted
for, or otherwise existing with respect to a particular series, if any, are enforceable
against the assets of such series only, and not against the assets of the foreign limited
liability company generally or any other series.
(3)
Notice in a foreign limited liability company's foreign registration statement of the
limitation on liability of a series as referenced in this section shall have the same effect
found in Section
48-3a-1202
16-20-1002
as a notice of limitation on liability of a series
set forth in a limited liability company's certificate of organization.
Section 70. Section
16-20-1101
, which is renumbered from Section 48-3a-1301 is renumbered
and amended to read:
11. Low-Profit Limited Liability Companies
48-3a-1301
16-20-1101
. Application of this part.
If a conflict arises between this part and another provision of this chapter, this part
controls.
Section 71. Section
16-20-1102
, which is renumbered from Section 48-3a-1302 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-3a-1302
16-20-1102
. Requirements.
(1)
To be a low-profit limited liability company, a limited liability company shall:
(a)
contain in its name the abbreviation "L3C" or "l3c";
(b)
state in its certificate of organization that it is a low-profit limited liability company;
(c)
organize under this chapter; and
(d)
be organized for a business purpose that satisfies, and at all times operates to satisfy
each of the requirements under Subsection
(2)
.
(2)
A low-profit limited liability company:
(a)
shall significantly further the accomplishment of one or more charitable or
educational purposes within the meaning of Section 170(c)(2)(B), Internal Revenue
Code;
(b)
shall demonstrate that it would not be formed but for the limited liability company's
relationship to the accomplishment of a charitable or educational purpose;
(c)
subject to Subsection
(3)
, may not have as a significant purpose the production of
income or the appreciation of property; and
(d)
may not have as a purpose to accomplish one or more political or legislative
purposes within the meaning of Section 170(c)(2)(D), Internal Revenue Code.
(3)
Notwithstanding Subsection
(2)
, if a low-profit limited liability company produces
significant income or capital appreciation, in the absence of other factors, the fact that
the low-profit limited liability company produces significant income or capital
appreciation is not conclusive evidence of a significant purpose involving the production
of income or the appreciation of property.
Section 72. Section
16-20-1103
, which is renumbered from Section 48-3a-1303 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-3a-1303
16-20-1103
. Ceasing to be a low-profit limited liability company.
(1)
If a limited liability company that is a low-profit limited liability company at its
formation at any time ceases to meet a requirement to be a low-profit limited liability
company under Section
48-3a-1302
16-20-1102
, the limited liability company:
(a)
ceases to be a low-profit limited liability company on the day on which the limited
liability company no longer meets the requirement; and
(b)
if it continues to meet the requirements of this chapter to be a limited liability
company, continues to exist as a limited liability company that is not a low-profit
limited liability company.
(2)
A low-profit limited liability company's failure to meet a requirement of Section
48-3a-1302
16-20-1102
may be:
(a)
voluntary, in order to convert to a limited liability company that is not a low-profit
limited liability company; or
(b)
involuntary.
(3)
If a low-profit limited liability company ceases to be a low-profit limited liability
company in accordance with this section, the limited liability company shall:
(a)
change
its
the limited liability company's
name to conform with Section
48-3a-108
16-1a-302
; and
(b)
amend
its
the limited liability company's
certificate of organization in accordance
with Section
48-3a-202
16-20-202
.
Section 73. Section
16-20-1104
, which is renumbered from Section 48-3a-1304 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-3a-1304
16-20-1104
. Merger, interest exchange, conversion, or
domestication of a low-profit limited liability company.
A low-profit limited liability company may engage in a merger, interest exchange,
conversion, or domestication under
Part 10, Merger, Interest Exchange, Conversion, and
Domestication
Chapter 1a, Part 7, Merger, Chapter 1a, Part 8, Interest Exchange, Chapter 1a,
Part 9, Conversion, or Chapter 1a, Part 10, Domestication
, to the same extent as a limited
liability company that is not a low-profit limited liability company.
Section 74. Section
16-20-1201
, which is renumbered from Section 48-3a-1401 is renumbered
and amended to read:
12. Miscellaneous Provisions
48-3a-1401
16-20-1201
. Uniformity of application and construction.
In applying and construing this chapter, consideration must be given to the need to
promote uniformity of the law with respect to
its
this chapter's
subject matter among states
that enact the uniform act upon which this chapter is based.
Section 75. Section
16-20-1202
, which is renumbered from Section 48-3a-1402 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-3a-1402
16-20-1202
. Severability clause.
If any provision of this chapter or
its
this chapter's
application to any person or
circumstance is held invalid, the invalidity does not affect other provisions or applications of
this chapter which can be given effect without the invalid provision or application, and to this
end the provisions of this chapter are severable.
Section 76. Section
16-20-1203
, which is renumbered from Section 48-3a-1403 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-3a-1403
16-20-1203
. Relation to Electronic Signatures in Global and
National Commerce Act.
This chapter modifies, limits, and supersedes the Electronic Signatures in Global and
National Commerce Act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 7001 et seq., but does not modify, limit, or supersede
Section 101(c) of that act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 7001(c), or authorize electronic delivery of any of
the notices described in Section 103(b) of that act, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 7003(b).
Section 77. Section
16-20-1204
, which is renumbered from Section 48-3a-1404 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-3a-1404
16-20-1204
. Savings clause.
This chapter does not affect an action commenced, proceeding brought, or right accrued
before this chapter takes effect.
Section 78. Section
16-20-1205
, which is renumbered from Section 48-3a-1405 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-3a-1405
16-20-1205
. Application to existing relationships.
(1)
Before January 1, 2016, this chapter governs only:
(a)
a limited liability company formed on or after January 1, 2014; and
(b)
except as otherwise provided in Subsection
(3)
, a limited liability company formed
before January 1, 2014, which elects, in the manner provided in its operating
agreement or by law for amending the operating agreement, to be subject to this
chapter.
(2)
Except as otherwise provided in Subsection
(3)
, on and after January 1, 2016, this
chapter governs all limited liability companies.
(3)
For the purposes of applying this chapter to a limited liability company formed before
January 1, 2014:
(a)
the limited liability company's articles of organization are deemed to be the limited
liability company's certificate of organization;
(b)
for the purposes of applying Subsection
48-3a-102(15)
16-20-101(15)
and subject
to Subsection
48-3a-114
(4)
16-20-109(4)
, language in the limited liability
company's articles of organization designating the limited liability company's
management structure operates as if that language were in the operating agreement;
and
(c)
(i)
the limited liability company has perpetual duration unless otherwise stated in
the limited liability company's articles of organization; and
(ii)
after the limited liability company's duration ends in accordance with the articles
of organization, the limited liability company is dissolved, and its activities and
affairs must be wound up.
Section 79. Section
16-21-101
, which is renumbered from Section 48-4-102 is renumbered
and amended to read:
21. Benefit Limited Liability Company Act
1. General Provisions
48-4-102
16-21-101
. Application and effect of chapter.
(1)
This chapter applies to a benefit company organized under this chapter.
(2)
(a)
The existence of a provision in this chapter does not itself create an implication
that a contrary or different rule of law is applicable to a limited liability company that
is not a benefit company.
(b)
This chapter does not affect a statute or rule of law that is applicable to a limited
liability company that is not a benefit company.
(3)
(a)
Except as otherwise provided in this chapter,
Title 48, Chapter 3a, Utah Revised
Uniform Limited Liability Company Act
Chapter 20, Utah Revised Uniform Limited
Liability Company Act
, applies to a benefit company.
(b)
The provisions of this chapter control over any inconsistent provision of
Title 48,
Chapter 3a, Utah Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act
Chapter 20, Utah
Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act
.
(4)
The operating agreement of a benefit company may not limit, be inconsistent with, or
supersede a provision of this chapter.
Section 80. Section
16-21-102
, which is renumbered from Section 48-4-103 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-4-103
16-21-102
. Definitions.
As used in this chapter:
(1)
"Benefit company" means a limited liability company:
(a)
that elects to become subject to this chapter; and
(b)
the status of which as a benefit company has not been terminated.
(2)
"Benefit enforcement proceeding" means a proceeding in a court of competent
jurisdiction for:
(a)
failure of a benefit company to pursue or create general public benefit or a specific
public benefit described in the benefit company's certificate of organization; or
(b)
a violation of an obligation, duty, or standard of conduct under this chapter.
(3)
"General public benefit" means a material positive impact on society and the
environment:
(a)
taken as a whole;
(b)
assessed against a third-party standard; and
(c)
from the business of a benefit company.
(4)
"Immediate family member" means a parent, spouse, surviving spouse, child, or sibling.
(5)
(a)
"Independent person" means a person who has no material relationship with a
benefit company or a subsidiary of the benefit company.
(b)
"Independent person" does not include a person:
(i)
who is, or has been within the last three years, an employee of the benefit
company or a subsidiary of the benefit company;
(ii)
whose immediate family member is, or has been within the last three years, an
executive officer of the benefit company or a subsidiary of the benefit company;
(iii)
who owns 5% or more of the outstanding interests of the benefit company,
calculated as if all outstanding rights to acquire interests in the benefit company
have been exercised; or
(iv)
who owns 5% or more of the outstanding interests in an entity, calculated as if all
outstanding rights to acquire interests in the entity have been exercised, that owns
5% or more of the outstanding interests of the benefit company, calculated as if all
outstanding rights to acquire interests in the benefit company have been exercised.
(6)
"Minimum status vote" means:
(a)
in the case of a limited liability company, in addition to any other required approval
or vote, the satisfaction of the following conditions:
(i)
the members of every class or series may vote as a separate voting group on an
action of the limited liability company regardless of a limitation state in the
certificate of organization or operating agreement on the voting rights of any class
or series; and
(ii)
the action of the limited liability company is required to be approved by vote of
the members of each class or series entitled to cast at least two-thirds of the votes
that all members of the class or series are entitled to cast on the action; or
(b)
in the case of a domestic entity other than a limited liability company, in addition to
any other required approval, vote, or consent, the satisfaction of the following
conditions:
(i)
the holders of every class or series of interest in the entity that are entitled to
receive a distribution of any kind from the entity may vote on or consent to the
action regardless of any otherwise applicable limitation on voting or consent
rights of the class or series; and
(ii)
the action of the limited liability company is required to be approved by vote or
consent of the holders described in Subsection
(6)(b)(i)
entitled to cast at least
two-thirds of the votes or consents that all of those holders are entitled to cast on
the action.
(7)
"Owns" includes ownership as the owner of record or as a beneficial owner.
(8)
"Specific public benefit" includes:
(a)
providing low-income or underserved individuals or communities with beneficial
products or services;
(b)
promoting economic opportunity for individuals or communities beyond the creation
of jobs in the normal course of business;
(c)
protecting or restoring the environment;
(d)
improving human health;
(e)
promoting the arts, sciences, or advancement of knowledge;
(f)
increasing the flow of capital to entities with a purpose to benefit society or the
environment; and
(g)
conferring any other particular benefit on society or the environment.
(9)
"Subsidiary" means, in relation to a person, an entity in which the person owns
beneficially or of record, 50% or more of the outstanding equity interests, calculated as
if all outstanding rights to acquire equity interests in the entity have been exercised.
(10)
"Third-party standard" means a standard for defining, reporting, and assessing overall
social and environmental performance that:
(a)
assesses the effect of a business and a business's operations on the interests described
in Subsections
48-4-301(1)(a)(ii)
16-21-301(1)(a)(ii)
through
(v)
;
(b)
is developed by an entity:
(i)
that is independent of the benefit company;
(ii)
whose governing body is comprised of no more than one-third of members who
are representatives of any of the following:
(A)
an association of businesses that operate in a specific industry whose members
are measured by the standard;
(B)
businesses from a specific industry or an association of businesses in that
industry; or
(C)
businesses whose performance is assessed against the standard;
(iii)
that is not materially financed by an association or business described in
Subsection
(10)(b)(ii)
;
(iv)
that has access to necessary expertise to assess overall social and environmental
performance;
(v)
uses a balanced multistakeholder approach to develop the standard, including a
public comment period of at least 30 days; and
(vi)
makes the following information publically available:
(A)
the criteria considered when measuring the overall social and environmental
performance of a business;
(B)
the relative weightings, if any, of the criteria described in Subsection
(10)(b)(vi)(A)
;
(C)
the identity of each director, officer, material owner, and governing body of
the entity that developed and controls revisions to the standard;
(D)
the process by which revisions to the standard and changes to the membership
of the governing body are made; and
(E)
an accounting of the revenue and sources of financial support for the entity,
with sufficient detail to disclose a relationship that could reasonably be
considered to present a potential conflict of interest.
Section 81. Section
16-21-103
, which is renumbered from Section 48-4-104 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-4-104
16-21-103
. Benefit company status.
(1)
A person may form a benefit company in accordance with
Title 48, Chapter 3a, Utah
Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act
Chapter 20, Utah Revised Uniform
Limited Liability Company Act
, except the certificate of organization shall state that the
limited liability company is a benefit company.
(2)
(a)
A limited liability company may elect to become a benefit company by amending,
in accordance with Section
48-3a-202
16-20-202
, the limited liability company's
certificate of organization to contain a statement that the limited liability company is
a benefit company.
(b)
An amendment described in Subsection
(2)(a)
is not effective unless the amendment
is adopted by at least the minimum status vote.
(3)
If an entity that is not a benefit company is a party to a merger or is the exchanging
entity in an interest exchange, and the surviving entity in the merger or interest exchange
is a benefit company, the merger or interest exchange is not effective unless the merger
or interest exchange is adopted by the entity by at least the minimum status vote.
(4)
(a)
A benefit company may terminate the benefit company's status as a benefit
company and cease to be subject to this chapter by amending the benefit company's
certificate of organization in accordance with Section
48-3a-202
16-20-202
to delete
the provision described in Subsection
(1)
or
(2)
that states that the limited liability
company is a benefit company.
(b)
An amendment described in Subsection
(4)(a)
is not effective unless the amendment
is adopted by at least the minimum status vote.
(5)
(a)
If a proposed merger or interest exchange would have the effect of terminating a
benefit company's status as a benefit company, the merger or interest exchange is not
effective unless the merger or interest exchange is adopted by at least the minimum
status vote.
(b)
Unless the transaction is in the usual and regular course of the benefit company's
business, a sale, lease, exchange, or other disposition of all or substantially all of the
assets of a benefit company is not effective unless the transaction is approved by at
least the minimum status vote.
Section 82. Section
16-21-201
, which is renumbered from Section 48-4-201 is renumbered
and amended to read:
2. Company Purpose
48-4-201
16-21-201
. Company purpose.
(1)
In addition to the benefit company's purpose under Section
48-3a-104
16-20-103
, a
benefit company shall have a purpose of creating general public benefit.
(2)
(a)
A benefit company's certificate of organization may identify one or more specific
public benefits that are the purposes of the benefit company to create.
(b)
Identifying a specific public benefit in accordance with Subsection
(2)(a)
does not
affect a benefit company's obligation to create general public benefit in accordance
with Subsection
(1)
.
(3)
The creation of general public benefit and one or more specific public benefits is in the
best interests of the benefit company.
(4)
(a)
A benefit company may amend the benefit company's certificate or organization
to add, amend, or delete a specific public benefit.
(b)
An amendment described in Subsection
(4)(a)
is not effective unless adopted by at
least the minimum status vote.
Section 83. Section
16-21-301
, which is renumbered from Section 48-4-301 is renumbered
and amended to read:
3. Accountability
48-4-301
16-21-301
. Standard of conduct for members.
(1)
When discharging a duty under this chapter, each member of a member-managed
benefit company:
(a)
shall consider the effect of any action or inaction on:
(i)
the members of the benefit company;
(ii)
the employees and workforce of the benefit company;
(iii)
the interests of customers as beneficiaries of the benefit company's general
public benefit purpose or specific public benefit purpose;
(iv)
community and societal considerations, including those of each community in
which offices or facilities of the benefit company or the benefit company's
subsidiaries or suppliers are located;
(v)
the local and global environment;
(vi)
the short-term and long-term interests of the benefit company, including benefits
that may accrue to the benefit company from the benefit company's long-term
plans and the possibility that the interests may be best served by the continued
independence of the benefit company; and
(vii)
the ability of the benefit company to accomplish the benefit company's general
public benefit purpose and any specific public benefit purpose; and
(b)
may consider other pertinent factors or the interests of any other group that the
member considers appropriate.
(2)
A member is not required to prioritize the interests of a person or factor described in
Subsection
(1)(a)
or
(b)
over the interests of any other person or factor, unless the
benefit company's certificate of organization states an intention to give priority to certain
interests related to the benefit company's accomplishment of the benefit company's
general public benefit purpose or a specific public benefit purpose identified in the
benefit company's certificate of organization.
(3)
A member's consideration of interests and factors in accordance with Subsections
(1)
and
(2)
does not constitute a violation of Section
48-3a-409
16-20-409
.
(4)
A member of a member-managed limited liability company that is a benefit company
does not have a duty to a person who is a beneficiary of the benefit company's general
public benefit purpose or a specific public benefit purpose arising from the person's
status as a beneficiary.
Section 84. Section
16-21-302
, which is renumbered from Section 48-4-302 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-4-302
16-21-302
. Standard of conduct for managers and officers.
(1)
Each manager of a manager-managed benefit company shall consider the interests and
factors described in Subsections
48-4-301(1)
16-21-301(1)
and
(2)
when discharging
the manager's duties under this chapter and the operating agreement.
(2)
If a benefit company has a person serving as an officer, the person shall consider the
interests and factors described in Subsections
48-4-301(1)
16-21-301(1)
and
(2)
when
discharging the person's duties under this chapter and the operating agreement if:
(a)
the officer has discretion to act with respect to the matter; and
(b)
it reasonably appears to the officer that the matter may have a material effect on the
benefit company's creation of a general public benefit or a specific public benefit
identified in the benefit company's certificate of organization.
(3)
A manager's consideration of the interests and factors described in Subsections
48-4-301(1)
16-21-301(1)
and
(2)
does not constitute a violation of Section
48-3a-409
16-20-409
.
(4)
A manager or officer does not have a duty to a person who is a beneficiary of the benefit
company's general public benefit purpose or a specific public benefit purpose arising
from the person's status as a beneficiary.
Section 85. Section
16-21-303
, which is renumbered from Section 48-4-303 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-4-303
16-21-303
. Right of action.
(1)
Except in a benefit enforcement proceeding, a person may not bring an action or assert a
claim against a benefit company or a benefit company's member, manager, or officer
with respect to:
(a)
failure to pursue or create general public benefit or a specific public benefit set forth
in the benefit company's certificate of organization; or
(b)
violation of a duty or standard of conduct under this chapter.
(2)
A benefit company is not liable for monetary damages under this chapter for a failure of
the benefit company to pursue or create general public benefit or a specific public
benefit.
(3)
Only the following may commence or maintain a benefit enforcement proceeding:
(a)
the benefit company, directly; or
(b)
one or more of the following, derivatively:
(i)
a member that owned at least 2% of the total number of interests of a class or
series outstanding at the time of the act or omission complained of;
(ii)
a manager of a manager-managed benefit company;
(iii)
a person or group of persons who own beneficially or of record at least 5% of the
interests in an association of which the benefit company is a subsidiary at the time
of the act or omission complained of; or
(iv)
any person or group of persons specified in the benefit company's certificate of
organization or operating agreement.
Section 86. Section
16-21-401
, which is renumbered from Section 48-4-401 is renumbered
and amended to read:
4. Transparency
48-4-401
16-21-401
. Annual benefit report.
(1)
A benefit company shall prepare an annual benefit report that includes:
(a)
a narrative description of:
(i)
the ways in which the benefit company pursued the benefit company's general
public benefit purpose during the year and the extent to which general public
benefit was created;
(ii)
the ways in which the benefit company pursued any specific public benefit that
the benefit company's certificate of organization states is the purpose of the
benefit company to create and the extent to which the specific public benefit was
created;
(iii)
any circumstances that have hindered the benefit company's creation of general
public benefit or any specific public benefit; and
(iv)
the process and rationale for selecting or changing the third-party standard used
to prepare the benefit report;
(b)
an assessment of the overall social and environmental performance of the benefit
company against a third-party standard:
(i)
applied consistently with any application of the standard in prior benefit reports; or
(ii)
accompanied by an explanation of the reasons for any inconsistent application;
and
(c)
any connection between the organization that established the third-party standard, or
the organization's directors or officers, or a holder of 5% or more of the governance
interests in the organization, and the benefit company or the benefit company's
members, managers, or officers or any holder of 5% or more of the outstanding
interests in the benefit company, including any financial or governance relationship
that might materially affect the credibility of the use of the third-party standard.
(2)
The assessment described in Subsection
(1)(b)
does not need to be audited or certified
by a third party.
Section 87. Section
16-21-402
, which is renumbered from Section 48-4-402 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-4-402
16-21-402
. Availability of annual benefit report.
(1)
Each year, a benefit company shall send the benefit report described in Section
48-4-401
16-21-401
to each member:
(a)
within 120 days after the day on which the benefit company's fiscal year ends; or
(b)
the day on which the benefit company delivers any other annual report to the benefit
company's members.
(2)
(a)
Within five days after the day on which a benefit company sends a benefit report
to each member in accordance with Subsection
(1)
, the benefit company shall:
(i)
subject to Subsection
(2)(b)
, post a copy of the benefit report on a public portion
of the benefit company's website; and
(ii)
deliver a copy of the benefit report to the division for filing.
(b)
If a benefit company does not have a website, the benefit company shall provide a
copy of the benefit report, without charge, to any person who requests a copy.
(c)
The benefit company may omit any financial or proprietary information from a copy
of a benefit report described in Subsection
(2)(a)
or
(b)
.
(d)
The division may charge a fee established by the division in accordance with Section
63J-1-504
for filing an annual benefit report in accordance with this section.
Section 88. Section
16-22-101
, which is renumbered from Section 48-5-101 is renumbered
and amended to read:
22. Decentralized Autonomous Organization Act
1. General Provisions
48-5-101
16-22-101
. Definitions.
As used in this chapter:
(1)
"Administrator" means a person that is appointed in a manner specified in the by-laws
to make decisions for specific, predefined operations of the decentralized autonomous
organization.
(2)
"Asset" means an item of value, whether on-chain or off-chain.
(3)
"By-laws" means the procedural rules and regulations that govern a decentralized
autonomous organization and the interaction of the decentralized autonomous
organization's members and participants.
(4)
"Cryptographic proof" means a mathematical proof that verifies that a message has not
been tampered with or altered in any way and can be verified by a person that has access
to the original message and the proof.
(5)
"Decentralized" means that decision-making is distributed among multiple persons.
(6)
"Decentralized autonomous organization" means an organization:
(a)
created by one or more smart contracts;
(b)
that implements rules enabling individuals to coordinate for decentralized
governance of an organization; and
(c)
that is an entity formed under this chapter.
(7)
(a)
"Developer" means a person involved in the development or maintenance of a
decentralized autonomous organization.
(b)
"Developer" includes a person that provides:
(i)
software code; or
(ii)
design, business, legal, or ancillary support.
(8)
(a)
"Dispute resolution mechanism" means an on-chain alternative dispute resolution
system that enables persons to resolve disputes arising out of a decentralized
autonomous organization.
(b)
"Dispute resolution mechanism" includes:
(i)
arbitration;
(ii)
expert determination; or
(iii)
an on-chain alternative court system.
(9)
"Division" means the Division of Corporations and Commercial Code.
(10)
"Failure event" means an error in the decentralized autonomous organization's
software code or an exploit that:
(a)
renders the decentralized autonomous organization inoperative; or
(b)
fundamentally changes the expected operation of the decentralized autonomous
organization.
(11)
"Graphical user interface" means a publicly accessible interface through which a
person interacts with computer software through visual indicator representations.
(12)
"Hard fork" means a blockchain software upgrade that is not compatible with previous
versions of the blockchain software and requires all users to upgrade to the latest version
of the blockchain software.
(13)
"Legal representative" means an individual appointed in the manner specified in the
by-laws of a decentralized autonomous organization to perform procedural functions
off-chain on behalf of a decentralized autonomous organization.
(14)
"Majority chain" means the version of the blockchain accepted by more than half of
the blockchain's validators following a hard fork.
(15)
"Meeting" means a synchronous or asynchronous event for the purpose of discussing
and acting upon decentralized autonomous organization related matters by members or
participants.
(16)
(a)
"Member" means a person who has governance rights in a decentralized
autonomous organization.
(b)
"Member" does not include an individual that has involuntarily received a token with
governance rights, unless that person has chosen to participate in governance by
undertaking a governance behavior, on-chain or off-chain, for the decentralized
autonomous organization.
(17)
"Minority chain" means the version of the chain that is not the majority chain
following a hard fork.
(18)
"Off-chain" means any action that is not on-chain.
(19)
"On-chain" means any action that is recorded and verified on a blockchain.
(20)
"On-chain contribution" refers to any token segregated and locked in one of the
decentralized autonomous organization's smart contracts for the purpose of member
buy-in to the decentralized autonomous organization and the provision of withdrawable
capital.
(21)
"Organizer" means a person that submits the certificate of filing as required in Section
48-5-201
16-22-201
.
(22)
"Participant" means a person that:
(a)
is not a member of a decentralized autonomous organization; and
(b)
holds or interacts with a token of a decentralized autonomous organization.
(23)
"Permissionless blockchain" means a publicly distributed ledger that allows a person to
transact and produce blocks in accordance with the blockchain protocol, in which the
validity of the block is independent of the identity of the user.
(24)
"Public address" means a unique, durable identifier that an individual can transact with
on a permissionless blockchain.
(25)
"Public forum" means a freely accessible online environment that is commonly used
for the exercise of speech and public debate.
(26)
"Public signal" means a declaration authorized by the decentralized autonomous
organization in a public forum.
(27)
"Quality assurance" means a security review of the software code of the decentralized
autonomous organization in accordance with industry standards.
(28)
"Redeem" means to exchange a token for the value that the token represents.
(29)
"Smart contract" means software code that:
(a)
is deployed on a permissionless blockchain;
(b)
consists of a set of predefined instructions executed in a distributed manner by the
nodes of an underlying blockchain network; and
(c)
produces a change on the blockchain network.
(30)
"Token" means a record on a permissionless blockchain that represents an asset,
participation right, or other entitlement.
(31)
"Transaction" means a new entry in a permissionless blockchain, including the
recording of a change in ownership of an asset or participation in a decentralized
autonomous organization.
Section 89. Section
16-22-102
, which is renumbered from Section 48-5-102 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-5-102
16-22-102
. Governing document hierarchy -- Governing law.
A decentralized autonomous organization shall be governed by the following, listed in
order of primacy:
(1)
this act;
(2)
the by-laws of the decentralized autonomous organization;
(3)
if this act and a decentralized autonomous organization's by-laws are silent, the
provisions of
Chapter 3a, Utah Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act
Chapter 20, Utah Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act
; and
(4)
principles of law and equity.
Section 90. Section
16-22-103
, which is renumbered from Section 48-5-103 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-5-103
16-22-103
. Powers of the division.
(1)
(a)
The division may make, amend, or rescind a rule, form, or order when necessary
to carry out this chapter.
(b)
The division shall make rules in accordance with Title 63G, Chapter 3, Utah
Administrative Rulemaking Act.
(2)
The division may by rule:
(a)
provide the form and content of a registration requirement required under this
chapter;
(b)
provide the method of determining whether formation requirements described in
Section
48-5-201
16-22-201
have been met and when to file a certificate of
organization; and
(c)
identify industry standards for determining whether the decentralized autonomous
organization has undergone security review for quality assurance.
Section 91. Section
16-22-104
, which is renumbered from Section 48-5-104 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-5-104
16-22-104
. Legal personality.
A decentralized autonomous organization that meets the requirements of this act:
(1)
shall be deemed a legal entity separate and distinct from the decentralized autonomous
organization's members;
(2)
has the capacity to sue and be sued in the decentralized autonomous organization's own
name and the power to do all things necessary or convenient to carry on the
decentralized autonomous organization's activities and affairs;
(3)
shall meet the decentralized autonomous organization's liabilities through the
decentralized autonomous organization's assets;
(4)
may have any lawful purpose; and
(5)
has perpetual duration.
Section 92. Section
16-22-105
, which is renumbered from Section 48-5-106 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-5-106
16-22-105
. Registered agent.
Each decentralized autonomous organization shall designate a registered agent in this
state in accordance with
Subsection
16-17-203(1)
Section
16-1a-404
and maintain a
registered agent in the state.
Section 93. Section
16-22-106
, which is renumbered from Section 48-5-109 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-5-109
16-22-106
. Electronic documents.
(1)
Subject to Section
48-5-107
13-1a-110
, the division shall by rule permit a writing
required or permitted to be filed with the division under this chapter:
(a)
to be delivered, mailed, or filed:
(i)
in an electronic medium; or
(ii)
by electronic transmission; or
(b)
to be signed by photographic, electronic, or other means prescribed by rule, except
that a writing signed in an electronic medium shall be signed by electronic signature
in accordance with
Title 46, Chapter 4, Uniform Electronic Transactions Act
.
(2)
The division may by rule provide for any writing required or permitted to be prepared,
delivered, or mailed by the division under this chapter to be prepared, delivered, or
mailed:
(a)
in an electronic medium; or
(b)
by electronic transmission.
Section 94. Section
16-22-201
, which is renumbered from Section 48-5-201 is renumbered
and amended to read:
2. Formation
48-5-201
16-22-201
. Formation requirements.
(1)
(a)
One or more persons may act as organizers to form a decentralized autonomous
organization by delivering to the division for filing a certificate of organization.
(b)
At least one of the organizers of a decentralized autonomous organization shall be an
individual.
(2)
(a)
A certificate of organization shall provide:
(i)
the name of the decentralized autonomous organization, which shall comply with
Section
48-5-105
Sections
16-1a-302
and
16-1a-303
;
(ii)
the name of an organizer that is an individual;
(iii)
the street and mailing address of the organizer described in Subsection
(2)(a)(ii)
;
(iv)
the name and address of the legal representative; and
(v)
the information required by
Subsection 16-17-203(1)
Section
16-1a-404
.
(b)
An organizer may request that the information provided in Subsections
(2)(a)(ii)
and
(iii)
is redacted by the division before any public disclosure of the filing.
(3)
A decentralized autonomous organization shall submit evidence to the division in a
form required by the division that the decentralized autonomous organization has
complied with the following requirements:
(a)
the decentralized autonomous organization is deployed on a permissionless
blockchain;
(b)
the decentralized autonomous organization has a unique public address through
which an individual can review and monitor the decentralized autonomous
organization's transactions;
(c)
the software code of the decentralized autonomous organization is available in a
public forum for any person to review;
(d)
the software code of the decentralized autonomous organization has undergone
quality assurance;
(e)
the decentralized autonomous organization has a graphical user interface that:
(i)
allows a person to read the value of the key variables of the decentralized
autonomous organization's smart contracts;
(ii)
allows a person to monitor all transactions originating from, or addressed to, the
decentralized autonomous organization's smart contracts;
(iii)
specifies the restrictions on a member's ability to redeem tokens;
(iv)
makes available the decentralized autonomous organization's by-laws; and
(v)
displays the mechanism to contact the administrator of the decentralized
autonomous organization;
(f)
the governance system of the decentralized autonomous organization is decentralized;
(g)
the decentralized autonomous organization has at least one member;
(h)
(i)
there is a publicly specified communication mechanism that allows a person to
contact the registered agent of the decentralized autonomous organization and
provide legally recognized service; and
(ii)
a member or administrator of the decentralized autonomous organization is able
to access the contents of this communication mechanism; and
(i)
the decentralized autonomous organization describes or provides a dispute resolution
mechanism that is:
(i)
binding on the decentralized autonomous organization, the members, and
participants of the decentralized autonomous organization; and
(ii)
able to resolve disputes with third parties capable of settlement by alternative
dispute resolution.
(4)
Notwithstanding the requirements of Subsection
(3)(e)(iv)
, a decentralized autonomous
organization may redact sensitive information from the by-laws before making the
by-laws available, if those redactions are necessary to protect the privacy of individual
members or participants in the decentralized autonomous organization.
(5)
A decentralized autonomous organization is formed when the decentralized autonomous
organization's certificate of organization becomes effective and the decentralized
autonomous organization submits the evidence required in Subsection
(3)
.
(6)
Upon formation, the decentralized autonomous organization shall have limited liability,
subject to the provisions of Section
48-5-202
16-22-202
.
Section 95. Section
16-22-202
, which is renumbered from Section 48-5-202 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-5-202
16-22-202
. Limited liability.
(1)
Except as set forth in Subsections
(2)
and
(3)
, a member:
(a)
may only be liable for the on-chain contributions that the member has committed to
the decentralized autonomous organization;
(b)
may not be held personally liable for any excess liability after the decentralized
autonomous organization's assets have been exhausted;
(c)
may not be held personally liable for any obligation incurred by the decentralized
autonomous organization; and
(d)
may not be held personally liable, in the member's capacity as a member, for the
wrongful act or omission of any other member of the decentralized autonomous
organization.
(2)
If a decentralized autonomous organization refuses to comply with an enforceable
judgment, order, or award entered against the decentralized autonomous organization,
the members who voted against compliance may be liable for any monetary payments
ordered in the judgment, order, or award in proportion to the member's share of
governance rights in the decentralized autonomous organization.
(3)
Subsections
(1)
and
(2)
do not affect the personal liability of a member in tort for a
member's own wrongful act or omission.
Section 96. Section
16-22-203
, which is renumbered from Section 48-5-203 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-5-203
16-22-203
. By-laws.
(1)
A decentralized autonomous organization shall adopt by-laws that establish internal
organization and procedures for the decentralized autonomous organization.
(2)
The by-laws shall be set out in plain terms.
(3)
The by-laws of a decentralized autonomous organization may contain any provision for
managing the entity and regulating the affairs of the decentralized autonomous
organization that is not inconsistent with law.
Section 97. Section
16-22-301
, which is renumbered from Section 48-5-301 is renumbered
and amended to read:
3. Members
48-5-301
16-22-301
. Classes of participation rights -- Membership.
(1)
A decentralized autonomous organization's by-laws may create multiple classes of
member participation rights.
(2)
Where the decentralized autonomous organization has tokens providing governance
powers to the token holder, the token holder shall be considered a member of the
decentralized autonomous organization:
(a)
from the time the ownership of the tokens is established to be in the possession of an
address; or
(b)
from the time when ownership is first acknowledged by the token holder through an
on-chain interaction with the decentralized autonomous organization.
(3)
This section does not apply in the event of a hard fork.
Section 98. Section
16-22-302
, which is renumbered from Section 48-5-302 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-5-302
16-22-302
. Voting rights.
(1)
The by-laws shall set out the distribution of voting rights for the classes of member
participation rights in a decentralized autonomous organization.
(2)
The method by which these voting rights are computed and distributed shall be set out
in the by-laws.
Section 99. Section
16-22-303
, which is renumbered from Section 48-5-303 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-5-303
16-22-303
. Proxies.
(1)
A member may be represented by a proxy.
(2)
The by-laws of a decentralized autonomous organization may establish the requirements
for representation by proxy.
(3)
A proxy may exercise all rights of a member.
Section 100. Section
16-22-304
, which is renumbered from Section 48-5-304 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-5-304
16-22-304
. Minority rights protection.
The decentralized autonomous organization shall state in the by-laws whether the
decentralized autonomous organization provides minority rights protection.
Section 101. Section
16-22-305
, which is renumbered from Section 48-5-305 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-5-305
16-22-305
. Administrators.
(1)
Unless mandated in the decentralized autonomous organization's by-laws, a
decentralized autonomous organization is not required to have an administrator,
including a board of directors or a trustee.
(2)
In the absence of a provision requiring administrators, all the powers and tasks of an
administrator shall be vested in the decentralized autonomous organization members as
a class.
(3)
The voting mechanism for nominating and appointing an administrator shall be set out
in the decentralized autonomous organization's by-laws.
Section 102. Section
16-22-306
, which is renumbered from Section 48-5-306 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-5-306
16-22-306
. Legal representation.
(1)
A decentralized autonomous organization shall retain a legal representative to undertake
tasks that cannot be achieved on-chain.
(2)
Legal representation of the decentralized autonomous organization shall be carried out
by the legal representative in the manner provided in the by-laws, as evidenced by an
authorization displayed on a public forum, and verifiable by cryptographic proof.
(3)
The legal representative may undertake and execute any and all acts and contracts
included within the scope of such authorization.
(4)
The legal representative may not be required to reside in Utah.
(5)
A legal representative may not be personally liable for acts performed on behalf of the
decentralized autonomous organization.
Section 103. Section
16-22-307
, which is renumbered from Section 48-5-307 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-5-307
16-22-307
. No implicit fiduciary status.
A developer, member, participant, or legal representative of a decentralized autonomous
organization may not be imputed to have fiduciary duties towards each other or third parties
solely on account of their role, unless the developer, member, participant, or legal
representative:
(1)
explicitly holds themselves out as a fiduciary; or
(2)
stipulates to assume a fiduciary status as provided in the decentralized autonomous
organization's by-laws.
Section 104. Section
16-22-401
, which is renumbered from Section 48-5-401 is renumbered
and amended to read:
4. Miscellaneous Provisions
48-5-401
16-22-401
. Asset subscription and payment.
(1)
No minimum capital requirements may apply to a decentralized autonomous
organization recognized by this act.
(2)
If the decentralized autonomous organization wishes to maintain a minimum amount of
capital, the by-laws of the decentralized autonomous organization shall specify the rules
for subscription and payment.
(3)
The by-laws shall provide the rules for exiting the decentralized autonomous
organization that address the consequences of voluntary and involuntary member and
participant exit on subscriptions and payments made by the member or participant.
(4)
No member may compel the dissolution of the decentralized autonomous organization
for failure to return the member's on-chain contribution.
Section 105. Section
16-22-402
, which is renumbered from Section 48-5-402 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-5-402
16-22-402
. Meetings.
(1)
A decentralized autonomous organization may hold meetings as provided in the
decentralized autonomous organization's by-laws.
(2)
Unless explicitly specified in the by-laws, meetings are not required to be in person.
(3)
If the by-laws include a meeting requirement, the by-laws shall include an explicit and
transparent mechanism of giving notice of meetings to administrators, members, or
participants, and a defined time period for deliberating upon proposals submitted by an
administrator, member, or participant.
(4)
Notice of any required meeting shall be communicated through a graphical user
interface.
(5)
The quorum and majority requirements for meetings of a decentralized autonomous
organization's administrators, members, or participants shall be specified in the by-laws.
Section 106. Section
16-22-403
, which is renumbered from Section 48-5-403 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-5-403
16-22-403
. Contentious forks in the underlying blockchain.
(1)
Except as provided in this section, in the event of a hard fork in the underlying
permissionless blockchain:
(a)
the legal representation of the decentralized autonomous organization remains on the
majority chain; and
(b)
any off-chain assets shall belong to the decentralized autonomous organization on
the majority chain.
(2)
(a)
A decentralized autonomous organization may choose to maintain legal presence
on a minority chain if the decentralized autonomous organization expresses an intent
to do so by public signal.
(b)
If the decentralized autonomous organization expresses an intent by public signal to
maintain legal presence on a minority chain, any off-chain assets shall belong to the
decentralized autonomous organization on the selected minority chain.
(3)
The decentralized autonomous organization may liquidate the decentralized autonomous
organization's on-chain assets after a hard fork to move those assets to the chosen chain.
(4)
The decentralized autonomous organization may split into multiple legal entities after a
hard fork, each on a separate chain, after public signal of an intent to do so, provided
there is a definitive distribution of off-chain assets between the majority and minority
chain.
Section 107. Section
16-22-404
, which is renumbered from Section 48-5-404 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-5-404
16-22-404
. Restructuring.
(1)
When a decentralized autonomous organization is restructured, whether through
modification, upgrade, or migration, the decentralized autonomous organization's legal
personality and limited liability is retained only to the extent that:
(a)
the new software code of the decentralized autonomous organization fulfills all the
formation requirements of Section
48-5-201
16-22-201
; and
(b)
where the decentralized autonomous organization has to be associated with a new
unique public address, proper notice is provided by way of public signal.
(2)
A decentralized autonomous organization that is restructured in compliance with
Subsection
(1)
inherits the rights and obligations of the original decentralized
autonomous organization as a successor.
Section 108. Section
16-22-405
, which is renumbered from Section 48-5-405 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-5-405
16-22-405
. Failure event.
(1)
In the case of a failure event, legal personality and limited liability are maintained to the
extent necessary to protect decentralized autonomous organization members and
participants from personal liability.
(2)
A failure event may trigger liability on the person deploying or upgrading the
decentralized autonomous organization if that person:
(a)
acted in bad faith; or
(b)
engaged in gross negligence.
Section 109. Section
16-22-406
, which is renumbered from Section 48-5-406 is renumbered
and amended to read:
48-5-406
16-22-406
. Taxation.
(1)
If a decentralized autonomous organization recognized by this act is eligible to elect to
be classified as a corporation for federal tax purposes, and the decentralized autonomous
organization makes that election, the decentralized autonomous organization shall be
subject to the provisions of
Title 59, Chapter 7, Corporate Franchise and Income Taxes
.
(2)
(a)
Unless the decentralized autonomous organization makes the election described in
Subsection
(1)
, a decentralized autonomous organization recognized by this act shall
be classified as a partnership for tax purposes and subject to the provisions of
Title
59, Chapter 10, Part 14, Pass-Through Entities and Pass-Through Entity Taxpayers
Act
.
(b)
For purposes of taxation, a decentralized autonomous organization shall allocate the
distributive share of income, gain, loss, deduction, and credit derived from the
decentralized autonomous organization's activities, to each member of the
decentralized autonomous organization in proportion to the member's membership
interest in the entity.
Section 110. Section
31A-5-201
is amended to read:
31A-5-201
. Reservation and registration of corporate name.
The reservation, registration, and renewal of the corporate name of stock corporations
and mutuals is governed by Sections
16-10a-402
16-1a-304
,
16-10a-403
, and
31A-1-109
.
The reservation and registration fees provided in Section
31A-3-103
apply.
Section 111. Section
31A-5-203
is amended to read:
31A-5-203
. Articles and bylaws.
(1)
The articles of incorporation requirements in Section
16-10a-202
apply to the articles of
a stock corporation, except that:
(a)
the name of the corporation shall comply with Sections
16-10a-401
16-1a-302
and
31A-1-109
and the name of any new or renamed corporation shall include the word
"insurance" or a term of equivalent meaning;
(b)
authorized shares shall conform to Subsection
31A-5-305(1)
and the capital provided
for shall conform to Section
31A-5-211
; and
(c)
beginning on July 1, 1988, the purposes of the corporation are limited to those
permitted by Section
31A-4-107
.
(2)
The articles of incorporation requirements in Section
16-6a-202
, except Subsections
16-6a-202(1)(f)
and
(g)
, apply to the articles of a mutual except that:
(a)
The name of the corporation shall comply with Sections
16-6a-401
16-1a-302
and
31A-1-109
and the name of any new or renamed corporation shall include the words
"mutual" and "insurance" or terms of equivalent meaning.
(b)
If any mutual bonds are authorized,
they
the mutual bonds
shall comply with
Subsection
31A-5-305(2)(a)
.
(c)
The purposes of the corporation may not include doing a title insurance business, and
shall be limited to those purposes permitted by Section
31A-4-107
.
(d)
If assessable policies are permitted, the articles shall contain provisions giving
assessment liabilities and procedures, including a provision specifying the classes of
business on which assessment may be separately levied.
(e)
(i)
The articles may specify those classes of persons who may be policyholders, or
prescribe the procedure for establishing or removing restrictions on the classes of
persons who may be policyholders.
(ii)
The articles shall also state that each policyholder is a member of the
corporation.
(3)
(a)
Sections
16-10a-830
and
16-10a-831
apply to stock corporations and Section
16-6a-818
applies to mutuals.
(b)
The articles or bylaws shall designate three or more principal offices the principal
officers of the corporation shall hold.
(c)
The principal offices shall be held by at least three separate natural persons.
(4)
(a)
The bylaws of a domestic corporation shall comply with this chapter.
(b)
A copy of the bylaws, and any amendments to them, shall be filed with the
commissioner within 60 days after their adoption.
(c)
Subject to this Subsection
(4)
, Subsections
31A-5-204(2)(c)
and
(5)
, Subsection
31A-5-213(4)
, and Section
16-10a-206
apply to stock corporations and Section
16-6a-206
applies to mutuals.
Section 112. Section
31A-5-401
is amended to read:
31A-5-401
. Principal office and registered agent.
(1)
Each domestic insurance corporation shall have its principal office and place of
business in this state.
(2)
By order, the commissioner may exempt a corporation from this requirement, in
which case it is subject to the requirement of Section
31A-14-204
.
(3)
The location of a domestic insurance corporation's principal office and the existence
of a registered agent are governed by
Title 16, Chapter 17, Model Registered Agents
Act
Title 16, Chapter 1a, Part 4, Registered Agent of an Entity
.
Section 113. Section
31A-7-201
is amended to read:
31A-7-201
. Organization, incorporation, and licensing.
Chapter 5, Part 2, Organization of Corporations
, governs the organization, incorporation,
and licensing of nonprofit health service corporations with the following exceptions:
(1)
Section
16-6a-201
applies in place of Section
31A-5-202
.
(2)
Sections
16-6a-401
16-1a-302
and
31A-1-109
apply in place of Subsection
31A-5-203(2)(a)
.
(3)
The last sentence of Subsection
31A-5-203(2)(e)
does not apply.
Section 114. Section
31A-8-202
is amended to read:
31A-8-202
. Corporate name -- Office -- Registered agent.
(1)
(a)
Sections
16-10a-402
16-1a-304
,
16-10a-403
, and
42-2-5
42-2-201
apply to the
reservation and registration of the corporate name in domestic health maintenance
organizations.
(b)
Reservation and registration fees under Section
31A-3-103
apply.
(2)
The location of an organization's principal office and the existence of a registered agent
are governed by
Title 16, Chapter 17, Model Registered Agents Act
Title 16, Chapter
1a, Part 4, Registered Agent of an Entity
.
Section 115. Section
31A-11-111
is amended to read:
31A-11-111
. Reservation and registration of corporate name.
Sections
16-10a-402
16-1a-304
,
16-10a-403
, and
42-2-5
42-2-201
apply to the
reservation and registration of the corporate name of motor clubs.
Section 116. Section
31A-14-204
is amended to read:
31A-14-204
. Registered agent and registered office.
(1)
(a)
Title 16, Chapter 17, Model Registered Agents Act
Title 16, Chapter 1a, Part 4,
Registered Agent of an Entity
, applies to the registered agent and service of process
on all foreign insurers authorized to do business in this state.
(b)
Whenever the words "Division of Corporations and Commercial Code" or
"division" are used, they mean "insurance commissioner."
(2)
The principal office shall have sufficient personnel to provide information and
assistance to Utah insureds, unless the insurer informs policyholders on the policy or on
other written communications of a toll-free telephone connection accessible at normal
business hours in this state.
Section 117. Section
31A-14-205
is amended to read:
31A-14-205
. Requirements from other applicable chapters.
(1)
A foreign insurer may not be authorized to do business in this state, unless it strictly
complies with the following requirements:
(a)
Foreign insurers shall comply with the solvency standard set forth in
Chapter 17, Part
6, Risk-Based Capital
, including maintenance of minimum capital or permanent
surplus under Section
31A-5-211
.
(b)
A foreign insurer proposing to market securities in this state shall comply with
Sections
31A-5-301
,
31A-5-302
, and
31A-5-305
, unless this marketing is subject to
United States Securities and Exchange Commission regulation.
(c)
Section
16-10a-1506
16-1a-507
applies to the corporate name and the change of
name of foreign stock insurers. Section
16-6a-1507
16-1a-505
applies to the change
of name of foreign mutual insurers.
(d)
Subsection
31A-5-203(2)(c)
applies to other business of foreign mutual insurers.
(e)
Subsection
31A-5-404(2)
, as modified by Subsection
31A-5-404(4)
, applies to
communications to shareholders, policyholders, or voting members of mutuals by
foreign insurers.
(f)
Section
31A-5-413
applies to interlocking directorates of foreign insurers.
(g)
Subsection
31A-5-203(2)(d)
applies to assessment liability in foreign insurers issuing
assessable policies in any state.
(2)
The commissioner may issue orders imposing and eliminating restrictions to foreign
insurers under Section
31A-5-103
.
(3)
After a hearing, the commissioner may by order apply any of the provisions of Sections
31A-5-307
,
31A-5-414
,
31A-5-418
to a foreign corporation after finding that it is
necessary for the protection of the interests of its insureds, creditors, or the public in this
state. This Subsection
(3)
may be applied to a foreign insurer without a hearing if done
under a reciprocal agreement with the domiciliary regulatory authority.
(4)
If any provision made applicable to a foreign insurer under this section conflicts with
the law of the insurer's domicile so that it is impossible for the corporation to comply
with both laws, the law of the domicile governs.
(5)
This section does not excuse or exempt any foreign insurer from complying with the
provisions of this title which are otherwise applicable to a foreign insurer.
(6)
This section does not apply to foreign fraternal insurers.
(7)
If a licensed foreign insurer is in rehabilitation or liquidation proceedings or is found to
be insolvent in its state of domicile, the commissioner may, without hearing, suspend the
insurer's certificate of authority to do business in this state.
Section 118. Section
31A-14-210
is amended to read:
31A-14-210
. Requirements for foreign fraternals.
(1)
A foreign fraternal may not be authorized to do business in this state under Section
31A-14-203
, unless it strictly complies with:
(a)
the financial requirements of Section
31A-9-209
and
Chapter 17, Part 6, Risk-Based
Capital
;
(b)
the requirements of Section
16-6a-1506
16-6a-1506
and Subsection
31A-5-410(1)(a)
,
the reporting requirements of Subsection
31A-5-410(2)
, Section
31A-5-413
whenever removal is made involuntarily under the laws of the domicile, Section
31A-9-202
, and Subsections
31A-9-204(1)(c)
,
31A-9-402(2)
, and
31A-9-602(1)
; and
(c)
for five years after the initial issuance of a certificate of authority in its domiciliary
jurisdiction, the requirements of Subsection
31A-9-213(2)
.
(2)
(a)
No foreign fraternal may be authorized to do business in this state unless it
substantially complies with Sections
31A-5-217
and
31A-5-218
, except that the
approval requirement of Subsection
31A-5-217(2)
does not apply.
(b)
When any corporate reorganization, transformation, or liquidation of a foreign
fraternal, or any levy to cover a deficiency under a law comparable to Subsection
31A-9-209(2)
, is formally initiated by the fraternal, by the official act of the
domiciliary commissioner, or by any other official, the fraternal shall promptly give
written notice to the commissioner.
(3)
The commissioner may issue orders imposing and eliminating restrictions under Section
31A-9-103
that are applicable to foreign fraternals.
(4)
(a)
After a hearing, the commissioner may, by order, apply any of the provisions of
Sections
31A-9-213
,
31A-9-404
,
31A-9-411
,
31A-9-413
, or Subsection
31A-5-415(2)
to a foreign fraternal after finding that it is necessary for the protection of the
interests of its members, creditors, or the public in this state.
(b)
If any provision made applicable to the foreign fraternal under Subsection
(4)(a)
conflicts with a provision of the law of the domicile, so that it is impossible for the
fraternal to comply with both, the law of the domicile governs.
Section 119. Section
31A-37-301
is amended to read:
31A-37-301
. Formation.
(1)
A captive insurance company, other than a branch captive insurance company, may
form as a corporation, a limited liability company, or a not-for-profit organization.
(2)
The capital of a captive insurance company shall be held by:
(a)
the interest holders of the captive insurance company; or
(b)
a governing body elected by:
(i)
the insureds;
(ii)
one or more affiliates; or
(iii)
a combination of the persons described in Subsections
(2)(b)(i)
and
(ii)
.
(3)
A captive insurance company formed in this state shall have at least one establisher who
is an individual and a resident of the state.
(4)
(a)
An applicant captive insurance company's establishers shall obtain a certificate of
public good from the commissioner before filing the applicant captive insurance
company's governing documents with the Division of Corporations and Commercial
Code.
(b)
In considering a request for a certificate under Subsection
(4)(a)
, the commissioner
shall consider:
(i)
the character, reputation, financial standing, and purposes of the establishers;
(ii)
the character, reputation, financial responsibility, insurance experience, and
business qualifications of the principal officers or members of the governing body;
(iii)
any information in:
(A)
the application for a certificate of authority; or
(B)
the department's files; and
(iv)
other aspects that the commissioner considers advisable.
(5)
(a)
Except as otherwise provided in this title, the governing body of a captive
insurance company shall consist of at least three individuals as members, at least one
of whom is a resident of the state.
(b)
One-third of the members of the governing body of a captive insurance company
constitutes a quorum of the governing body.
(6)
A captive insurance company shall have at least three separate individuals as principal
officers with duties comparable to those of president, treasurer, and secretary.
(7)
(a)
(i)
A captive insurance company formed as a corporation is subject to the
provisions of
Title 16, Chapter 10a, Utah Revised Business Corporation Act
, and
this chapter.
(ii)
If a conflict exists between a provision of
Title 16, Chapter 10a, Utah Revised
Business Corporation Act
, and a provision of this chapter, this chapter controls.
(b)
A captive insurance company formed as a limited liability company is subject to the
provisions of
Title 48, Chapter 3a, Utah Revised Uniform Limited Liability
Company Act
Title 16, Chapter 20, Utah Revised Uniform Limited Liability
Company Act
, and this chapter. If a conflict exists between a provision of
Title 48,
Chapter 3a, Utah Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act
Title 16, Chapter
20, Utah Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act
, and a provision of this
chapter, this chapter controls.
(c)
Except as provided in Subsection
(7)(d)
, the provisions of this title that govern a
merger, consolidation, conversion, mutualization, and redomestication apply to a
captive insurance company in carrying out any of the transactions described in those
provisions.
(d)
Notwithstanding Subsection
(7)(c)
, the commissioner may waive or modify the
requirements for public notice and hearing in accordance with rules adopted under
Section
31A-37-106
.
(e)
If a notice of public hearing is required, but no one requests a hearing, the
commissioner may cancel the public hearing.
Section 120. Section
46-4-503
is amended to read:
46-4-503
. Government products and services provided electronically.
(1)
Notwithstanding Section
46-4-501
, a state governmental agency that administers one or
more of the following transactions shall allow those transactions to be conducted
electronically:
(a)
an application for or renewal of a professional or occupational license issued under
Title 58, Occupations and Professions
;
(b)
the renewal of a drivers license;
(c)
an application for a hunting or fishing license;
(d)
the filing of:
(i)
a return under
Title 59, Chapter 10, Individual Income Tax Act
, or
Title 59,
Chapter 12, Sales and Use Tax Act
;
(ii)
a court document, as defined by the Judicial Council; or
(iii)
a document under
Title 70A, Uniform Commercial Code
;
(e)
a registration for:
(i)
a product; or
(ii)
a brand;
(f)
a renewal of a registration of a motor vehicle;
(g)
a registration under:
(i)
Title 16, Corporations
Title 16, Business Entities
;
or
(ii)
Title 42, Names
; or
(iii)
Title 48, Unincorporated Business Entity Act
; or
(h)
submission of an application for benefits:
(i)
under
Title 35A, Chapter 3, Employment Support Act
;
(ii)
under
Title 35A, Chapter 4, Employment Security Act
; or
(iii)
related to accident and health insurance.
(2)
The state system of public education, in coordination with the Utah Education and
Telehealth Network, shall make reasonable progress toward making the following
services available electronically:
(a)
secure access by parents and students to student grades and progress reports;
(b)
email communications with:
(i)
teachers;
(ii)
parent-teacher associations; and
(iii)
school administrators;
(c)
access to school calendars and schedules; and
(d)
teaching resources that may include:
(i)
teaching plans;
(ii)
curriculum guides; and
(iii)
media resources.
(3)
A state governmental agency shall:
(a)
in carrying out the requirements of this section, take reasonable steps to ensure the
security and privacy of records that are private or controlled as defined by
Title 63G,
Chapter 2, Government Records Access and Management Act
;
(b)
in addition to those transactions listed in Subsections
(1)
and
(2)
, determine any
additional services that may be made available to the public through electronic
means; and
(c)
as part of the agency's information technology plan required by Section
63A-16-203
,
report on the progress of compliance with Subsections
(1)
through
(3)
.
(4)
Notwithstanding the other provisions of this part, a state governmental agency is not
required by this part to conduct a transaction electronically if:
(a)
conducting the transaction electronically is not required by federal law; and
(b)
conducting the transaction electronically is:
(i)
impractical;
(ii)
unreasonable; or
(iii)
not permitted by laws pertaining to privacy or security.
(5)
(a)
For purposes of this Subsection
(5)
, "one-stop shop" means the consolidation of
access to diverse services and agencies at one location including virtual colocation.
(b)
(i)
State agencies that provide services or offer direct assistance to the business
community shall participate in the establishment, maintenance, and enhancement
of an integrated Utah business web portal known as Business.utah.gov.
(ii)
The purpose of the business web portal is to provide "one-stop shop"
assistance to businesses.
(c)
State agencies shall partner with other governmental and nonprofit agencies whose
primary mission is to provide services or offer direct assistance to the business
community in Utah in fulfilling the requirements of this section.
(d)
The following state entities shall comply with the provisions of this Subsection
(5)
:
(i)
Governor's Office of Economic Opportunity, which shall serve as the managing
partner for the website;
(ii)
Department of Workforce Services;
(iii)
Department of Commerce;
(iv)
Tax Commission;
(v)
Department of Government Operations - Division of Purchasing and General
Services, including other state agencies operating under a grant of authority from
the division to procure goods and services in excess of $5,000;
(vi)
Department of Agriculture;
(vii)
Department of Natural Resources; and
(viii)
other state agencies that provide services or offer direct assistance to the
business sector.
(e)
The business services available on the business web portal may include:
(i)
business life cycle information;
(ii)
business searches;
(iii)
employment needs and opportunities;
(iv)
motor vehicle registration;
(v)
permit applications and renewal;
(vi)
tax information;
(vii)
government procurement bid notifications;
(viii)
general business information;
(ix)
business directories; and
(x)
business news.
Section 121. Section
53-2a-1203
is amended to read:
53-2a-1203
. Business and employee status during disaster period.
(1)
Notwithstanding any other provision, an out-of-state business that conducts operations
within the state for purposes of performing work or services related to a declared state
disaster or emergency during the disaster period:
(a)
is not considered to have established a level of presence that would require that
business to be subject to any state licensing or registration requirements, provided
that the out-of-state business is in substantial compliance with all applicable
regulatory and licensing requirements in its state of domicile, including:
(i)
unemployment insurance;
(ii)
state or local occupational licensing fees;
(iii)
public service commission regulation; or
(iv)
state or local licensing or regulatory requirements; and
(b)
is exempt from the registration requirements under
Title 16, Corporations
,
Title 42,
Names
, and
Title 48, Unincorporated Business Entity Act
Title 16, Business Entities
;
and
(c)
shall, within a reasonable time after entry, upon the request of the Labor Commission
or the Department of Insurance, confirm that it is in compliance with Subsections
34A-2-406(1)(a)
,
(1)(b)
, and
(2)
.
(2)
Notwithstanding any other provision, an out-of-state employee who performs disaster-
or emergency-related work specific to a declared state disaster or emergency during the
disaster period is not subject to any state licensing or registration requirements provided
that the out-of-state employee is in substantial compliance with all applicable regulatory
and licensing requirements in the employee's state of residence or state of employment.
(3)
(a)
Income taxation related to an out-of-state employee or an out-of-state business is
as provided in:
(i)
Title 59, Chapter 7, Corporate Franchise and Income Taxes
; and
(ii)
Title 59, Chapter 10, Individual Income Tax Act
.
(b)
Sales and use taxation during a disaster period is as provided in
Title 59, Chapter 12,
Sales and Use Tax Act
.
(c)
Any property brought into the state temporarily during the disaster period is not
subject to any state or local ad valorem taxes under
Title 59, Chapter 2, Property Tax
Act
.
Section 122. Section
53-9-115
is amended to read:
53-9-115
. Business name and address -- Posting of license -- Advertising --
Incapacitation, death of agent.
(1)
As used in this section, "no agent agency" means a licensed agency that has only one
agent and for which the agent is incapacitated or dies.
(2)
(a)
Subject to the provisions of this chapter, a licensee may conduct an investigative
business under a name other than the licensee's by:
(i)
complying with the requirements of
Title 42, Chapter 2, Conducting Business
Under Assumed Name
Title 42, Chapter 2, Conducting Business as a D.B.A.
; and
(ii)
providing a copy of the filed certificate to the commissioner.
(b)
Failure to comply with Subsection
(2)(a)
shall result in the suspension of the license.
(3)
(a)
Each licensee shall have at least one physical location from which the agency
conducts normal business.
(b)
The address of this location shall be on file with the commissioner at all times and is
not a public record in accordance with Subsection
63G-2-301(2)(b)(ii)
.
(4)
A licensee shall post the license certificate issued by the commissioner in a conspicuous
place in the principal office of the licensee.
(5)
Subject to the provisions of this chapter, a licensee may solicit business through any
accepted form of advertising.
(a)
Any advertisement shall contain the licensee's name and license number as the name
and license number appear on the license certificate.
(b)
A licensee may not use false, deceptive, or misleading advertising.
(6)
(a)
The bureau, after receiving notice, shall allow an agent for an agency licensed
under this chapter to act as the agent for a no agent agency until the next scheduled or
emergency board meeting, where the board shall consider mitigating circumstances
for the no agent agency to remain operating permanently or temporarily.
(b)
If the board allows the no agent agency to operate temporarily, the board shall allow
sufficient time for the no agent agency to complete investigations that began before
the incapacitation or death of the agent.
Section 123. Section
53C-1-201
is amended to read:
53C-1-201
. Creation of administration -- Purpose -- Director -- Participation in
Risk Management Fund -- Closed meetings.
(1)
(a)
There is established within state government the School and Institutional Trust
Lands Administration.
(b)
The administration shall manage all school and institutional trust lands and assets
within the state, except as otherwise provided in
Title 53C, Chapter 3, Deposit and
Allocation of Revenue from Trust Lands
, and
Title 53D, Chapter 1, School and
Institutional Trust Fund Management Act
.
(2)
The administration is an independent state agency and not a division of any other
department.
(3)
(a)
The administration is subject to the usual legislative and executive department
controls except as provided in this Subsection
(3)
.
(b)
(i)
The director may make rules as approved by the board that allow the
administration to classify a business proposal submitted to the administration as
protected under Section
63G-2-305
, for as long as is necessary to evaluate the
proposal.
(ii)
The administration shall return the proposal to the party who submitted the
proposal, and incur no further duties under
Title 63G, Chapter 2, Government
Records Access and Management Act
, if the administration determines not to
proceed with the proposal.
(iii)
The administration shall classify the proposal pursuant to law if the
administration decides to proceed with the proposal.
(iv)
Section
63G-2-403
does not apply during the review period.
(c)
The director shall make rules in compliance with
Title 63G, Chapter 3, Utah
Administrative Rulemaking Act
, except that the administration is not subject to
Subsections
63G-3-301(5)
,
(6)
,
(7)
, and
(13)
and Section
63G-3-601
, and the
director, with the board's approval, may establish a procedure for the expedited
approval of rules, based on written findings by the director showing:
(i)
the changes in business opportunities affecting the assets of the trust;
(ii)
the specific business opportunity arising out of those changes which may be lost
without the rule or changes to the rule;
(iii)
the reasons the normal procedures under Section
63G-3-301
cannot be met
without causing the loss of the specific opportunity;
(iv)
approval by at least five board members; and
(v)
that the director has filed a copy of the rule and a rule analysis, stating the specific
reasons and justifications for the director's findings, with the Office of
Administrative Rules and notified interested parties as provided in Subsection
63G-3-301(10)
.
(d)
(i)
The administration shall comply with
Title 63A, Chapter 17, Utah State
Personnel Management Act
, except as provided in this Subsection
(3)(d)
.
(ii)
(A)
The board may approve, upon recommendation of the director, that
exemption for specific positions under Subsections
63A-17-301(1)
and
63A-17-307(2)
is required in order to enable the administration to efficiently
fulfill the administration's responsibilities under the law.
(B)
The director shall consult with the director of the Division of Human
Resource Management before making a recommendation under Subsection
(3)(d)(ii)(A)
.
(iii)
The positions of director, deputy director, associate director, assistant director,
legal counsel appointed under Section
53C-1-305
, administrative assistant, and
public affairs officer are exempt under Subsections
63A-17-301(1)
and
63A-17-307(2)
.
(iv)
(A)
The director shall set salaries for exempted positions, except for the
director, after consultation with the director of the Division of Human
Resource Management, within ranges approved by the board.
(B)
The board and director shall consider salaries for similar positions in private
enterprise and other public employment when setting salary ranges.
(v)
The board may create an annual incentive and bonus plan for the director and
other administration employees designated by the board, based upon the
attainment of financial performance goals and other measurable criteria defined
and budgeted in advance by the board.
(e)
The administration shall comply with:
(i)
subject to Subsection
(8)
,
Title 52, Chapter 4, Open and Public Meetings Act
;
(ii)
Title 63G, Chapter 2, Government Records Access and Management Act
; and
(iii)
Title 63G, Chapter 6a, Utah Procurement Code
, except where the board
approves, upon recommendation of the director, exemption from the Utah
Procurement Code, and simultaneous adoption of rules under
Title 63G, Chapter
3, Utah Administrative Rulemaking Act
, for procurement, that enable the
administration to efficiently fulfill the administration's responsibilities under the
law.
(f)
(i)
Except as provided in Subsection
(3)(f)(ii)
, the administration is not subject to
the fee agency requirements of Section
63J-1-504
.
(ii)
The following fees of the administration are subject to Section
63J-1-504
:
(A)
application;
(B)
assignment;
(C)
amendment;
(D)
affidavit for lost documents;
(E)
name change;
(F)
reinstatement;
(G)
grazing nonuse;
(H)
extension of time;
(I)
partial conveyance;
(J)
patent reissue;
(K)
collateral assignment;
(L)
electronic payment; and
(M)
processing.
(g)
(i)
Notwithstanding Subsection
63J-1-206(2)(c)
, the administration may transfer
money between the administration's line items.
(ii)
Before transferring appropriated money between line items, the administration
shall submit a proposal to the board for the board's approval.
(iii)
If the board gives approval to a proposal to transfer appropriated money between
line items, the administration shall submit the proposal to the Legislative
Executive Appropriations Committee for the Legislative Executive
Appropriations Committee's review and recommendations.
(iv)
The Legislative Executive Appropriations Committee may recommend:
(A)
that the administration transfer the appropriated money between line items;
(B)
that the administration not transfer the appropriated money between line
items; or
(C)
to the governor that the governor call a special session of the Legislature to
supplement the appropriated budget for the administration.
(4)
The administration is managed by a director of school and institutional trust lands
appointed by a majority vote of the board of trustees with the consent of the governor.
(5)
(a)
The board of trustees shall provide policies for the management of the
administration and for the management of trust lands and assets.
(b)
(i)
The board shall provide policies for the ownership and control of Native
American remains that are discovered or excavated on school and institutional
trust lands in consultation with the Division of Indian Affairs and giving due
consideration to
Title 9, Chapter 9, Part 4, Native American Grave Protection and
Repatriation Act
.
(ii)
The director may make rules in accordance with
Title 63G, Chapter 3, Utah
Administrative Rulemaking Act
, to implement policies provided by the board
regarding Native American remains.
(6)
In connection with joint ventures and other transactions involving trust lands and
minerals approved under Sections
53C-1-303
and
53C-2-401
, the administration, with
board approval, may become a member of a limited liability company under
Title 48,
Chapter 3a, Utah Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act
Title 16, Chapter 20,
Utah Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act
, as appropriate pursuant to
Section
48-3a-1405
16-20-1205
and is considered a person under Section
48-3a-102
16-20-101
.
(7)
Subject to Subsection
63E-1-304(2)
, the administration may participate in coverage
under the Risk Management Fund created by Section
63A-4-201
.
(8)
(a)
Notwithstanding Subsection
(3)
, Subsection
52-4-204(2)
or
52-4-205(1)
, and in
addition to the reasons to close a meeting under Section
52-4-205
, the board may
hold a closed meeting if two-thirds of the members present when a quorum is present
vote to close the meeting for the purpose of:
(i)
conducting a strategy session to discuss market conditions relevant to the sale of
particular trust assets if the terms of the sale of any trust assets are publicly
disclosed before the board approves the sale and a public discussion would:
(A)
disclose the appraisal or estimated value of the trust assets under
consideration; or
(B)
prevent the board from completing a contemplated transaction concerning the
trust assets on the best possible terms; or
(ii)
conducting a strategy session to evaluate the terms of a joint venture or other
business arrangement authorized under Subsection
53C-1-303(3)(e)
if the terms of
the joint venture or other business arrangement are publicly disclosed before the
board approves the transaction and a public discussion of the transaction would:
(A)
disclose the appraisal or estimated value of the trust assets under
consideration; or
(B)
prevent the board from completing the transaction concerning the joint
venture or other business arrangement on the best possible terms.
(b)
The board shall comply with the procedural requirements for closing a meeting
under
Title 52, Chapter 4, Open and Public Meetings Act
.
Section 124. Section
57-8-55
is amended to read:
57-8-55
. Consolidation of multiple associations of unit owners.
(1)
Two or more associations of unit owners may be consolidated into a single association
of unit owners as provided in
Title 16, Chapter 6a, Part 11, Merger
Title 16, Chapter
1a, Part 7, Merger
, and this section.
(2)
Unless the declaration, articles, or bylaws otherwise provide, a declaration of
consolidation between two or more associations of unit owners to consolidate into a
single association of unit owners is not effective unless it is approved by the unit owners
of each of the consolidating associations of unit owners, by the highest percentage of
allocated voting interests of the unit owners required by each association of unit owners
to amend its respective declaration, articles, or bylaws.
(3)
A declaration of consolidation under Subsection
(2)
shall:
(a)
be prepared, executed, and certified by the president of the association of each of the
consolidating associations of unit owners; and
(b)
provide for the reallocation of the allocated interests in the consolidated association
by stating:
(i)
the reallocations of the allocated interests in the consolidated association of unit
owners or the formulas used to reallocate the allocated interests; or
(ii)
(A)
the percentage of overall allocated interests of the consolidated association
of unit owners that are allocated to all of the units comprising each of the
consolidating associations of unit owners; and
(B)
that the portion of the percentages allocated to each unit formerly comprising
a part of a consolidating association of unit owners is equal to the percentages
of allocated interests allocated to the unit by the declaration of the
consolidating association of unit owners.
(4)
A declaration of consolidation under Subsection
(2)
is not effective until it is recorded
in the office of each applicable county recorder.
(5)
Unless otherwise provided in the declaration of consolidation, the consolidated
association of unit owners resulting from a consolidation under this section:
(a)
is the legal successor for all purposes of all of the consolidating associations of unit
owners;
(b)
the operations and activities of all of the consolidating associations of unit owners
shall be consolidated into the consolidated association of unit owners; and
(c)
the consolidated association of unit owners holds all powers, rights, obligations,
assets, and liabilities of all consolidating associations of unit owners.
Section 125. Section
57-8a-601
is amended to read:
57-8a-601
. Consolidation of multiple associations.
(1)
Two or more associations may be consolidated into a single association as provided in
Title 16, Chapter 6a, Part 11, Merger
Title 16, Chapter 1a, Part 7, Merger
, and this
section.
(2)
Unless the declaration, articles, or bylaws otherwise provide, a declaration of
consolidation between two or more associations to consolidate into a single association
is not effective unless it is approved by the lot owners of each of the consolidating
associations by the highest percentage of allocated voting interests of the lot owners
required by each association to amend its respective declaration, articles, or bylaws.
(3)
A declaration of consolidation under Subsection
(2)
shall:
(a)
be prepared, executed, and certified by the president of each of the consolidating
associations; and
(b)
provide for the reallocation of the allocated interests in the consolidated association
by stating:
(i)
the reallocations of the allocated interests in the consolidated association or the
formulas used to reallocate the allocated interests; or
(ii)
(A)
the percentage of overall allocated interests of the consolidated association
that are allocated to all of the lots comprising each of the consolidating
associations; and
(B)
that the portion of the percentages allocated to each lot formerly comprising a
part of a consolidating association is equal to the percentages of allocated
interests allocated to the lot by the declaration of the consolidating association.
(4)
A declaration of consolidation under Subsection
(2)
is not effective until it is recorded
in the office of each applicable county recorder.
(5)
Unless otherwise provided in the declaration of consolidation:
(a)
the consolidated association resulting from a consolidation under this section is the
legal successor for all purposes of all of the consolidating associations;
(b)
the operations and activities of all of the consolidating associations shall be
consolidated into the consolidated association; and
(c)
the consolidated association holds all powers, rights, obligations, assets, and
liabilities of all consolidating associations.
Section 126. Section
58-28-606
is amended to read:
58-28-606
. Veterinary corporations, partnerships, and limited liability
companies -- Unlicensed individuals -- Ownership of capital stock -- Service as officer or
director.
(1)
As used in this section:
(a)
"Veterinary corporation" means a professional corporation organized to render
veterinary services under
Title 16, Chapter 11, Professional Corporation Act
.
(b)
"Veterinary limited liability company" means a limited liability company organized
to render veterinary services under
Title 48, Chapter 3a, Utah Revised Uniform
Limited Liability Company Act
Title 16, Chapter 20, Utah Revised Uniform Limited
Liability Company Act
.
(c)
"Veterinary partnership" means a partnership or limited liability partnership
organized to render veterinary services under:
(i)
Title 48, Chapter 1d, Utah Uniform Partnership Act
Title 16, Chapter 18, Utah
Uniform Partnership Act
; or
(ii)
Title 48, Chapter 2e, Utah Uniform Limited Partnership Act
Title 16, Chapter 19,
Utah Uniform Limited Partnership Act
.
(2)
A veterinary corporation may issue or transfer shares of the veterinary corporation's
capital stock to a person that is not licensed to practice veterinary medicine, surgery, and
dentistry under this chapter.
(3)
An individual who is not licensed to practice veterinary medicine, surgery, and dentistry
under this chapter:
(a)
may not serve as an officer or director of a veterinary corporation; and
(b)
may serve as secretary or treasurer of a veterinary corporation.
(4)
A veterinary limited liability company or a veterinary partnership may include an
individual who is not licensed to practice veterinary medicine, surgery, and dentistry
under this chapter.
Section 127. Section
58-55-102
is amended to read:
58-55-102
. Definitions.
In addition to the definitions in Section
58-1-102
, as used in this chapter:
(1)
(a)
"Alarm business" or "alarm company" means a person engaged in the sale,
installation, maintenance, alteration, repair, replacement, servicing, or monitoring of
an alarm system, except as provided in Subsection
(1)(b)
.
(b)
"Alarm business" or "alarm company" does not include:
(i)
a person engaged in the manufacture or sale of alarm systems unless:
(A)
that person is also engaged in the installation, maintenance, alteration, repair,
replacement, servicing, or monitoring of alarm systems;
(B)
the manufacture or sale occurs at a location other than a place of business
established by the person engaged in the manufacture or sale; or
(C)
the manufacture or sale involves site visits at the place or intended place of
installation of an alarm system; or
(ii)
an owner of an alarm system, or an employee of the owner of an alarm system
who is engaged in installation, maintenance, alteration, repair, replacement,
servicing, or monitoring of the alarm system owned by that owner.
(2)
"Alarm company agent":
(a)
except as provided in Subsection
(2)(b)
, means any individual employed within this
state by an alarm business; and
(b)
does not include an individual who:
(i)
is not engaged in the sale, installation, maintenance, alteration, repair,
replacement, servicing, or monitoring of an alarm system; and
(ii)
does not, during the normal course of the individual's employment with an alarm
business, use or have access to sensitive alarm system information.
(3)
"Alarm company officer" means:
(a)
a governing person, as defined in Section
48-3a-102
16-20-101
, of an alarm
company;
(b)
an individual appointed as an officer of an alarm company that is a corporation in
accordance with Section
16-10a-830
;
(c)
a general partner, as defined in Section
48-2e-102
16-19-101
, of an alarm company;
or
(d)
a partner, as defined in Section
48-1d-102
16-18-101
, of an alarm company.
(4)
"Alarm company owner" means:
(a)
a shareholder, as defined in Section
16-10a-102
, who owns directly, or indirectly
through an entity controlled by the individual, 5% or more of the outstanding shares
of an alarm company that:
(i)
is a corporation; and
(ii)
is not publicly listed or traded; or
(b)
an individual who owns directly, or indirectly through an entity controlled by the
individual, 5% or more of the equity of an alarm company that is not a corporation.
(5)
"Alarm company proprietor" means the sole proprietor of an alarm company that is
registered as a sole proprietorship with the Division of Corporations and Commercial
Code.
(6)
"Alarm company trustee" means an individual with control of or power of
administration over property held in trust.
(7)
(a)
"Alarm system" means equipment and devices assembled for the purpose of:
(i)
detecting and signaling unauthorized intrusion or entry into or onto certain
premises; or
(ii)
signaling a robbery or attempted robbery on protected premises.
(b)
"Alarm system" includes a battery-charged suspended-wire system or fence that is
part of and interfaces with an alarm system for the purposes of detecting and
deterring unauthorized intrusion or entry into or onto certain premises.
(8)
"Apprentice electrician" means a person licensed under this chapter as an apprentice
electrician who is learning the electrical trade under the immediate supervision of a
master electrician, residential master electrician, a journeyman electrician, or a
residential journeyman electrician.
(9)
"Apprentice plumber" means a person licensed under this chapter as an apprentice
plumber who is learning the plumbing trade under the immediate supervision of a master
plumber, residential master plumber, journeyman plumber, or a residential journeyman
plumber.
(10)
"Approved continuing education" means instruction provided through courses under a
program established under Subsection
58-55-302.5
(2).
(11)
(a)
"Approved prelicensure course provider" means a provider that is the Associated
General Contractors of Utah, the Utah Chapter of the Associated Builders and
Contractors, or the Utah Home Builders Association, and that meets the requirements
established by rule by the commission with the concurrence of the director, to teach
the 25-hour course described in Subsection
58-55-302(1)(e)(iii)
.
(b)
"Approved prelicensure course provider" may only include a provider that, in
addition to any other locations, offers the 25-hour course described in Subsection
58-55-302(1)(e)(iii)
at least six times each year in one or more counties other than
Salt Lake County, Utah County, Davis County, or Weber County.
(12)
"Board" means the Alarm System Security and Licensing Board or Electricians and
Plumbers Licensing Board created in Section
58-55-201
.
(13)
"Combustion system" means an assembly consisting of:
(a)
piping and components with a means for conveying, either continuously or
intermittently, natural gas from the outlet of the natural gas provider's meter to the
burner of the appliance;
(b)
the electric control and combustion air supply and venting systems, including air
ducts; and
(c)
components intended to achieve control of quantity, flow, and pressure.
(14)
"Commission" means the Construction Services Commission created under Section
58-55-103
.
(15)
"Construction trade" means any trade or occupation involving:
(a)
(i)
construction, alteration, remodeling, repairing, wrecking or demolition, addition
to, or improvement of any building, highway, road, railroad, dam, bridge,
structure, excavation or other project, development, or improvement to other than
personal property; and
(ii)
constructing, remodeling, or repairing a manufactured home or mobile home as
defined in Section
15A-1-302
; or
(b)
installation or repair of a residential or commercial natural gas appliance or
combustion system.
(16)
"Construction trades instructor" means a person licensed under this chapter to teach
one or more construction trades in both a classroom and project environment, where a
project is intended for sale to or use by the public and is completed under the direction
of the instructor, who has no economic interest in the project.
(17)
(a)
"Contractor" means any person who for compensation other than wages as an
employee undertakes any work in the construction, plumbing, or electrical trade for
which licensure is required under this chapter and includes:
(i)
a person who builds any structure on the person's own property for the purpose of
sale or who builds any structure intended for public use on the person's own
property;
(ii)
any person who represents that the person is a contractor, or will perform a
service described in this Subsection (17) by advertising on a website or social
media, or any other means;
(iii)
any person engaged as a maintenance person, other than an employee, who
regularly engages in activities set forth under the definition of "construction trade";
(iv)
any person engaged in, or offering to engage in, any construction trade for which
licensure is required under this chapter; or
(v)
a construction manager, construction consultant, construction assistant, or any
other person who, for a fee:
(A)
performs or offers to perform construction consulting;
(B)
performs or offers to perform management of construction subcontractors;
(C)
provides or offers to provide a list of subcontractors or suppliers; or
(D)
provides or offers to provide management or counseling services on a
construction project.
(b)
"Contractor" does not include:
(i)
an alarm company or alarm company agent; or
(ii)
a material supplier who provides consulting to customers regarding the design
and installation of the material supplier's products.
(18)
(a)
"Electrical trade" means the performance of any electrical work involved in the
installation, construction, alteration, change, repair, removal, or maintenance of
facilities, buildings, or appendages or appurtenances.
(b)
"Electrical trade" does not include:
(i)
transporting or handling electrical materials;
(ii)
preparing clearance for raceways for wiring;
(iii)
work commonly done by unskilled labor on any installations under the exclusive
control of electrical utilities;
(iv)
work involving cable-type wiring that does not pose a shock or fire-initiation
hazard;
(v)
work involving class two or class three power-limited circuits as defined in the
National Electrical Code; or
(vi)
minor electrical work incidental to a mechanical or service installation when
wiring is extended to no more than 10 feet from an existing outlet or disconnect
and does not exceed 120 volts and 20 amperes.
(19)
"Elevator" means the same as that term is defined in Section
34A-7-202
, except that
for purposes of this chapter it does not mean a stair chair, a vertical platform lift, or an
incline platform lift.
(20)
"Elevator contractor" means a sole proprietor, firm, or corporation licensed under this
chapter that is engaged in the business of erecting, constructing, installing, altering,
servicing, repairing, or maintaining an elevator.
(21)
"Elevator mechanic" means an individual who is licensed under this chapter as an
elevator mechanic and who is engaged in erecting, constructing, installing, altering,
servicing, repairing, or maintaining an elevator under the immediate supervision of an
elevator contractor.
(22)
"Employee" means an individual as defined by the division by rule giving
consideration to the definition adopted by the Internal Revenue Service and the
Department of Workforce Services.
(23)
"Engage in a construction trade" means to:
(a)
engage in, represent oneself to be engaged in, or advertise oneself as being engaged
in a construction trade; or
(b)
use the name "contractor" or "builder" or in any other way lead a reasonable person
to believe one is or will act as a contractor.
(24)
(a)
"Financial responsibility" means a demonstration of a current and expected
future condition of financial solvency evidencing a reasonable expectation to the
division and the board that an applicant or licensee can successfully engage in
business as a contractor without jeopardy to the public health, safety, and welfare.
(b)
Financial responsibility may be determined by an evaluation of the total history
concerning the licensee or applicant including past, present, and expected condition
and record of financial solvency and business conduct.
(25)
"Gas appliance" means any device that uses natural gas to produce light, heat, power,
steam, hot water, refrigeration, or air conditioning.
(26)
(a)
"General building contractor" means a person licensed under this chapter as a
general building contractor qualified by education, training, experience, and
knowledge to perform or superintend construction of structures for the support,
shelter, and enclosure of persons, animals, chattels, or movable property of any kind
or any of the components of that construction except plumbing, electrical work,
mechanical work, work related to the operating integrity of an elevator, and
manufactured housing installation, for which the general building contractor shall
employ the services of a contractor licensed in the particular specialty, except that a
general building contractor engaged in the construction of single-family and
multifamily residences up to four units may perform the mechanical work and hire a
licensed plumber or electrician as an employee.
(b)
The division may by rule exclude general building contractors from engaging in the
performance of other construction specialties in which there is represented a
substantial risk to the public health, safety, and welfare, and for which a license is
required unless that general building contractor holds a valid license in that specialty
classification.
(27)
"General electrical contractor" means a person licensed under this chapter as a general
electrical contractor qualified by education, training, experience, and knowledge to
perform the fabrication, construction, and installation of generators, transformers,
conduits, raceways, panels, switch gear, electrical wires, fixtures, appliances, apparatus
that uses electrical energy, or any other work the division authorizes by rule in
accordance with Subsection
58-55-301(4)
.
(28)
(a)
"General engineering contractor" means a person licensed under this chapter as a
general engineering contractor qualified by education, training, experience, and
knowledge to perform or superintend construction of fixed works, or components of
fixed works requiring specialized engineering knowledge and skill in:
(i)
airports;
(ii)
airport runways;
(iii)
bridges;
(iv)
chemical plants;
(v)
drainage;
(vi)
electrical utilities;
(vii)
flood control;
(viii)
foundations;
(ix)
harbors;
(x)
highways;
(xi)
industrial plants;
(xii)
inland waterways;
(xiii)
irrigation systems;
(xiv)
piers;
(xv)
pipelines;
(xvi)
power plants;
(xvii)
railroads;
(xviii)
refineries;
(xix)
sewers;
(xx)
tunnels;
(xxi)
underground electric utility conduits;
(xxii)
utility plants;
(xxiii)
water power; or
(xxiv)
water supply.
(b)
A general engineering contractor may not perform or superintend:
(i)
construction of a structure built primarily for the support, shelter, and enclosure of
persons, animals, and chattels;
(ii)
plumbing work;
(iii)
electrical work beyond underground electric utility conduit or electrical utilities;
(iv)
mechanical work; or
(v)
work where the general engineering contractor does not have the required
specialized engineering knowledge and skill.
(29)
"General plumbing contractor" means a person licensed under this chapter as a general
plumbing contractor qualified by education, training, experience, and knowledge to
perform the fabrication or installation of material and fixtures to create and maintain
sanitary conditions in a building by providing permanent means for a supply of safe and
pure water, a means for the timely and complete removal from the premises of all used
or contaminated water, fluid and semi-fluid organic wastes and other impurities
incidental to life and the occupation of such premises, a safe and adequate supply of
gases for lighting, heating, and industrial purposes, or other work the division authorizes
by rule in accordance with Subsection
58-55-301(4)
.
(30)
"HVAC" means a heating, ventilation, and air conditioning system and the specific
components that are a part of the system, including the gas line.
(31)
"HVAC contractor" means a person licensed under this chapter specialized in the
installation, maintenance, repair, and servicing of heating, ventilation, air conditioning
systems or any other work the division authorizes by rule in accordance with Subsection
58-55-301(4)
.
(32)
"Immediate supervision" means reasonable direction, oversight, inspection, and
evaluation of the work of a person:
(a)
as the division specifies in rule;
(b)
by, as applicable, a qualified electrician or plumber;
(c)
as part of a planned program of training; and
(d)
to ensure that the end result complies with applicable standards.
(33)
"Individual" means a natural person.
(34)
"Journeyman lineman" means a person that builds and maintains an electrical power
system, performs work on transmission lines or distribution lines from power plants to
customers, and has completed an approved 7,000 hour certified apprenticeship program.
(35)
"Journeyman electrician" means a person licensed under this chapter as a journeyman
electrician having the qualifications, training, experience, and knowledge to wire, install,
and repair electrical apparatus and equipment for light, heat, power, and other purposes.
(36)
"Journeyman plumber" means a person licensed under this chapter as a journeyman
plumber having the qualifications, training, experience, and technical knowledge to
engage in the plumbing trade.
(37)
"Master electrician" means a person licensed under this chapter as a master electrician
having the qualifications, training, experience, and knowledge to properly plan, layout,
and supervise the wiring, installation, and repair of electrical apparatus and equipment
for light, heat, power, and other purposes.
(38)
"Master plumber" means a person licensed under this chapter as a master plumber
having the qualifications, training, experience, and knowledge to properly plan and
layout projects and supervise persons in the plumbing trade.
(39)
"Person" means a natural person, sole proprietorship, joint venture, corporation,
limited liability company, association, or organization of any type.
(40)
(a)
"Plumbing trade" means the performance of any mechanical work pertaining to
the installation, alteration, change, repair, removal, maintenance, or use in buildings,
or within three feet beyond the outside walls of buildings, of pipes, fixtures, and
fittings for the:
(i)
delivery of the water supply;
(ii)
discharge of liquid and water carried waste;
(iii)
building drainage system within the walls of the building; and
(iv)
delivery of gases for lighting, heating, and industrial purposes.
(b)
"Plumbing trade" includes work pertaining to the water supply, distribution pipes,
fixtures and fixture traps, soil, waste and vent pipes, the building drain and roof
drains, and the safe and adequate supply of gases, together with their devices,
appurtenances, and connections where installed within the outside walls of the
building.
(41)
"Ratio of apprentices" means the number of licensed plumber apprentices or licensed
electrician apprentices that are allowed to be under the immediate supervision of a
licensed supervisor as established by the provisions of this chapter and by rules made by
the commission, with the concurrence of the director, in accordance with Title 63G,
Chapter 3, Utah Administrative Rulemaking Act.
(42)
"Residential and small commercial contractor" means a person licensed under this
chapter as a residential and small commercial contractor qualified by education, training,
experience, and knowledge to perform or superintend the construction of single-family
residences, multifamily residences up to four units, and commercial construction of not
more than three stories above ground and not more than 20,000 square feet, or any of the
components of that construction except plumbing, electrical work, mechanical work, and
manufactured housing installation, for which the residential and small commercial
contractor shall employ the services of a contractor licensed in the particular specialty,
except that a residential and small commercial contractor engaged in the construction of
single-family and multifamily residences up to four units may perform the mechanical
work and hire a licensed plumber or electrician as an employee.
(43)
"Residential building," as it relates to the license classification of residential
journeyman plumber and residential master plumber, means a single or multiple family
dwelling of up to four units.
(44)
"Residential electrical contractor" means a person licensed under this chapter as a
residential electrical contractor qualified by education, training, experience, and
knowledge to perform the fabrication, construction, and installation of services,
disconnecting means, grounding devices, panels, conductors, load centers, lighting and
plug circuits, appliances, and fixtures in a residential unit or any other work the division
authorizes by rule in accordance with Subsection
58-55-301(4)
.
(45)
"Residential journeyman electrician" means a person licensed under this chapter as a
residential journeyman electrician having the qualifications, training, experience, and
knowledge to wire, install, and repair electrical apparatus and equipment for light, heat,
power, and other purposes on buildings using primarily nonmetallic sheath cable.
(46)
"Residential journeyman plumber" means a person licensed under this chapter as a
residential journeyman plumber having the qualifications, training, experience, and
knowledge to engage in the plumbing trade as limited to the plumbing of residential
buildings.
(47)
"Residential master electrician" means a person licensed under this chapter as a
residential master electrician having the qualifications, training, experience, and
knowledge to properly plan, layout, and supervise the wiring, installation, and repair of
electrical apparatus and equipment for light, heat, power, and other purposes on
residential projects.
(48)
"Residential master plumber" means a person licensed under this chapter as a
residential master plumber having the qualifications, training, experience, and
knowledge to properly plan and layout projects and supervise persons in the plumbing
trade as limited to the plumbing of residential buildings.
(49)
"Residential plumbing contractor" means a person licensed under this chapter as a
residential plumbing contractor qualified by education, training, experience, and
knowledge to perform the fabrication or installation of material and fixtures to create
and maintain sanitary conditions in residential buildings by providing permanent means
for a supply of safe and pure water, a means for the timely and complete removal from
the premises of all used or contaminated water, fluid and semi-fluid organic wastes and
other impurities incidental to life and the occupation of such premises, a safe and
adequate supply of gases for lighting, heating, and residential purposes, or any other
work the division authorizes by rule in accordance with Subsection
58-55-301(4)
.
(50)
"Residential project," as it relates to an electrician or electrical contractor, means
buildings primarily wired with nonmetallic sheathed cable, in accordance with standard
rules and regulations governing this work, including the National Electrical Code, and in
which the voltage does not exceed 250 volts line to line and 125 volts to ground.
(51)
"Responsible management personnel" means:
(a)
a qualifying agent;
(b)
an operations manager; or
(c)
a site manager.
(52)
"Sensitive alarm system information" means:
(a)
a pass code or other code used in the operation of an alarm system;
(b)
information on the location of alarm system components at the premises of a
customer of the alarm business providing the alarm system;
(c)
information that would allow the circumvention, bypass, deactivation, or other
compromise of an alarm system of a customer of the alarm business providing the
alarm system; and
(d)
any other similar information that the division by rule determines to be information
that an individual employed by an alarm business should use or have access to only if
the individual is licensed as provided in this chapter.
(53)
(a)
"Specialty contractor" means a person licensed under this chapter under a
specialty contractor classification established by rule, who is qualified by education,
training, experience, and knowledge to perform those construction trades and crafts
requiring specialized skill, the regulation of which are determined by the division to
be in the best interest of the public health, safety, and welfare.
(b)
A specialty contractor may perform work in crafts or trades other than those in which
the specialty contractor is licensed if they are incidental to the performance of the
specialty contractor's licensed craft or trade.
(54)
"Unincorporated entity" means an entity that is not:
(a)
an individual;
(b)
a corporation; or
(c)
publicly traded.
(55)
"Unlawful conduct" means the same as that term is defined in Sections
58-1-501
and
58-55-501
.
(56)
"Unprofessional conduct" means the same as that term is defined in Sections
58-1-501
and
58-55-502
and as may be further defined by rule.
(57)
"Wages" means amounts due to an employee for labor or services whether the amount
is fixed or ascertained on a time, task, piece, commission, or other basis for calculating
the amount.
Section 128. Section
58-63-102
is amended to read:
58-63-102
. Definitions.
In addition to the definitions in Section
58-1-102
, as used in this chapter:
(1)
"Agreement for services" means a written and signed agreement between a security
service provider and a client that:
(a)
contains clear language that addresses and assigns financial responsibility;
(b)
describes the length, duties, and scope of the security services that will be provided;
and
(c)
describes the compensation that will be paid by the client for the security services,
including the compensation for each security officer.
(2)
"Armed courier service" means a person engaged in business as a contract security
company who transports or offers to transport tangible personal property from one place
or point to another under the control of an armed security officer employed by that
service.
(3)
"Armed private security officer" means an individual:
(a)
employed by a contract security company;
(b)
whose primary duty is:
(i)
guarding personal or real property; or
(ii)
providing protection or security to the life and well being of humans or animals;
and
(c)
who wears, carries, possesses, or has immediate access to a firearm in the
performance of the individual's duties.
(4)
"Armored car company" means a person engaged in business under contract to others
who transports or offers to transport tangible personal property, currency, valuables,
jewelry, SNAP benefits as defined in Section
35A-1-102
, or any other high value items,
that require secured delivery from one place to another under the control of an armored
car security officer employed by the company using a specially equipped motor vehicle
offering a high degree of security.
(5)
"Armored car security officer" means an individual:
(a)
employed by an armored car company;
(b)
whose primary duty is to guard the tangible property, currency, valuables, jewelry,
SNAP benefits as defined in Section
35A-1-102
, or other high value items that
require secured delivery from one place to another; and
(c)
who wears, carries, possesses, or has immediate access to a firearm in the
performance of the individual's duties.
(6)
"Board" means the Security Services Licensing Board created in Section
58-63-201
.
(7)
"Client" means a person, company, or entity that contracts for and receives security
services from a contract security company or an armored car company.
(8)
"Contract security company" means a company that is engaged in business to provide
security services to another person, business, or entity on a contractual basis by
assignment of an armed or unarmed private security officer.
(9)
"Company officer" means:
(a)
a governing person, as defined in Section
48-3a-102
16-20-101
, of an armored car
company or contract security company;
(b)
an individual appointed as an officer of an armored car company or contract security
company that is a corporation in accordance with Section
16-10a-830
;
(c)
a general partner, as defined in Section
48-2e-102
16-19-101
, of an armored car
company or contract security company; or
(d)
a partner, as defined in Section
48-1d-102
16-18-102
, of an armored car company
or contract security company.
(10)
"Company owner" means:
(a)
a shareholder, as defined in Section
16-10a-102
, who owns directly, or indirectly
through an entity controlled by the individual, 5% or more of the outstanding shares
of an armored car company or contract security company that:
(i)
is a corporation; and
(ii)
is not publicly listed or traded; or
(b)
an individual who owns directly, or indirectly through an entity controlled by the
individual, 5% or more of the equity of an armored car company or contract security
company that is not a corporation.
(11)
"Company proprietor" means the sole proprietor of an armored car company or
contract security company that is registered as a sole proprietorship with the Division of
Corporations and Commercial Code.
(12)
"Company trustee" means an individual with control of or power of administration
over property held in trust.
(13)
"Financial responsibility," when referring to a contract security company, means that a
contract security company may only provide security services to a client if the contract
security company:
(a)
enters into an agreement for services with the client;
(b)
maintains a current general liability insurance policy with:
(i)
at least an annual $1,000,000 per occurrence limit;
(ii)
at least an annual $2,000,000 aggregate limit; and
(iii)
the following riders:
(A)
general liability;
(B)
assault and battery;
(C)
personal injury;
(D)
false arrest;
(E)
libel and slander;
(F)
invasion of privacy;
(G)
broad form property damage;
(H)
damage to property in the care, custody, or control of the security service
provider; and
(I)
errors and omissions;
(c)
maintains a workers' compensation insurance policy with at least a $1,000,000 per
occurrence limit and that covers each security officer employed by the contract
security company; and
(d)
maintains a federal employer identification number and an unemployment insurance
employer account as required under state and federal law.
(14)
"Identification card" means a personal pocket or wallet size card issued by the division
to each armored car and armed or unarmed private security officer licensed under this
chapter.
(15)
"Law enforcement agency" means the same as that term is defined in Section
53-1-102
.
(16)
"Peace officer" means a person who:
(a)
is a certified peace officer as defined in
Title 53, Chapter 13, Peace Officer
Classifications
; and
(b)
derives total or special law enforcement powers from, and is an employee of, the
federal government, the state, or a political subdivision, agency, department, branch,
or service of either, of a municipality, or a unit of local government.
(17)
"Regular basis" means at least 20 hours per month.
(18)
"Responsible management personnel" means:
(a)
a qualifying agent;
(b)
an operations manager; or
(c)
a site manager.
(19)
(a)
"Security officer" means an individual who is licensed as an armed or unarmed
private security officer under this chapter and who:
(i)
is employed by a contract security company securing, guarding, or otherwise
protecting tangible personal property, real property, or the life and well being of
human or animal life against:
(A)
trespass or other unlawful intrusion or entry;
(B)
larceny;
(C)
vandalism or other abuse;
(D)
arson or other criminal activity; or
(E)
personal injury caused by another person or as a result of an act or omission
by another person;
(ii)
is controlling, regulating, or directing the flow of movements of an individual or
vehicle; or
(iii)
providing street patrol service.
(b)
"Security officer" does not include an individual whose duties include taking
admission tickets, checking credentials, ushering, or checking bags, purses,
backpacks, or other materials of individuals who are entering a sports venue, concert
venue, theatrical venue, convention center, fairgrounds, public assembly facility, or
mass gathering location if:
(i)
the individual carries out these duties without the use of specialized equipment;
(ii)
the authority of the individual is limited to denying entry or passage of another
individual into or within the facility; and
(iii)
the individual is not authorized to use physical force in the performance of the
individual's duties under this Subsection
(19)(b)
.
(20)
"Security service provider" means a contract security company or an armored car
company licensed under this chapter.
(21)
"Security system" means equipment, a device, or an instrument installed for:
(a)
detecting and signaling entry or intrusion by an individual into or onto, or exit from
the premises protected by the system; or
(b)
signaling the commission of criminal activity at the election of an individual having
control of the features of the security system.
(22)
"Specialized resource, motor vehicle, or equipment" means an item of tangible
personal property specifically designed for use in law enforcement or in providing
security or guard services, or that is specially equipped with a device or feature designed
for use in providing law enforcement, security, or guard services, but does not include:
(a)
standardized clothing, whether or not bearing a company name or logo, if the
clothing does not bear the words "security" or "guard"; or
(b)
an item of tangible personal property, other than a firearm or nonlethal weapon, that
may be used without modification in providing security or guard services.
(23)
"Street patrol service" means a contract security company that provides patrols by
means of foot, vehicle, or other method of transportation using public streets,
thoroughfares, or property in the performance of the company's duties and
responsibilities.
(24)
"Unarmed private security officer" means an individual:
(a)
employed by a contract security company;
(b)
whose primary duty is guarding personal or real property or providing protection or
security to the life and well being of humans or animals;
(c)
who does not wear, carry, possess, or have immediate access to a firearm in the
performance of the individual's duties; and
(d)
who wears clothing of distinctive design or fashion bearing a symbol, badge,
emblem, insignia, or other device that identifies the individual as a security officer.
(25)
"Unlawful conduct" means the same as that term is defined in Sections
58-1-501
and
58-63-501
.
(26)
"Unprofessional conduct" means the same as that term is defined in Sections
58-1-501
and
58-63-502
and as may be further defined by rule.
Section 129. Section
59-8-103
is amended to read:
59-8-103
. Definitions.
As used in this chapter:
(1)
"Corporation" means:
(a)
any domestic corporation organized under
Title 16, Chapter 6a, Utah Revised
Nonprofit Corporation Act
;
(b)
any foreign corporation engaged in business in this state under
Sections
16-6a-1501
through
16-6a-1518
Title 16, Chapter 1a, Part 5, Foreign Entities
;
(c)
any project entity defined in Section
11-13-103
; or
(d)
a public agency, as defined in Section
11-13-103
, to the extent it owns an interest in
facilities providing additional project capacity, as defined in Section
11-13-103
.
(2)
"Engaging in business" means carrying on or causing to be carried on any activity
through which goods or services are made or rendered by the taxpayer, except as
provided in Section
59-7-102
.
(3)
"Gross receipts" means the totality of the consideration that the taxpayer receives for
any good or service produced or rendered in the state without any deduction or expense
paid or accrued in respect to it.
(4)
"Taxpayer" means any corporation, other than an eleemosynary, religious, or charitable
institution, any insurance company, credit union, or Subchapter S organization, any
nonprofit hospital, educational, welfare, or employee representation organization, or any
mutual benefit association engaged in business in the state that is not otherwise required
to pay income or franchise tax to the state under
Title 59, Chapter 7, Corporate
Franchise and Income Taxes
.
Section 130. Section
61-2c-201
is amended to read:
61-2c-201
. Licensure required of person engaged in the business of residential
mortgage loans.
(1)
(a)
Except as provided in Subsection
(1)(b)
, a person may not transact the business of
residential mortgage loans without first obtaining a license under this chapter.
(b)
A person may transact the business of residential mortgage loans without first
obtaining a license under this chapter if the person:
(i)
is exempt from this chapter under Section
61-2c-105
; or
(ii)
qualifies for temporary authority to act as a mortgage loan originator under
Section
61-2c-201.2
.
(2)
For purposes of this chapter, a person transacts the business of residential mortgage
loans in this state if:
(a)
(i)
the person engages in an act that constitutes the business of residential
mortgage loans;
(ii)
the act described in Subsection
(2)(a)(i)
is directed to or received in this state; and
(iii)
the real property that is the subject of the act described in Subsection
(2)(a)(i)
is
located in this state; or
(b)
the person makes a representation that the person transacts the business of residential
mortgage loans in this state.
(3)
An individual who has an ownership interest in an entity required to be licensed under
this chapter is not required to obtain an individual license under this chapter unless the
individual transacts the business of residential mortgage loans.
(4)
Unless otherwise exempted under this chapter, licensure under this chapter is required
of both:
(a)
the individual who directly transacts the business of residential mortgage loans; and
(b)
if the individual transacts business as an employee or agent of an entity or individual,
the entity or individual for whom the employee or agent transacts the business of
residential mortgage loans.
(5)
(a)
If an entity that is licensed to transact the business of residential mortgage loans
transacts the business of residential mortgage loans under an assumed business name,
the entity shall in accordance with rules made by the division:
(i)
register the assumed name under this chapter; and
(ii)
furnish proof that the assumed business name is filed with the Division of
Corporations and Commercial Code pursuant to
Title 42, Chapter 2, Conducting
Business Under Assumed Name
Title 42, Chapter 2, Conducting Business as a
D.B.A
.
(b)
The division may charge a fee established in accordance with Section
63J-1-504
for
registering an assumed name as described in this Subsection
(5)
.
Section 131. Section
61-2f-401
is amended to read:
61-2f-401
. Grounds for disciplinary action.
The following acts are unlawful and grounds for disciplinary action for a person licensed
or required to be licensed under this chapter:
(1)
(a)
making a substantial misrepresentation, including in a licensure statement;
(b)
making an intentional misrepresentation;
(c)
pursuing a continued and flagrant course of misrepresentation;
(d)
making a false representation or promise through an agent, sales agent, advertising,
or otherwise; or
(e)
making a false representation or promise of a character likely to influence, persuade,
or induce;
(2)
acting for more than one party in a transaction without the informed written consent of
the parties;
(3)
(a)
acting as an associate broker or sales agent while not affiliated with a principal
broker;
(b)
representing or attempting to represent a principal broker other than the principal
broker with whom the person is affiliated; or
(c)
representing as sales agent or having a contractual relationship similar to that of sales
agent with a person other than a principal broker;
(4)
(a)
failing, within a reasonable time, to account for or to remit money that belongs to
another and comes into the person's possession;
(b)
commingling money described in Subsection
(4)(a)
with the person's own money; or
(c)
diverting money described in Subsection
(4)(a)
from the purpose for which the
money is received;
(5)
paying or offering to pay valuable consideration to a person not licensed under this
chapter, except that valuable consideration may be shared:
(a)
with a principal broker of another jurisdiction; or
(b)
as provided under:
(i)
Title 16, Chapter 10a, Utah Revised Business Corporation Act;
(ii)
Title 16, Chapter 11, Professional Corporation Act; or
(iii)
Title 48, Chapter 3a, Utah Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act, as
appropriate pursuant to Section
48-3a-1405
16-20-1205
;
(6)
for a principal broker, paying or offering to pay a sales agent or associate broker who is
not affiliated with the principal broker at the time the sales agent or associate broker
earned the compensation;
(7)
being incompetent to act as a principal broker, associate broker, or sales agent in such
manner as to safeguard the interests of the public;
(8)
failing to voluntarily furnish a copy of a document to the parties before and after the
execution of a document;
(9)
a brokerage failing to keep and make available for inspection by the division a record of
each transaction, including:
(a)
the names of buyers and sellers or lessees and lessors;
(b)
the identification of real estate;
(c)
the sale or rental price;
(d)
money received in trust;
(e)
agreements or instructions from buyers and sellers or lessees and lessors; and
(f)
any other information required by rule;
(10)
failing to disclose, in writing, in the purchase, sale, or rental of real estate, whether the
purchase, sale, or rental is made for that person or for an undisclosed principal;
(11)
regardless of whether the crime is related to the business of real estate:
(a)
be convicted of:
(i)
a felony; or
(ii)
any of the following involving fraud, misrepresentation, theft, or dishonesty:
(A)
a class A misdemeanor;
(B)
a class B misdemeanor; or
(C)
a criminal offense comparable to a class A or class B misdemeanor;
(b)
plead guilty or nolo contendere to:
(i)
a felony; or
(ii)
any of the following involving fraud, misrepresentation, theft, or dishonesty:
(A)
a class A misdemeanor;
(B)
a class B misdemeanor; or
(C)
a criminal offense comparable to a class A or class B misdemeanor;
(c)
enter into a plea in abeyance agreement in relation to:
(i)
a felony; or
(ii)
any of the following involving fraud, misrepresentation, theft, or dishonesty:
(A)
a class A misdemeanor;
(B)
a class B misdemeanor; or
(C)
a criminal offense comparable to a class A or class B misdemeanor;
(12)
at the time of placing an advertisement:
(a)
advertising the availability of real estate or the services of a licensee in a false,
misleading, or deceptive manner; or
(b)
failing to include within the advertisement the brokerage name with which a person
who is licensed is affiliated or, if the advertisement is placed online or in a digital
format, a link to a website or media platform that identifies the brokerage name
within one click;
(13)
in the case of a principal broker or a branch broker, failing to exercise active and
reasonable supervision, as the commission may define by rule made in accordance with
Title 63G, Chapter 3, Utah Administrative Rulemaking Act, over the activities of the
principal broker's or branch broker's licensed or unlicensed staff;
(14)
violating or disregarding:
(a)
this chapter;
(b)
an order of the commission; or
(c)
the rules adopted by the commission and the division;
(15)
breaching a fiduciary duty owed by a licensee to the licensee's principal in a real estate
transaction;
(16)
any other conduct which constitutes dishonest dealing;
(17)
having one of the following suspended, revoked, surrendered, or cancelled on the basis
of misconduct in a professional capacity that relates to character, honesty, integrity, or
truthfulness:
(a)
a real estate license, registration, or certificate issued by another jurisdiction; or
(b)
another license, registration, or certificate to engage in an occupation or profession
issued by this state or another jurisdiction;
(18)
failing to respond to a request by the division in an investigation authorized under this
chapter within 10 business days after the day on which the request is served, including:
(a)
failing to respond to a subpoena;
(b)
withholding evidence; or
(c)
failing to produce documents or records;
(19)
in the case of a dual licensed title licensee as defined in Section
31A-2-402
:
(a)
providing a title insurance product or service without the approval required by
Section
31A-2-405
; or
(b)
knowingly providing false or misleading information in the statement required by
Subsection
31A-2-405(2)
;
(20)
violating an independent contractor agreement between a principal broker and a sales
agent or associate broker as evidenced by a final judgment of a court;
(21)
violating Title 57, Chapter 30, Residential Property Service Agreements;
(22)
(a)
engaging in an act of loan modification assistance that requires licensure as a
mortgage officer under Chapter 2c, Utah Residential Mortgage Practices and
Licensing Act, without being licensed under that chapter;
(b)
engaging in an act of foreclosure rescue without entering into a written agreement
specifying what one or more acts of foreclosure rescue will be completed;
(c)
inducing a person who is at risk of foreclosure to hire the licensee to engage in an act
of foreclosure rescue by:
(i)
suggesting to the person that the licensee has a special relationship with the
person's lender or loan servicer; or
(ii)
falsely representing or advertising that the licensee is acting on behalf of:
(A)
a government agency;
(B)
the person's lender or loan servicer; or
(C)
a nonprofit or charitable institution; or
(d)
recommending or participating in a foreclosure rescue that requires a person to:
(i)
transfer title to real estate to the licensee or to a third-party with whom the
licensee has a business relationship or financial interest;
(ii)
make a mortgage payment to a person other than the person's loan servicer; or
(iii)
refrain from contacting the person's:
(A)
lender;
(B)
loan servicer;
(C)
attorney;
(D)
credit counselor; or
(E)
housing counselor;
(23)
taking or removing from the premises of a main office or a branch office, or otherwise
limiting a real estate brokerage's access to or control over, a record that:
(a)
(i)
the real estate brokerage's licensed staff, unlicensed staff, or affiliated
independent contractor prepared; and
(ii)
is related to the business of:
(A)
the real estate brokerage; or
(B)
an associate broker, a branch broker, or a sales agent of the real estate
brokerage; or
(b)
is related to the business administration of the real estate brokerage;
(24)
as a principal broker, placing a lien on real property, unless authorized by law;
(25)
as a sales agent or associate broker, placing a lien on real property for an unpaid
commission or other compensation related to real estate brokerage services; or
(26)
failing to timely disclose to a buyer or seller an affiliated business arrangement, as
defined in Section
31A-23a-1001
, in accordance with the federal Real Estate Settlement
Procedures Act, 12 U.S.C. Sec. 2601 et seq. and any rules made thereunder.
Section 132. Section
61-2g-103
is amended to read:
61-2g-103
. Other law unaffected.
This chapter may not be considered to prohibit a person licensed, certified, or registered
under this chapter from engaging in the practice of real estate appraising as a professional
corporation or a limited liability company in accordance with:
(1)
Title 16, Chapter 11, Professional Corporation Act
; or
(2)
Title 48, Chapter 3a, Utah Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act
Title 16,
Chapter 20, Utah Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act
.
Section 133. Section
70-3a-405
is amended to read:
70-3a-405
. Forum for actions regarding registration -- Service on out-of-state
registrants.
(1)
(a)
A person may bring an action in a court with jurisdiction under
Title 78A,
Judiciary and Judicial Administration
, to require the cancellation of a mark registered
under this chapter.
(b)
The division may not be made a party to an action filed under Subsection
(1)(a)
,
except that the division may intervene in an action filed under Subsection
(1)(a)
.
(2)
In any action brought against a nonresident registrant, service may be effected upon the
nonresident registrant in accordance with the procedures established for service upon
nonresident corporations and business entities under Section
16-10a-1511
16-1a-1511
.
Section 134. Section
75B-2-1011
is amended to read:
75B-2-1011
. Interest as general partner.
(1)
Except as otherwise provided in Subsection
(3)
or unless personal liability is imposed in
the contract, a trustee who holds an interest as a general partner in a general or limited
partnership is not personally liable on a contract entered into by the partnership after the
trust's acquisition of the interest if the fiduciary capacity was disclosed in the contract or
in a statement previously filed in accordance with
Title 48, Chapter 2e, Utah Uniform
Limited Partnership Act
Title 16, Chapter 19, Utah Uniform Limited Partnership Act
.
(2)
Except as otherwise provided in Subsection
(3)
, a trustee who holds an interest as a
general partner is not personally liable for torts committed by the partnership or for
obligations arising from ownership or control of the interest unless the trustee is
personally at fault.
(3)
The immunity provided by this section does not apply if an interest in the partnership is
held by the trustee in a capacity other than that of trustee or is held by the trustee's
spouse or one or more of the trustee's descendants, siblings, or parents, or the spouse of
any of them.
(4)
If the trustee of a revocable trust holds an interest as a general partner, the settlor is
personally liable for contracts and other obligations of the partnership as if the settlor
were a general partner.
Section 135. Section
76-5c-304
is amended to read:
76-5c-304
. Change of registered office or agent by film distributor -- Service of
process, notice, or demand on registered agent.
(1)
A distributor qualified to distribute films in this state may change the distributor's
registered office or registered agent in accordance with
Title 16, Chapter 17, Model
Registered Agents Act
Title 16, Chapter 1a, Part 4, Registered Agent of an Entity
.
(2)
Any process, notice, or demand required or permitted by law to be served upon the
distributor may be served upon the registered agent of that distributor.
Section 136. Section
78A-5a-101
is amended to read:
78A-5a-101
. Definitions.
(1)
"Action" means a lawsuit or case commenced in a court.
(2)
(a)
"Asset" means property of all kinds, real or personal and tangible or intangible.
(b)
"Asset" includes:
(i)
cash, except for any reasonable compensation or salary for services rendered;
(ii)
stock or other investments;
(iii)
goodwill;
(iv)
an ownership interest;
(v)
a license;
(vi)
a cause of action; and
(vii)
any similar property.
(3)
"Beneficial shareholder" means the same as that term is defined in Section
16-10a-1301
.
(4)
"Blockchain" means the same as that term is defined in Section
63A-16-108
.
(5)
"Blockchain technology" means computer software or hardware or collections of
computer software or hardware, or both, that utilize or enable a blockchain.
(6)
"Board" means the board of directors or trustees of a corporation.
(7)
"Business" means any enterprise carried on for the purpose of gain or economic profit.
(8)
(a)
"Business organization" means an organization in any form that is primarily
engaged in business.
(b)
"Business organization" includes:
(i)
an association;
(ii)
a corporation;
(iii)
a joint stock company;
(iv)
a joint venture;
(v)
a limited liability company;
(vi)
a mutual fund trust;
(vii)
a partnership; or
(viii)
any other similar form of an organization described in Subsections
(8)(b)(i)
through
(vii)
.
(c)
"Business organization" does not include a governmental entity as defined in Section
63G-7-102
.
(9)
"Claim" means a written demand or assertion in an action.
(10)
"Commercial tenant" means the same as that term is defined in Section
78B-6-801
.
(11)
"Consumer contract" means a contract entered into by a consumer for the purchase of
goods or services for personal, family, or household purposes.
(12)
"Court" means the Business and Chancery Court established in Section
78A-5a-102
.
(13)
"Decentralized autonomous organization" means the same as that term is defined in
Section
48-5-101
16-22-101
.
(14)
"Franchisee" means the same as that term is defined in 16 C.F.R. Sec. 436.1.
(15)
"Franchisor" means the same as that term is defined in 16 C.F.R. Sec. 436.1.
(16)
"Governmental entity" means the same as that term is defined in Section
63G-7-102
.
(17)
"Health care" means the same as that term is defined in Section
78B-3-403
.
(18)
"Health care provider" means the same as that term is defined in Section
78B-3-403
.
(19)
"Monetary damages" does not include:
(a)
punitive or exemplary damages;
(b)
prejudgment or postjudgment interest; or
(c)
attorney fees or costs.
(20)
"Officer" means an individual designated by a board, or other governing body of a
business organization, to act on behalf of the business organization.
(21)
"Owner" means a person who, directly or indirectly, owns or controls an ownership
interest in a business organization regardless of whether the person owns or controls the
ownership interest through another person, a power of attorney, or another business
organization.
(22)
"Ownership interest" means an interest owned in a business organization, including
any shares, membership interest, partnership interest, or governance or transferable
interest.
(23)
"Personal injury" means a physical or mental injury, including wrongful death.
(24)
"Professional" means an individual whose profession requires a license, registration, or
certification on the basis of experience, education, testing, or training.
(25)
(a)
"Provisional remedy" means a temporary order by a court while an action is
pending.
(b)
"Provisional remedy" includes a preliminary injunction, a temporary restraining
order, a prejudgment writ, or an appointment of a receiver.
(26)
"Security" means the same as that term is defined in Section
61-1-13
.
(27)
"Shareholder" means the record shareholder or the beneficial shareholder.
(28)
"Record shareholder" means the same as that term is defined in Section
16-10a-1301
.
(29)
"Trustee" means a person that holds or administers an ownership interest on behalf of a
third party.
Section 137. Section
78B-3-204
is amended to read:
78B-3-204
. Effect of failure to appoint registered agent -- Service of process
upon nonresident.
If a nonresident person doing business fails to appoint a registered agent within the state
in accordance with
Title 16, Chapter 17, Model Registered Agents Act
Title 16, Chapter 1a,
Part 4, Registered Agent of an Entity
, service of process may be made by serving any person
employed by or acting as an agent for the nonresident.
Section 138. Section
78B-3-205
is amended to read:
78B-3-205
. Acts submitting person to jurisdiction.
Notwithstanding Section
16-10a-1501
16-1a-503
, any person or personal representative
of the person, whether or not a citizen or resident of this state, who, in person or through an
agent, does any of the following enumerated acts is subject to the jurisdiction of the courts of
this state as to any claim arising out of or related to:
(1)
the transaction of any business within this state;
(2)
contracting to supply services or goods in this state;
(3)
the causing of any injury within this state whether tortious or by breach of warranty;
(4)
the ownership, use, or possession of any real estate situated in this state;
(5)
contracting to insure any person, property, or risk located within this state at the time of
contracting;
(6)
with respect to actions of divorce, separate maintenance, or child support, having
resided, in the marital relationship, within this state notwithstanding subsequent
departure from the state; or the commission in this state of the act giving rise to the
claim, so long as that act is not a mere omission, failure to act, or occurrence over which
the defendant had no control; or
(7)
the commission of sexual intercourse within this state which gives rise to a parentage
action under Title 81, Chapter 5, Uniform Parentage Act, to determine parentage for the
purpose of establishing responsibility for child support.
Section 139. Section
78B-6-2601
is amended to read:
78B-6-2601
. Definitions.
As used in this part:
(1)
"Activate" means the process of powering on a device and associating the device with a
user account.
(2)
"Device" means a tablet or a smart phone manufactured on or after January 1, 2025.
(3)
"Filter" means generally accepted and commercially reasonable software used on a
device that is capable of preventing the device from accessing or displaying obscene
material through Internet browsers or search engines owned or controlled by the
manufacturer in accordance with prevailing industry standards including blocking
known websites linked to obscene content via mobile data networks, wired Internet
networks, and wireless Internet networks.
(4)
"Internet" means the same as that term is defined in Section
13-40-102
.
(5)
"Manufacturer" means a person that:
(a)
(i)
is engaged in the business of manufacturing a device;
(ii)
holds the patents for the device the person manufactures; or
(iii)
holds the patents for the operating system on a device; and
(b)
has a commercial registered agent as that term is defined in Section
16-17-102
16-1a-101
.
(6)
"Minor" means an individual under the age of 18 who is not emancipated, married, or a
member of the armed forces of the United States.
(7)
"Obscenity" means the same as that term is defined in Section
32B-1-504
.
(8)
"Operating system" means software that manages all of the other application
programs on a device.
(9)
"Password" means a string of characters or other secure method used to enable,
deactivate, modify, or uninstall a filter on a device.
(10)
(a)
"Retailer" means a person, that is not a manufacturer, that sells a device directly
to consumers.
(b)
"Retailer" includes an employee of a retailer acting in the course and scope of the
employee's employment.
(11)
"Smart phone" means the same as that term is defined in Section
63A-2-101.5
.
(12)
"Tablet" means a mobile device that:
(a)
is equipped with a mobile operating system, touchscreen display, and rechargeable
battery; and
(b)
has the ability to support access to a cellular network.
(13)
"Video game console" means a discrete computing system, including the system's
components and peripherals, primarily used for playing video games, but does not
include a smartphone or tablet.
Section 140.
Effective Date.
This bill takes effect on
October 1, 2026
.
1-21-26 9:47 PM