USA Statutes : maine
Title : Title 13. CORPORATIONS
Chapter : Chapter 85. COOPERATIVES
Title 13 - §1501. Definitions
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1: CONSUMER COOPERATIVES
Article 1: General Provisions
§1501. Definitions
In this subchapter, unless the subject matter requires otherwise:
1. Association. "Association" means a group enterprise legally incorporated under this subchapter and shall be deemed to be a nonprofit corporation.
2. Cooperative basis. "Cooperative basis" as applied to any incorporated or unincorporated group referred to in subsequent sections of this subchapter
means:
A. That each member has one vote and only one vote, except as may be altered in the articles or bylaws by provisions for voting
by member organizations;
B. That the maximum rate at which any return is paid on share or membership capital is limited to not more than 6%; and
C. That the net savings after payment, if any, of said limited return on capital and after making provision for such separate
funds as may be required or specifically permitted by statute, articles or bylaws shall be allocated or distributed to member
patrons, or to all patrons, in proportion to their patronage; or retained by the enterprise for the actual or potential expansion
of its services or the reductions of its charges to the patrons, or for other purposes not inconsistent with its nonprofit
character.
3. Member. "Member" means not only a member in a nonshare association but also a member in a share association.
4. Net savings. "Net savings" means the total income of an association minus the costs of operation.
5. Savings returns. "Savings returns" means the amount returned to the patrons in proportion to their patronage or otherwise in accordance with
this subchapter.
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Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1502. Existing cooperative groups
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1: CONSUMER COOPERATIVES
Article 1: General Provisions
§1502. Existing cooperative groups
Any group incorporated under the law of this State and operating on a cooperative basis or any unincorporated group operating
on such a basis in this State may elect by a vote of 23 of the members voting to secure the benefits of and be bound by this
subchapter, and shall thereupon amend such of its articles and bylaws as are not in conformity with the provisions hereof.
A certified copy of the amended articles shall be filed and recorded with the Secretary of State and a fee of $5 shall be
paid.
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Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1503. Foreign corporations doing business in State
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1: CONSUMER COOPERATIVES
Article 1: General Provisions
§1503. Foreign corporations doing business in State
A foreign corporation or association operating on a cooperative basis and complying with the applicable laws of the state
or District of Columbia wherein it is organized shall be entitled to do business in the State as a foreign cooperative corporation
or association upon complying with law for foreign corporations doing business in this State.
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Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1504. Laws not applicable
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1: CONSUMER COOPERATIVES
Article 1: General Provisions
§1504. Laws not applicable
No law of the State conflicting or inconsistent with any part of this subchapter shall, to the extent of the conflict or inconsistency,
be construed as applicable to associations formed under this subchapter; nor shall any law of the State inappropriate to the
purposes of such associations be so construed.
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Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1505. Taxation
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1: CONSUMER COOPERATIVES
Article 1: General Provisions
§1505. Taxation
Associations formed under this subchapter and foreign corporations and associations admitted to do business in the State and
entitled to the benefits of this subchapter shall pay the annual license fee required of other business corporations and foreign
corporations.
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Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1506. Registration as dealers in securities
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1: CONSUMER COOPERATIVES
Article 1: General Provisions
§1506. Registration as dealers in securities
Associations organized under this subchapter shall be subject to Title 32, chapter 13. The fee charged for registration or
renewal shall be $10.
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Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1507. Limitation on return on capital
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1: CONSUMER COOPERATIVES
Article 1: General Provisions
§1507. Limitation on return on capital
The return upon capital shall not exceed 6% per year upon the paid-up capital and shall be noncumulative.
div>
Total return upon capital distributed for any single period shall not exceed 50% of the net savings for that period.
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Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1551. Articles of incorporation; first meeting; fees
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1: CONSUMER COOPERATIVES
Article 2: Organization and Bylaws
§1551. Articles of incorporation; first meeting; fees
Articles of incorporation for the formation of an association under this subchapter shall be drawn up and filed in the same
manner and under the same provisions as for organizing business corporations under the general law, except where such procedure
would be inconsistent with this subchapter. The same provision shall apply under said general law to associations organized
under this subchapter in respect to the first meeting of the corporation, and as to fees payable to the State.
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Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1552. Who may incorporate
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1: CONSUMER COOPERATIVES
Article 2: Organization and Bylaws
§1552. Who may incorporate
Any 3 or more natural persons or 2 or more associations may incorporate in this State under this subchapter.
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Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1553. Purposes
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1: CONSUMER COOPERATIVES
Article 2: Organization and Bylaws
§1553. Purposes
An association may be incorporated under this subchapter to engage in any one or more lawful mode or modes of acquiring, producing,
building, operating, manufacturing, furnishing, exchanging or distributing any type or types of property, commodities, goods
or services for the primary and mutual benefit of the patrons of the association, or their patrons, if any, as ultimate consumers.
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Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1554. Powers
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1: CONSUMER COOPERATIVES
Article 2: Organization and Bylaws
§1554. Powers
An association shall have the capacity to act possessed by natural persons and the authority to do anything required or permitted
by this subchapter and also:
1. Continuation. To continue as a corporation for the time specified in its articles;
2. Seal. To have a corporate seal and to alter the same at pleasure;
3. Sue and be sued. To sue and be sued in its corporate name;
4. Bylaws. To make bylaws for the government and regulation of its affairs;
5. Acquire and dispose of property. To acquire, own, hold, sell, lease, pledge, mortgage or otherwise dispose of any property incident to its purposes and activities;
6. Own other corporations. To own and hold membership in and share capital of other associations and any other corporations and any types of bonds or
other obligations; and while the owner thereof to exercise all the rights of ownership;
7. Borrow money; make contracts. To borrow money, contract debts and make contracts, including agreements of mutual aid or federation with other associations,
other groups organized on a cooperative basis and other nonprofit groups;
8. Operate within and without State. To conduct its affairs within or without this State;
9. Powers of ordinary business corporations. To exercise in addition any power granted to ordinary business corporations, save those powers inconsistent with this subchapter;
and
10. Other powers. To exercise all powers not inconsistent with this subchapter which may be necessary, convenient or expedient for the accomplishment
of its purposes, and to that end, the powers enumerated in this section shall not be deemed exclusive.
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Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1555. Bylaws
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1: CONSUMER COOPERATIVES
Article 2: Organization and Bylaws
§1555. Bylaws
Bylaws shall be adopted, amended or repealed by at least a majority vote of the members voting.
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Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1556. Meetings
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1: CONSUMER COOPERATIVES
Article 2: Organization and Bylaws
§1556. Meetings
Regular meetings shall be held as prescribed in the bylaws, but shall be held at least once a year. Special meetings may be
demanded by a majority vote of the directors or by written petition of at least 310 of the membership, in which case it shall
be the duty of the secretary to call such meeting to take place within 30 days after such demand.
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Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1601. One member, one vote
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1: CONSUMER COOPERATIVES
Article 3: Voting
§1601. One member, one vote
Each member of an association shall have one and only one vote, except that where an association includes among its members
any number of other associations or groups organized on a cooperative basis, the voting rights of such member associations
or groups may be as prescribed in the articles or bylaws.
div>
No voting agreement or other device to evade the one-member-one-vote rule shall be enforceable by a civil action.
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Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1602. No proxies (REPEALED)
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1: CONSUMER COOPERATIVES
Article 3: Voting
§1602. No proxies (REPEALED)
Section History:
PL 1997,
Ch. 7,
§1
(RP ).
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Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1603. Application of provisions to voting by delegates
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1: CONSUMER COOPERATIVES
Article 3: Voting
§1603. Application of provisions to voting by delegates
If an association has provided for voting by delegates, any provision of this subchapter referring to votes cast by the members
shall apply to votes cast by delegates; but this shall not permit delegates to vote by mail.
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Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1604. Voting by proxy
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1: CONSUMER COOPERATIVES
Article 3: Voting
§1604. Voting by proxy
Unless specified otherwise in an association's articles of incorporation or bylaws, members are permitted to vote by proxy.
[1997, c. 7, §2 (new).]
1. Appointment of agent. The appointment of one or more agents to vote on behalf of the member must be by written proxy executed by the member or
by the member's duly authorized attorney-in-fact. A telegram, cablegram or facsimile appearing to have been transmitted may
be considered to satisfy this requirement.
[1997, c. 7, §2 (new).]
2. Duration. A proxy is valid for only 11 months from the date of its execution, unless otherwise expressly and conspicuously provided
in the proxy.
[1997, c. 7, §2 (new).]
3. Revocation. A proxy is revocable at the pleasure of the person executing it. A proxy may be revoked, without limitation, by an instrument
that in terms revokes the proxy or by a subsequent duly executed proxy. The authority of a proxy holder is not revoked by
death or supervening incapacity of the member executing the proxy unless, before the authority is exercised, written notice
of death or incapacity is filed with the corporate officer responsible for maintaining the list of members. The presence
at a members' meeting of the member appointing a proxy does not of itself revoke the proxy. A member may revoke an appointment
of a proxy by giving notice to the corporate officer responsible for maintaining a list of members or by giving notice in
open meeting of the members.
[1997, c. 7, §2 (new).]
Section History:
PL 1997,
Ch. 7,
§2
(NEW).
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interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
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Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1641. Eligibility and admission to membership
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1: CONSUMER COOPERATIVES
Article 4: Members
§1641. Eligibility and admission to membership
Any natural person, association, incorporated or unincorporated group organized on a cooperative basis or any nonprofit group
shall be eligible for membership in an association, if it has met the qualifications for eligibility, if any, stated in the
articles or bylaws and shall be deemed a member upon payment in full for the par value of the minimum amount of share or membership
capital stated in the articles as necessary to qualify for membership.
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Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1642. Subscribers
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1: CONSUMER COOPERATIVES
Article 4: Members
§1642. Subscribers
Any natural person or group eligible for membership and legally obligated to purchase a share or shares of, or membership
in, an association shall be deemed a subscriber. The articles or bylaws may determine whether, and the conditions under which,
any voting rights or other rights of membership shall be granted to subscribers.
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Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1643. Liability of members
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1: CONSUMER COOPERATIVES
Article 4: Members
§1643. Liability of members
Members shall not be jointly or severally liable for any debts of the association, nor shall a subscriber be so liable except
to the extent of the unpaid amount on the shares or membership certificates subscribed by him. No subscriber shall be released
from such liability by reason of any assignment of his interest in the shares or membership certificate, but shall remain
jointly and severally liable with the assignee until the shares or certificates are fully paid-up.
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Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1644. Expulsion
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1: CONSUMER COOPERATIVES
Article 4: Members
§1644. Expulsion
A member may be expelled by the vote of a majority of the members voting at a regular or special meeting. The member against
whom the charges are to be preferred shall be informed thereof in writing at least 10 days in advance of the meeting, and
shall have an opportunity to be heard in person or by counsel at said meeting. On decision of the association to expel a member,
the board of directors shall purchase the member's holdings at par value, if and when there are sufficient reserve funds.
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Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1645. Allocation and distribution of net savings
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1: CONSUMER COOPERATIVES
Article 4: Members
§1645. Allocation and distribution of net savings
At least once a year the members or the directors, or both, as the articles or bylaws may provide, shall apportion the net
savings of the association in the following order.
1. Reserve fund. Not less than 10% shall be placed in a reserve fund until such time as the fund shall equal at least 50% of the paid-up capital;
and such fund may be used in the general conduct of the business. The amounts apportioned to the reserve fund shall be allocated
on the books of the association on a patronage basis, or in lieu thereof, the books and records of the association shall afford
a means for doing so in order that upon dissolution or earlier, if deemed advisable, such reserves may be returned to the
patrons who have contributed the same, subject to the limitations of the section on dissolution herein;
2. Return upon capital. A return upon capital, within the limitations of sections 1507, 1641 to 1644, 1691 and 1692, may be paid upon share capital;
but such return upon capital may be paid only out of the surplus of the aggregate of the assets over the aggregate of the
liabilities, including in the latter the amount of the capital stock, after deducting from such aggregate of the assets the
amount by which such aggregate was increased by unrealized appreciation in value or revaluation of fixed assets.
3. Educational fund. A portion of the remainder, as determined by the articles or bylaws, shall be allocated to an educational fund to be used
in teaching cooperation, and a portion may be allocated to funds for the general welfare of the members of the association.
4. Patronage. The remainder shall be allocated at the same uniform rate to all patrons of the association in proportion to their individual
patronage:
A. In the case of a member patron, his proportionate amount of savings returns shall be distributed to him unless he agrees
that the association should credit the amount to his account toward the purchase of an additional share or shares or additional
membership capital;
B. In the case of a subscriber patron, his proportionate amount of savings returns may, as the articles or bylaws provide,
be distributed to him or credited to his account until the amount of capital subscribed for has been fully paid;
C. In the case of a nonmember patron, his proportionate amount of savings returns shall be set aside in a general fund for
such patrons and shall be allocated to individual nonmember patrons only upon request and presentation of evidence of the
amount of their patronage. Any savings returns so allocated shall be credited to such patron toward payment of the minimum
amount of share or membership capital necessary for membership, or may be paid to such patron. When a sum equal to this amount
has been accumulated and so credited at any time within a period of time specified in the bylaws, such patron shall be deemed
and become a member of the association if he so agrees or requests and complies with any provisions in the bylaws for admission
to membership. The certificates of shares or membership to which he is entitled shall then be issued to him;
D. If within any periods of time specified in the articles or bylaws:
(1) Any subscriber has not accumulated and paid in the amount of capital subscribed for; or
(2) Any nonmember patron has not accumulated in his individual account the sum necessary for membership; or
(3) Any nonmember patron has accumulated the sum necessary for membership, but neither requests nor agrees to become a member
or fails to comply with the provisions of the bylaws, if any, for admission to membership;
then the amounts so accumulated or paid in shall go to the educational fund, and thereafter no member or other patron shall
have any rights in said paid-in capital or accumulated savings returns as such. Nothing in this section shall prevent an association
operating under this subchapter, which is engaged in rendering services, from disposing of the net savings from the rendering
of such services in such manner as to lower the fees charged for services or otherwise to further the common benefit of the
members. Nothing in this section shall prevent an association from adopting a system whereby the payment of savings returns,
which would otherwise be distributed, shall be deferred for a fixed period of months or years; nor from adopting a system
whereby the savings returns distributed shall be partly in cash, partly in shares, such shares to be retired at a fixed future
date in the order of the serial number or date of issue.
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Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1691. Issuance and contents
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1: CONSUMER COOPERATIVES
Article 5: Shares
§1691. Issuance and contents
No certificate for share or membership capital shall be issued until the par value thereof has been paid for in full. There
shall be printed upon each certificate issued by an association a full or condensed statement of the requirements of sections
pertaining to one-member-one-vote, no proxy and transfer of shares and membership.
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State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1692. Transfer of shares and membership; withdrawal
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1: CONSUMER COOPERATIVES
Article 5: Shares
§1692. Transfer of shares and membership; withdrawal
If a member desires to withdraw from the association or dispose of any or all of his holdings, the directors shall have the
power to purchase such holdings by paying him the par value of any or all of the holdings offered. The directors shall then
reissue or cancel the same. A vote of the majority of the members voting at a regular or special meeting may order the directors
to exercise this power to purchase.
div>
If the association fails, within 60 days of the original offer, to purchase all or any part of the holdings offered, the member
may dispose of the unpurchased interest elsewhere, subject to the approval of the transferee by a majority vote of the directors.
Any would-be transferee not approved by the directors may appeal to the members at their first regular or special meeting
thereafter, and the action of the meeting shall be final. If such transferee is not approved, the directors shall exercise
their power to purchase, if and when such purchase can be made without jeopardizing the solvency of the association.
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interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
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Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1731. Procedure
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1: CONSUMER COOPERATIVES
Article 6: Dissolution
§1731. Procedure
An association may, at any regular or special meeting legally called, be directed to dissolve by a vote of 23 of the entire
membership. By a vote of a majority of the members voting, 3 of their number shall be designated as trustees, who shall, on
behalf of the association and within a time fixed in their designation or within any extension thereof, liquidate its assets
and shall distribute them in the manner set forth in this section. In case of any dissolution of an association, its assets
shall be distributed in the following manner and order:
1. Paying debts and expenses. By paying its debts and expenses;
2. Amounts paid by members. By returning to the members the par value of their shares or of their membership certificates, returning to the subscribers
the amounts paid on their subscriptions and returning to the patrons the amount of savings returns credited to their accounts
toward the purchase of shares or membership certificates; and
3. Paying patrons or giving to nonprofit associations. By distributing any surplus in either or both of the following ways as the articles may provide:
A. Among those patrons who have been members or subscribers at any time during the past 6 years, on the basis of their patronage
during that period; or
B. As a gift to any consumers' cooperatives association or other nonprofit enterprise which may be designated in the articles.
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Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1741. Short title
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1-A: COOPERATIVE AFFORDABLE HOUSING OWNERSHIP (HEADING: PL 1993, c. 300, @1 (new))
§1741. Short title
This subchapter may be known and cited as the "Maine Cooperative Affordable Housing Ownership Act."
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
Section History:
PL 1993,
Ch. 300,
§1
(NEW).
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interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
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Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1742. Definitions
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1-A: COOPERATIVE AFFORDABLE HOUSING OWNERSHIP (HEADING: PL 1993, c. 300, @1 (new))
§1742. Definitions
As used in this subchapter, unless the context otherwise indicates, the following terms have the following meanings.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
1. Conversion. "Conversion" means a change in character of residential real property from a rental to an ownership basis. Creation of a
cooperative affordable housing corporation to own property formerly rented for dwelling purposes is considered such a change
in character.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
2. Cooperative affordable housing corporation. "Cooperative affordable housing corporation" means a domestic corporation that is organized under or elects to be governed
by the provisions of this subchapter.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
3. Cooperative interest. "Cooperative interest" means the ownership interest in a cooperative affordable housing corporation that is evidenced by
a membership share.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
4. Cooperative property. "Cooperative property" means the real and personal property, including mobile and manufactured homes, in this State owned
or leased by a cooperative affordable housing corporation for the primary purpose of residential use.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
5. Lender. "Lender" includes, but is not limited to, the following institutional lenders whose policies and procedures are subject
to governmental supervision:
A. A federal, state or local housing finance agency;
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
B. A bank, including savings and loan associations or insured credit unions;
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
C. Insurance companies;
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
D. Pension and profit-sharing funds or trusts; or
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
E. Any combination of the lenders listed in paragraphs A to D.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
"Lender" also includes a community loan fund or similar nonprofit lender to housing projects.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
6. Limited equity cooperative. "Limited equity cooperative" means a cooperative affordable housing corporation organized in accordance with section 1754.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
7. Limited equity formula. "Limited equity formula" means a rule or method for determining the transfer value of a share in a limited equity cooperative.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
8. Low income. "Low income" means income that is less than or equal to 80% of median income for the area, adjusted for family size, in
accordance with federal standards generally accepted at the time of incorporation under this subchapter and comparable to
standards of the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development in existence on the effective date of this section.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
9. Member. "Member" means a person who owns a cooperative interest.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
10. Moderate income. "Moderate income" means income that is less than or equal to 100% of median income for the area, adjusted for family size,
in accordance with federal standards generally accepted at the time of incorporation under this subchapter and comparable
to standards of the federal Department of Housing and Urban Development in existence on the effective date of this section.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
11. Proprietary lease. "Proprietary lease" means an agreement with a cooperative affordable housing corporation governing a member's right to occupancy
under which a member has an exclusive possessory interest in a unit.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
12. Resident. "Resident" means any occupant of space owned by the cooperative affordable housing corporation.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
13. Share loan. "Share loan" means an agreement entered into by a member and a lender to finance the member's acquisition of the member's
cooperative interest.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
14. Subscription agreement. "Subscription agreement" means a written agreement between a prospective member and a cooperative affordable housing corporation
for the purchase and sale of a cooperative interest.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
15. Unit. "Unit" means a portion of the cooperative property leased for exclusive occupancy by a member under a proprietary lease
or leased to a tenant by lease agreement.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
Section History:
PL 1993,
Ch. 300,
§1
(NEW).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1743. Application
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1-A: COOPERATIVE AFFORDABLE HOUSING OWNERSHIP (HEADING: PL 1993, c. 300, @1 (new))
§1743. Application
1. Nonprofit. Cooperative affordable housing corporations are considered nonprofit inasmuch as they are not organized to make a profit
for themselves or for their members.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
2. Applicability. Except as otherwise provided in this subchapter, cooperative affordable housing corporations in the State are governed by
and have all the rights, privileges and powers established in Title 13-C. Without limiting the applicability of federal law
to any other corporation or unincorporated association that provides housing on a cooperative basis, it is the intent that
cooperative affordable housing corporations governed by this subchapter qualify as cooperative housing corporations under
federal law.
[RR 2001, c. 2, Pt. B, §27 (cor); §58 (aff).]
3. Election. Any corporation governed by Title 13-C may elect by a vote of 23 of the members voting to secure the benefits of and be
bound by this subchapter and must then amend its articles of incorporation to conform with this subchapter.
[RR 2001, c. 2, Pt. B, §27 (cor); §58 (aff).]
4. Exemption. Any corporation or unincorporated association that does not elect to be governed under this subchapter may not be restricted
from providing housing on a cooperative basis whether as a consumer cooperative under subchapter I or otherwise.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
Section History:
PL 1993,
Ch. 300,
§1
(NEW).
RR 2001,
Ch. 2,
§B27
(COR).
RR 2001,
Ch. 2,
§B58
(AFF).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1744. Name; use of "cooperative"
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1-A: COOPERATIVE AFFORDABLE HOUSING OWNERSHIP (HEADING: PL 1993, c. 300, @1 (new))
§1744. Name; use of "cooperative"
A person, firm, corporation or association, domestic or foreign, commencing business in this State after the effective date
of this section may not use the word "cooperative" or "co-op" as a part of its corporate name unless it has complied with
this subchapter or any other law of this State relating to cooperative associations. A foreign association organized under
and complying with the cooperative laws of the state in which it was created is entitled to use the term "cooperative" or
"co-op" in this State if it has obtained the privilege of doing business or carrying on activities in this State.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
Section History:
PL 1993,
Ch. 300,
§1
(NEW).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1745. Property classification of cooperative interest
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1-A: COOPERATIVE AFFORDABLE HOUSING OWNERSHIP (HEADING: PL 1993, c. 300, @1 (new))
§1745. Property classification of cooperative interest
1. Personal property. A cooperative interest is personal property.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
2. Nonseverable interest. The possessory interest evidenced by a proprietary lease is a part of and may not be severed from a cooperative interest.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
Section History:
PL 1993,
Ch. 300,
§1
(NEW).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1746. Perfection of security interests in cooperative interests
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1-A: COOPERATIVE AFFORDABLE HOUSING OWNERSHIP (HEADING: PL 1993, c. 300, @1 (new))
§1746. Perfection of security interests in cooperative interests
1. Creation of security interest. Security interests in shares of cooperative affordable housing corporations may be created, perfected and enforced in the
same manner as security interests in certificated securities under Title 11, Articles 8-A and 9-A. A lender may perfect such
a security interest by possession of shares or by any other method under which security interests in certificated securities
may be perfected pursuant to Title 11, Article 8-A.
[1999, c. 699, Pt. D, §9 (amd); §30 (aff).]
2. Notation of secured party. Upon the request of a secured party, a cooperative affordable housing corporation shall note on its books and records the
interest of the secured party in a cooperative interest. Such a request or notation is not required to perfect a security
interest in a cooperative interest.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
Section History:
PL 1993,
Ch. 300,
§1
(NEW).
PL 1999,
Ch. 699,
§D30
(AFF).
PL 1999,
Ch. 699,
§D9
(AMD).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1747. Articles of incorporation; minimum requirements
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1-A: COOPERATIVE AFFORDABLE HOUSING OWNERSHIP (HEADING: PL 1993, c. 300, @1 (new))
§1747. Articles of incorporation; minimum requirements
Articles of incorporation of a cooperative affordable housing corporation must contain the following provisions in addition
to those required by Title 13-C:
[RR 2001, c. 2, Pt. B, §28 (cor); §58 (aff).]
1. One class of stock. A statement that the cooperative affordable housing corporation has only one class of stock;
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
2. Restrictions on transfers. A statement of restrictions, if any, upon transfers of shares;
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
3. Rate of dividend. The rate of dividend, if any, allocable to membership shares, which may not exceed 6% per annum on invested capital;
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
4. Acquire membership. The conditions, if any, under which the cooperative affordable housing corporation reserves the right to acquire membership
shares;
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
5. Distribution upon dissolution. The basis for distribution of assets in the event of dissolution;
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
6. Allocation of ownership and voting interests. The method of allocation of ownership and voting interests in the cooperative affordable housing corporation; and
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
7. Right of first refusal. The conditions, if any, under which the cooperative affordable housing corporation has a right of first refusal upon proposed
transfers of cooperative interest.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
Section History:
PL 1993,
Ch. 300,
§1
(NEW).
RR 2001,
Ch. 2,
§B28
(COR).
RR 2001,
Ch. 2,
§B58
(AFF).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1748. Organizational meeting
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1-A: COOPERATIVE AFFORDABLE HOUSING OWNERSHIP (HEADING: PL 1993, c. 300, @1 (new))
§1748. Organizational meeting
Within 6 months after the first conveyance of a share to a member, an organizational meeting of the cooperative affordable
housing corporation must be held for the purpose of adopting bylaws, electing officers and transacting such other business
as may come before the meeting.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
Section History:
PL 1993,
Ch. 300,
§1
(NEW).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1749. Membership
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1-A: COOPERATIVE AFFORDABLE HOUSING OWNERSHIP (HEADING: PL 1993, c. 300, @1 (new))
§1749. Membership
1. Capital stock. A cooperative affordable housing corporation must be organized on a membership basis with capital stock.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
2. Requirements. A cooperative affordable housing corporation must have one class of stock and one class of members. The designation, qualifications,
requirements, method of acceptance and incidents of membership must be set forth in the articles of incorporation or the bylaws.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
3. Transfers. A member may not transfer membership except as permitted in the articles of incorporation or the bylaws.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
4. Termination. The articles of incorporation or the bylaws may provide for termination of membership and the conditions and terms of termination.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
Section History:
PL 1993,
Ch. 300,
§1
(NEW).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1750. Bylaws; minimum requirements
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1-A: COOPERATIVE AFFORDABLE HOUSING OWNERSHIP (HEADING: PL 1993, c. 300, @1 (new))
§1750. Bylaws; minimum requirements
The bylaws of a cooperative affordable housing corporation must contain procedures under which the cooperative affordable
housing corporation's possessory remedy will be pursued in the event of a member's default and the rights of a defaulting
member, in accordance with section 1755, subsection 2.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
Section History:
PL 1993,
Ch. 300,
§1
(NEW).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1751. Membership shares; requirements
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1-A: COOPERATIVE AFFORDABLE HOUSING OWNERSHIP (HEADING: PL 1993, c. 300, @1 (new))
§1751. Membership shares; requirements
A cooperative affordable housing corporation shall issue shares to its members as evidence of their ownership of a cooperative
interest. The shares must be in a form prescribed in the articles of incorporation or bylaws of the cooperative affordable
housing corporation. Restrictions upon transfers of shares must be noted on the face of the certificates representing shares.
Membership shares may not be issued under this section and proprietary leases may not be issued under section 1755 before
filing of the articles of incorporation as a cooperative affordable housing corporation.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
Section History:
PL 1993,
Ch. 300,
§1
(NEW).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1752. Voting
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1-A: COOPERATIVE AFFORDABLE HOUSING OWNERSHIP (HEADING: PL 1993, c. 300, @1 (new))
§1752. Voting
1. One vote per member. Except as provided in subsection 5, the votes in a cooperative affordable housing corporation must be assigned so that each
member has one vote.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
2. Nonmembers on board. Nonmembers may be elected by the membership of the cooperative affordable housing corporation to serve on the board of directors
of the cooperative affordable housing corporation, except that no more than 13 of the directors may be nonmembers.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
3. Proxy voting. Voting by proxy may be permitted in cooperative affordable housing corporations, subject to the following limitations:
A. Proxies must be assigned to members; and
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
B. No more than one proxy may be voted by any member on any question.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
4. Absentee ballots. Voting by absentee ballots may be permitted in cooperative affordable housing corporations.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
5. Alternative voting scheme. Notwithstanding subsection 1, a cooperative affordable housing corporation not organized as a limited equity cooperative
pursuant to section 1754 may adopt in its articles of incorporation or bylaws a voting scheme other than one vote per member,
except that decisions to merge a cooperative affordable housing corporation with another entity, to dissolve it or to amend
its articles of incorporation or bylaws must be made on the basis of one vote per member.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
Section History:
PL 1993,
Ch. 300,
§1
(NEW).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1753. Merger; consolidation
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1-A: COOPERATIVE AFFORDABLE HOUSING OWNERSHIP (HEADING: PL 1993, c. 300, @1 (new))
§1753. Merger; consolidation
A cooperative affordable housing corporation may not consolidate or merge with another corporation other than a cooperative
affordable housing corporation. Two or more cooperative affordable housing corporations may consolidate or merge in accordance
with Title 13-C, chapter 11. Cooperative affordable housing corporations may not engage in mergers or consolidation if such
an action is undertaken for the purpose of circumventing section 1754, 1757, 1758 or 1761.
[RR 2001, c. 2, Pt. B, §29 (cor); §58 (aff).]
Section History:
PL 1993,
Ch. 300,
§1
(NEW).
RR 2001,
Ch. 2,
§B29
(COR).
RR 2001,
Ch. 2,
§B58
(AFF).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1754. Limited equity cooperatives
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1-A: COOPERATIVE AFFORDABLE HOUSING OWNERSHIP (HEADING: PL 1993, c. 300, @1 (new))
§1754. Limited equity cooperatives
A cooperative affordable housing corporation may organize as a limited equity cooperative in order to fulfill the public purpose
of providing and preserving housing for persons and households of low income and moderate income at the time that they purchase
their memberships. In addition to safeguarding the public purpose, a limited equity cooperative must meet the following requirements.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
1. Sale of interest based on limited equity formula. The articles of incorporation must require that cooperative interests be sold at no more than a transfer value determined
by a limited equity formula contained in the articles. That value must be consistent with the object of maintaining long-term
affordability of cooperative interests for persons or households of low income and moderate income.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
2. Maintenance of affordability. A limited equity formula, once established by a cooperative affordable housing corporation in its articles of incorporation,
may be amended only if that amendment does not make the cooperative membership unaffordable for classes of low-income or moderate-income
households for which the cooperative affordable housing corporation was originally incorporated. A cooperative affordable
housing corporation once organized under this section may not reorganize as other than a limited equity cooperative without
first dissolving.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
3. Uphold public purpose. A limited equity cooperative may not sell all or substantially all of its assets if such sale is intended to circumvent
the public purpose of this section.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
4. Right to repurchase. The articles of incorporation must require that the cooperative affordable housing corporation has the first right to repurchase
a member's cooperative interest.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
5. Limit on capital distribution. The articles of incorporation must require that the total distribution of capital to a member not exceed the transfer value.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
6. Distribution upon dissolution. The articles of incorporation must require that upon dissolution of the cooperative affordable housing corporation any assets
remaining after retirement of corporate debts and distribution to members must be distributed to a charitable organization
described in the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, Section 501(c)(3), as amended, a public agency or another limited equity cooperative
whose formula for determining transfer value is no less restrictive than that of the cooperative affordable housing corporation
being dissolved.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
7. Sublease limitations. The articles of incorporation must require that a sublease of a unit may not require monthly payments by the sublessee in
excess of 100% of the monthly payments for the unit required in the proprietary lease.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
8. Minimum occupancy requirement. At least 80% of a limited equity cooperative's occupied units must be occupied by members.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
9. Residents only. Voting authority may not be assigned to nonresidents, except for any assignment as security for a share loan or as security
for a loan for construction, acquisition or permanent financing of cooperative property.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
Section History:
PL 1993,
Ch. 300,
§1
(NEW).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1755. Proprietary lease
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1-A: COOPERATIVE AFFORDABLE HOUSING OWNERSHIP (HEADING: PL 1993, c. 300, @1 (new))
§1755. Proprietary lease
Every member of a cooperative affordable housing corporation is entitled to receive from the cooperative affordable housing
corporation a written proprietary lease that must include the following:
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
1. Personal property security interest. A provision that the collateral for a loan against the member's cooperative interest is in the nature of a personal property
security interest and any default of such a loan entitles the lender to treat the default in the same manner as a default
of a loan secured by personal property;
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
2. Remedy for default. A description of the cooperative affordable housing corporation's possessory remedy in the event of default. Good cause
is required for termination of the right of occupancy. "Good cause" includes nonpayment of loans, fees, costs or assessments
pertaining to the cooperative interest or material violation of bylaws, rules or proprietary lease that continues following
reasonable notice and reasonable opportunity to cure the alleged material violations; and
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
3. Maintenance and carrying charges. Provisions for determining maintenance and carrying charges for the unit.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
Section History:
PL 1993,
Ch. 300,
§1
(NEW).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1756. Offering of cooperative interests; subscription agreement; disclosures required
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1-A: COOPERATIVE AFFORDABLE HOUSING OWNERSHIP (HEADING: PL 1993, c. 300, @1 (new))
§1756. Offering of cooperative interests; subscription agreement; disclosures required
1. Materials provided to prospective members. In conjunction with the offering of cooperative interests to prospective members, a person or entity offering to sell cooperative
interests shall provide to a purchaser prior to the execution of a subscription agreement by the purchaser a copy of the proposed
or adopted articles of incorporation and bylaws of the cooperative affordable housing corporation, a subscription agreement
or sales agreement, a proposed proprietary lease and the most current corporate financial statements, if any exist.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
2. Contents of agreements. The subscription agreement or sales agreement must contain:
A. Provisions detailing the cost of acquisition of a cooperative interest, the rights and privileges of membership in the cooperative
affordable housing corporation and terms and conditions of occupancy of a unit in the cooperative affordable housing corporation;
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
B. Provisions, if any, under which the subscription agreement or sales agreement is subordinated to other agreements or otherwise
encumbered;
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
C. Provisions for cancellation of the agreement by either party; and
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
D. A legally sufficient description of the property.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
3. Cancellation. The subscriber or purchaser has the right to cancel the subscription agreement or sales agreement without penalty upon provision
of written notice to the offeror within 10 days of the date of signing the agreement. In the event of a cancellation, all
money paid by the subscriber or purchaser to the offeror must be returned to the subscriber or purchaser by the offeror within
14 days of receipt of the notice of cancellation. The offeror shall inform the subscriber or purchaser in writing of the
right of cancellation.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
div>
Notwithstanding any other provision of law to the contrary, the offer of membership, shares or other ownership interests in
a cooperative affordable housing corporation or any other corporation or unincorporated association organized for the primary
purpose of providing housing on a cooperative basis as a consumer cooperative under subchapter 1 or otherwise is not the offer
of a security pursuant to Title 32, chapter 135 or any other provision of law.
[2005, c. 65, Pt. C, §7 (amd).]
Section History:
PL 1993,
Ch. 300,
§1
(NEW).
PL 2005,
Ch. 65,
§C7
(AMD).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1757. Consumer protection; enforcement
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1-A: COOPERATIVE AFFORDABLE HOUSING OWNERSHIP (HEADING: PL 1993, c. 300, @1 (new))
§1757. Consumer protection; enforcement
Failure or neglect to provide to purchasers the documents and disclosures required by section 1756 is considered a violation
of Title 10, chapter 206.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
Section History:
PL 1993,
Ch. 300,
§1
(NEW).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1758. Dissolution
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1-A: COOPERATIVE AFFORDABLE HOUSING OWNERSHIP (HEADING: PL 1993, c. 300, @1 (new))
§1758. Dissolution
By vote of at least 80% of its members or any larger percentage specified in the articles of incorporation or bylaws, a cooperative
affordable housing corporation may vote to dissolve and terminate its proprietary leases.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
Section History:
PL 1993,
Ch. 300,
§1
(NEW).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1759. Loans
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1-A: COOPERATIVE AFFORDABLE HOUSING OWNERSHIP (HEADING: PL 1993, c. 300, @1 (new))
§1759. Loans
Any lender is authorized to make loans secured by shares in a cooperative affordable housing corporation, including limited
equity cooperatives. For purposes of Title 9-A, section 1-202, subsection (8), a loan secured by shares of a cooperative
affordable housing corporation must be considered a loan secured by a mortgage on real estate.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
Section History:
PL 1993,
Ch. 300,
§1
(NEW).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1760. Net income; apportionment
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1-A: COOPERATIVE AFFORDABLE HOUSING OWNERSHIP (HEADING: PL 1993, c. 300, @1 (new))
§1760. Net income; apportionment
1. Apportionment. Subject to subsection 2, the board of directors of a cooperative affordable housing corporation may apportion annually the
remainder of its net income in one or more of the following ways:
A. As a reserve fund for the general operation of the cooperative affordable housing corporation; or
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
B. As a dividend not to exceed 6% per annum on invested capital.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
2. Cost reduction. This section does not prevent a cooperative affordable housing corporation from disposing of its net income by reducing
the cost of facilities or services or by applying the net income otherwise for the common benefit of its members.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
Section History:
PL 1993,
Ch. 300,
§1
(NEW).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1761. Nondiscrimination
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1-A: COOPERATIVE AFFORDABLE HOUSING OWNERSHIP (HEADING: PL 1993, c. 300, @1 (new))
§1761. Nondiscrimination
Title 5, chapter 337, subchapter IV applies to all cooperative affordable housing corporations in the State.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
Section History:
PL 1993,
Ch. 300,
§1
(NEW).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1762. Property tax provisions
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 1-A: COOPERATIVE AFFORDABLE HOUSING OWNERSHIP (HEADING: PL 1993, c. 300, @1 (new))
§1762. Property tax provisions
1. Property not tax-exempt. Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, cooperative property does not qualify for property tax exemption under
Title 36, section 652, subsection 1, paragraph A.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
2. Eligibility for property tax relief. Without limiting the eligibility of members of any other corporation or unincorporated association that provides housing
on a cooperative basis for tax relief, a member of a cooperative affordable housing corporation is eligible for any relief
afforded to property taxpayers under law.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
3. Homestead exemption from attachment and execution. Title 14, section 4422 applies to cooperative interests in cooperative affordable housing corporations.
[1993, c. 300, §1 (new).]
Section History:
PL 1993,
Ch. 300,
§1
(NEW).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1771. Short title
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 1: General Provisions
§1771. Short title
This subchapter may be cited as the "Uniform Agricultural Cooperative Association Act".
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
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Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1772. Policy
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 1: General Provisions
§1772. Policy
It is the declared policy of this State, as one means of improving the economic position of agriculture, to encourage the
organization of producers of agricultural products into effective associations under the control of such producers, and to
that end this subchapter should be liberally construed.
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
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Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1773. Uniformity of interpretation
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 1: General Provisions
§1773. Uniformity of interpretation
This subchapter shall be so interpreted and construed as to effectuate its general purpose to make uniform the law of those
states which enact it.
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
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Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1774. Definitions
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 1: General Provisions
§1774. Definitions
As used in this subchapter, unless the context otherwise indicates, the following terms shall have the following meanings.
[1979, c. 541, Pt. A, §133 (amd).]
1. Agricultural products. "Agricultural products" include floricultural, horticultural, viticultural, forestry, nut, dairy, livestock, poultry, bee
and any farm products.
2. Articles. "Articles" means the articles of incorporation.
3. Association. "Association" means a corporation organized under this subchapter, or a similar domestic corporation, or a foreign association
or corporation if authorized to do business in this State, organized under any general or special Act as a cooperative association
for the mutual benefit of its members, as agricultural producers, and which confines its operations to purposes authorized
by this subchapter and restricts the return on the stock or membership capital and the amount of its business with nonmembers
to the limits placed thereon by this subchapter for associations organized hereunder.
[1993, c. 316, §10 (amd).]
4. Board. "Board" means the board of directors.
5. Domestic association. "Domestic association" means an association or corporation formed under the laws of this State.
6. Foreign association. "Foreign association" means an association or corporation not formed under the laws of this State.
6-A. Independent agricultural contractor. "Independent agricultural contractor" means a person who grows under contract as his primary activity or as part of a general
agricultural activity.
[1971, c. 502 (new).]
6-B. Marketing contract. "Marketing contract" includes a contract related to the marketing of agricultural products and a contract by an independent
agricultural contractor for furnishing services and facilities in raising or growing agricultural products.
[1971, c. 502 (new).]
7. Member. "Member" includes the holder of a membership in an association without capital stock and the holder of common stock in an
association organized with capital stock.
8. Person. "Person" includes an individual, a partnership, a corporation and an association.
8-A. Producers. "Producers" includes independent agricultural contractors.
[1971, c. 502 (new).]
9. Subchapter. "This subchapter" means the "Uniform Agricultural Cooperative Association Act."
Section History:
PL 1971,
Ch. 502,
§
(AMD).
PL 1979,
Ch. 541,
§A133
(AMD).
PL 1993,
Ch. 316,
§10
(AMD).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
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Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1775. Existing associations
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 1: General Provisions
§1775. Existing associations
Any existing association formed under any law of this State as a cooperative agricultural association may elect, by a vote
of 23 of the members voting thereon at a legal meeting, to secure the benefits of and be bound by this subchapter, and shall
thereupon amend such of its articles and bylaws as are not in conformity with this subchapter. A certificate of the action
taken at such meeting shall be filed with the Secretary of State within 20 days after such meeting, and a fee of $5 shall
be paid.
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
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Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1776. Use of word "cooperative"
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 1: General Provisions
§1776. Use of word "cooperative"
No person, firm, corporation or association, domestic or foreign, hereafter commencing business in this State shall use the
word "cooperative" as a part of its corporate or business name unless it has complied with this subchapter or some other statute
of this State relating to cooperative associations. A foreign association organized under and complying with the cooperative
law of the state of such association's creation shall be entitled to use the term "cooperative" in this State if it has obtained
the privilege of doing business in this State.
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
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Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1777. Foreign associations
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 1: General Provisions
§1777. Foreign associations
A foreign corporation that can qualify as an association, as defined in section 1774, may be authorized to do business in
this State under this subchapter by complying with the laws relating to foreign corporations doing business in the State.
It shall pay the same fees and charges as domestic associations. Upon such compliance it shall have all the rights and privileges
of like domestic associations.
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
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Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1778. Inducing breach of contract; spreading false reports; penalty
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 1: General Provisions
§1778. Inducing breach of contract; spreading false reports; penalty
1. Violation. A person may not:
A. Knowingly induce a member or stockholder of an association to violate the member's or stockholder's marketing contract with
the association;
[2003, c. 452, Pt. G, §1 (new); Pt. X, §2 (aff).]
B. Knowingly attempt to induce a member or stockholder of an association to violate the member's or stockholder's marketing
contract with the association; or
[2003, c. 452, Pt. G, §1 (new); Pt. X, §2 (aff).]
C. Intentionally or knowingly spread false reports about the finances or management of the association.
[2003, c. 452, Pt. G, §1 (new); Pt. X, §2 (aff).]
[2003, c. 452, Pt. G, §1 (new); Pt. X, §2 (aff).]
2. Penalties. A person or corporation whose employees or officers violate this section commits a civil violation for which a fine of not
less than $100 and not more than $1,000 may be adjudged for each such offense. In addition, the person or corporation is
subject to a civil penalty of $500 for each such offense, to be recovered in a civil action by the aggrieved association.
[2003, c. 452, Pt. G, §1 (new); Pt. X, §2 (aff).]
Section History:
PL 2003,
Ch. 452,
§G1
(RPR).
PL 2003,
Ch. 452,
§X2
(AFF).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
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Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1779. License fees
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 1: General Provisions
§1779. License fees
Domestic associations and foreign associations admitted to do business in this State shall pay an annual license fee of $10,
which shall be in lieu of all other corporation and franchise taxes.
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
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Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1780. Savings clause
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 1: General Provisions
§1780. Savings clause
This subchapter shall not impair or affect any act done, offense committed or right accruing, accrued or acquired, or liability,
penalty, forfeiture or punishment incurred prior to July 21, 1945, but the same may be enjoyed, asserted, enforced, prosecuted
or inflicted as fully and to the same extent as if this subchapter had not been passed.
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
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Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1781. Nonprofit associations
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 1: General Provisions
§1781. Nonprofit associations
An association is deemed "nonprofit," as the association is not organized to make a profit for that association or for its
members, but only for its members as producers of agricultural products.
[1993, c. 316, §11 (new).]
Section History:
PL 1993,
Ch. 316,
§11
(NEW).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
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Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1782. General corporation law; applicability
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 1: General Provisions
§1782. General corporation law; applicability
The provisions of the laws related to business corporations and all powers and rights under those laws apply to associations,
except when those provisions are in conflict with or inconsistent with the express provisions of this chapter.
[1993, c. 316, §11 (new).]
Section History:
PL 1993,
Ch. 316,
§11
(NEW).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
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Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1821. Incorporators
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 2: Organization and Powers
§1821. Incorporators
Five or more adult persons, engaged in agriculture as bona fide producers of agricultural products, or 2 or more associations
of such producers, may form an association with or without capital stock.
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
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Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1822. Purposes
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 2: Organization and Powers
§1822. Purposes
Such association may be organized for the purpose of engaging in any cooperative activity for producers of agricultural products
in connection with:
1. Producing, selling, etc. Producing, assembling, marketing, buying or selling agricultural products, or harvesting, preserving, drying, processing,
manufacturing, blending, canning, packing, ginning, grading, storing, warehousing, handling, shipping or utilizing such products,
or manufacturing or marketing the by-products thereof;
2. Equipment, feed, fertilizer, etc. Manufacturing, buying for or supplying to its members and other patrons, machinery, equipment, feed, fertilizer, fuel, seeds
and other agricultural and household supplies;
3. Business or educational services. Performing or furnishing business or educational services, on a cooperative basis, for or to its members and other patrons;
or
4. Financing. Financing any of the above enumerated activities for its members, subject to the limitations of Title 9-B, section 466.
[1977, c. 564, § 66 (amd).]
Section History:
PL 1977,
Ch. 564,
§66
(AMD).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
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Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1823. Articles of incorporation
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 2: Organization and Powers
§1823. Articles of incorporation
Articles of incorporation shall be signed by each of the incorporators and acknowledged by at least 3 of them if natural persons,
and by the president and secretary if associations, before an officer authorized to take acknowledgments, and shall state:
1. Name. The name of the association which may or may not include the word "cooperative";
2. Purposes. Its purposes;
3. Duration. Its duration;
4. Location of office. The location and post-office address of its registered office in this State;
5. Name and address of incorporators; number of shares. The name and post-office address of the incorporators, and if organized with capital stock, a statement of the number of
shares subscribed by each, which shall not be less than one, and the class of shares for which each subscribes;
6. Names and addresses of first directors. The names of the first directors and their post-office addresses;
7. With or without capital stock; if with, par value shares. Whether organized with or without capital stock; and if organized with capital stock the total authorized number of par value
shares and the par value of each share, and if any of its shares have no par value, the authorized number of such shares;
and if more than one class of stock is authorized, a description of the classes of shares, the number of shares in each class,
the relative rights, preferences and restrictions granted to or imposed upon the shares of each class and the dividends to
which each class shall be entitled;
8. If without, rights and interests of members. If organized without capital stock, whether the property rights and interests of each member are equal or unequal; if unequal,
the rule by which such rights and interests shall be determined; and
9. Other provisions. The articles may contain any other provisions, consistent with law for regulating the association's business or the conduct
of its affairs, the establishment of voting districts, the election of delegates to represent such districts and the members
residing therein, for voting by proxy, and issuance, retirement and transfer of memberships and stock.
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
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Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1824. Filing and recording certificate of incorporation
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 2: Organization and Powers
§1824. Filing and recording certificate of incorporation
Before commencing business, the president, treasurer and a majority of the directors or trustees of every corporation organized
under this subchapter shall prepare a certificate setting forth the articles of incorporation and the names and addresses
of the officers, and shall sign and make oath to it. Said certificate shall be presented to the Secretary of State accompanied
by a copy thereof or by a data sheet containing all of the information required. After said certificate has been examined
by the Secretary of State, and been by him certified to be properly drawn and signed and to be conformable to the Constitution
and laws, it shall be recorded in the registry of deeds in the county where said corporation is located, in a book kept for
that purpose, and within 60 days after the day of the meeting at which such corporation is organized, a copy thereof certified
by such register shall be filed in the office of the Secretary of State, who shall enter the date of filing thereon, and on
the original certificate to be kept by the corporation and shall record said copy in a book kept for that purpose. A fee of
$5 shall be paid to the Secretary of State and a fee of $8 shall be paid to registers of deeds for recording such certificate
and certifying copies thereof for filing with the Secretary of State.
[1977, c. 522, § 8 (amd).]
Section History:
PL 1977,
Ch. 522,
§8
(AMD).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
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Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1825. Amendment of articles
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 2: Organization and Powers
§1825. Amendment of articles
1. Procedure. An association may amend its articles of incorporation by the affirmative vote of 23 of the members voting thereon at any
regular meeting, or at a special meeting called for the purpose, or if the association permits its members to vote on the
basis of patronage, by the affirmative vote of a majority of the members representing 23 of the membership patronage voting
thereon. A written or printed notice of the proposed amendment and of the time and place of holding such meetings shall be
delivered to each member, or mailed to his last known address as shown by the books of the association, at least 30 days prior
to any such meetings. No amendment affecting the preferential rights of any outstanding stock shall be adopted until the written
consent of the holders of 23 of the outstanding preference shares has been obtained.
2. Certificate recorded. After an amendment has been adopted, a certificate shall be prepared setting forth the amendment and the adoption thereof,
and shall be signed and sworn to by the president or vice-president and by the treasurer or secretary or assistant secretary,
and filed, recorded and indorsed as in the case of original certificate of incorporation. For filing or recording an amendment
to the articles, the association shall pay to the registers of deeds a fee of $5, and a fee of $5 shall be paid to the Secretary
of State.
[1977, c. 522, § 9 (amd).]
Section History:
PL 1977,
Ch. 522,
§9
(AMD).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
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Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1826. Bylaws
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 2: Organization and Powers
§1826. Bylaws
The members of the association may adopt bylaws not inconsistent with law or the articles, and they may alter and amend the
same from time to time. The bylaws must be adopted by a majority of the members voting thereon, or if the association permits
its members to vote on the basis of patronage, then by a majority of members and a majority of the patronage voting thereon.
The bylaws may provide for:
1. Meetings; quorum. The time, place and manner of calling and conducting meetings of the members, and the number of members that shall constitute
a quorum;
2. Manner of voting. The manner of voting and the condition upon which members may vote at general and special meetings and by mail or by delegates
elected by district groups or other associations, and the voting power of votes based on patronage;
3. Provisions as to directors and officers. Subject to any provision thereon in the articles and in this subchapter, the number, qualifications, compensation, duties
and terms of office of directors and officers; the time of their election and the mode and manner of giving notice thereof;
4. Meetings of directors and executive committee; quorum. The time, place and manner for calling and holding meetings of the directors and executive committee, and the number that
shall constitute a quorum;
5. Rules. Rules consistent with law and the articles for the management of the association, the establishment of voting districts,
the making of contracts, the issuance, retirement and transfer of stock, and the relative rights, interests and preferences
of members and shareholders; and
6. Penalties. Penalties for violation of the bylaws.
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
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Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1827. General and special meetings
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 2: Organization and Powers
§1827. General and special meetings
An association may provide in its bylaws for one or more regular meetings each year, which may be held within or without the
State at the time and place designated in the bylaws. Special meetings of the members may be called by the board of directors,
and it shall be their duty to call such meetings when 10% of the members file with the secretary a petition demanding a special
meeting and specifying the business to be considered at such meeting. Notice of all meetings, except as otherwise provided
by law, or the articles or bylaws, shall be mailed to each member at least 10 days prior to the meeting, and in case of special
meetings the notice shall state the purposes for which it is called, but the bylaws may require that all notices, except of
proposed amendments to the articles, shall be given by publication in a periodical published by or for the association, to
which substantially all its members are subscribers, or in a newspaper or newspapers whose combined circulation is general
in the territory in which the association operates.
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1828. Powers
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 2: Organization and Powers
§1828. Powers
1. Capacity to act. An association formed under this subchapter, or an association which might be formed under this subchapter and which existed
at the time this Act took effect, shall have the capacity to act possessed by natural persons, but such association shall
have authority to perform only such acts as are necessary or proper to accomplish the purposes as set forth in its articles
and which are not repugnant to law.
2. Authority. Without limiting or enlarging the grant of authority contained in subsection 1, it is specifically provided that every such
association shall have authority:
A. To act as agent, broker or attorney in fact for its members and other patrons, and for any subsidiary or affiliated association,
and otherwise to assist or join with associations engaged in any one or more of the activities authorized by its articles,
and to hold title for its members and other patrons and for subsidiary and affiliated associations to property handled or
managed by the association on their behalf;
B. To make contracts, and to exercise by its board or duly authorized officers or agents, all such incidental powers as may
be necessary, suitable or proper for the accomplishment of the purposes of the association and not inconsistent with law or
its articles, and that may be conducive to or expedient for the interest or benefit of the association;
C. To make loans or advances to members or producer-patrons against products delivered or to be delivered to the association,
or to the members of an association which is itself a member or subsidiary thereof; to purchase, otherwise acquire, indorse,
discount or sell any evidence of debt, obligation or security, but it shall not engage in banking;
D. To establish and accumulate reserves;
E. To own and hold membership in or shares of the capital stock of other associations and corporations and the bonds or other
obligations thereof, engaged in any related activity; or, in producing, warehousing or marketing or purchasing any of the
products handled by the association; or, in financing its activities, and while the owner thereof, to exercise all the rights
of ownership, including the right to vote thereon;
F. To acquire, hold, sell, dispose of, pledge or mortgage any property which its purposes may require, subject to any limitation
prescribed by law or its articles;
G. To borrow money and to give its notes, bonds or other obligations therefor and secure the payment thereof by mortgage or
pledge;
H. To deal in products of, and handle machinery, equipment, supplies and perform services for nonmembers to an amount not greater
in annual value than such as are dealt in, handled or performed for or on behalf of its members, but the value of the annual
purchases made for persons who are neither members nor producers shall not exceed 15% of the value of all its purchases;
I. To have a corporate seal and to alter the same at pleasure;
J. To continue as a corporation for the time limited in its articles, and if no time limit is specified, then perpetually;
K. To sue and be sued in its corporate name;
L. To conduct business in this State and elsewhere as may be permitted by law; and
M. To dissolve and settle its affairs.
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
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Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1829. Information and advice for members
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 2: Organization and Powers
§1829. Information and advice for members
1. Not in restraint of trade. No association complying with the terms hereof shall be deemed to be a conspiracy, or a combination in restraint of trade
or an illegal monopoly; or be deemed to have been formed for the purpose of lessening competition or fixing prices arbitrarily,
nor shall the contracts between the association and its members, or any agreements authorized in this subchapter, be construed
as an unlawful restraint of trade or as part of a conspiracy or combination to accomplish an improper or illegal purpose or
act.
2. Information. An association may acquire, exchange, interpret and disseminate to its members, to other cooperative associations and otherwise,
past, present and prospective crop, market, statistical, economic and other similar information relating to the business of
the association, either directly or through an agent created or selected by it or by other associations acting in conjunction
with it.
3. Advice. An association may advise its members in respect to the adjustment of their current and prospective production of agricultural
commodities and its relation to the prospective volume of consumption, selling prices and existing or potential surplus, to
the end that every market may be served from the most convenient productive areas under a program of orderly marketing that
will assure adequate supplies without undue enhancement of prices or the accumulation of any undue surplus.
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1871. Directors
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 3: Officers and Directors
§1871. Directors
1. Membership; term. The business of the association shall be managed by a board of not less than 3 directors. The directors shall be members
of the association or officers, general managers, directors or members of a member association. A director shall hold office
for the term for which he was named or elected and until his successor is elected and qualified.
2. Names; successors. The names of the first directors shall be stated in the articles. Their successors shall be elected by the members as prescribed
by the articles or bylaws.
3. Duties, etc. prescribed by articles or bylaws. The number, qualifications, terms of office, manner of election, time and place of meeting
and the powers and duties of the directors may, subject to this subchapter, be prescribed by the articles or bylaws.
4. District directors. The bylaws may provide, if not restricted by the articles, that the territory in which the association has members shall
be divided into districts and that the directors shall be elected according to such districts, either directly or by district
delegates elected by the members in that district. In such case, the bylaws shall specify or vest in the board of directors
authority to determine the number of directors to be elected by each district and the manner and method of apportioning the
directors and of districting and redistricting the territory covered by the association. The bylaws may provide that primary
elections shall be held in each district to nominate the directors apportioned thereto and that the result of all such primary
elections may be ratified by the next regular meeting of the association or may be considered as a final election.
5. Executive committee. The bylaws may provide for an executive committee to be elected by the board of directors from their number and may allot
to such committee all the functions and powers of the board, subject to its general direction and control.
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1872. -- removal
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 3: Officers and Directors
§1872. -- removal
Any member may ask for the removal of a director by filing charges with the secretary or president of the association, together
with a petition signed by 5% of the members requesting the removal of the director in question. The removal shall be voted
upon at the next meeting of the members, and by 23 of the voting power voting thereon the association may remove the director.
The director whose removal is requested shall be served with a copy of the charges not less than 10 days prior to the meeting
and shall have an opportunity at the meeting to be heard in person and by counsel and to present evidence. The persons requesting
the removal shall have the same opportunity. In case the bylaws provide for election of directors by districts, then the petition
for removal of a director must be signed by 20% of the members residing in the district from which he was elected. The board
must call a special meeting of the members residing in that district to consider the removal of the director, and by 23 of
the voting power of the members of that district voting thereon the director in question may be removed from office.
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1873. Officers
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 3: Officers and Directors
§1873. Officers
The board shall elect one or more officers as authorized in the bylaws. The bylaws of each cooperative must provide for one
or more officers, including the qualifications for and the titles of those officers.
[1999, c. 48, §1 (amd).]
Section History:
PL 1999,
Ch. 48,
§1
(AMD).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1874. -- removal
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 3: Officers and Directors
§1874. -- removal
Any member may bring charges of misconduct or incompetency against an officer by filing them with the secretary or president
of the association, together with a petition signed by 10% of the members requesting the removal of the officer in question.
The directors shall vote upon the removal of the officer at the first meeting of the board held after the hearing on the charges,
and the officer may be removed by a majority vote, notwithstanding any contract the officer may have with the association,
which shall terminate upon his removal, anything in the contract to the contrary notwithstanding. The officer against whom
such charges are made shall be served with a copy of the charges not less than 10 days prior to the meeting, and shall have
an opportunity at the meeting to be heard in person and by counsel, and to present evidence, and the persons making the charges
shall have the same opportunity.
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1875. Referendum
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 3: Officers and Directors
§1875. Referendum
The articles or bylaws may provide that upon demand of 25 of all the directors, any matter of policy that has been approved
or passed by the board must be referred to the members for their approval before it becomes effective. No referendum shall
be allowed unless it is demanded by the required number of directors at the meeting at which the matter of policy in question
is adopted.
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1911. Members
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 4: Members and Shares
§1911. Members
1. Producers of agricultural products. An association may admit as members only bona fide producers of agricultural products, including tenants and landlords receiving
a share of the crop, and cooperative associations of such producers. The incorporators named in the articles are thereby made
members of the association, and they shall pay for their membership or stock the same amount and in the same manner as may
be required in the case of other members.
2. Limit of common stock. The articles may limit the amount of common stock which a member may own.
3. Vote; liability. Under the terms and conditions prescribed in the bylaws, a member shall lose his vote if he ceases to belong to the class
eligible to membership under this section, but he shall remain subject to any liability incurred by him while a member of
the association.
4. Personal liability. No member shall be personally liable for any debt or liability of the association.
5. One vote. Unless the articles otherwise provide, no member shall have more than one vote.
6. Member defined. In agricultural associations organized under this subchapter the term "member" in associations without capital stock may,
by the bylaws, include any agricultural producer, either corporate or individual, with whom the association shall do business,
either directly or through a member cooperative association, amounting to at least $100 during any fiscal year, and may, by
the bylaws, include employees.
7. Requirements of statute met. Whenever under this subchapter an association is permitted to take any action, provided such action is authorized by a vote
of the members or the vote of a specified proportion of the voting power based on patronage, the requirements of the statute
shall be deemed to have been met by an association which has established voting districts and provided for the election of
delegates, if such action is authorized by a vote of the delegates representing such members or such voting power.
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1912. Certificates; transfers; dividends; preferred stock
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 4: Members and Shares
§1912. Certificates; transfers; dividends; preferred stock
1. Certificate for membership or stock. No certificate for membership or stock shall be issued until fully paid for, but bylaws may provide that a member may vote
and hold office prior to payment in full for his membership or stock.
2. Dividends. Dividends in excess of 8% on the actual cash value of the consideration received by the association shall not be paid on
common or preferred stock or membership capital, but dividends may be cumulative.
3. Net income distributed. Net income in excess of dividends and additions to reserves shall be distributed on the basis of patronage, and the books
of the association shall show the interest of patrons in the reserves. The bylaws may provide that any distribution to a nonmember,
eligible for membership, may be credited to such nonmember until the amount thereof equals the value of a membership certificate
or a share of the association's common stock. The distribution credited to the account of a nonmember may be transferred to
the reserve fund at the option of the board if, after 6 years, the amount is less than the value of the membership certificate
or a share of common stock.
4. Value of member's interest after withdrawal or termination. The bylaws may fix a time within which a member shall receive from the association, after he has notified the association
of his withdrawal, or after the adoption of a resolution by the board terminating his membership, the value in money of his
membership interest in the association as appraised by the board of directors. If the board of directors approves the member's
designation of a transferee of his membership interest, the association shall be under no obligation to pay him the value
of his interest.
5. Preferred stock. An association may issue preferred stock to members and nonmembers. Preferred stock may be redeemed or retired by the association
on such terms and conditions as may be provided in the articles and printed on the stock certificate. Preferred stockholders
shall not be entitled to vote, but no change in their priority or preference rights shall be effective until the written consent
of the holders of 23 of the preferred stock has been obtained. Payment for preferred stock may be made in cash, services
or property on the basis of the fair value of the stock, services and property as determined by the board.
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1951. Consolidation procedure
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 5: Consolidation and Dissolution
§1951. Consolidation procedure
Any 2 or more associations organized with or without capital stock and existing under this subchapter may consolidate into
a single association which may be either one or any one of said associations, or a new association under this subchapter to
be formed by means of such consolidation. Such a consolidation may be effected by a vote of the directors, trustees or managing
board, however designated, of each of said associations at a legal meeting thereof ratifying a proposed agreement of consolidation
and approved by the affirmative vote of 23 of the members of each of said associations voting thereon at any regular meeting
or at a special meeting called for the purpose, which agreement shall then be submitted to the Secretary of State for his
certification as conformable to the laws of this State and when certified by him shall then be recorded in the registry of
deeds in the county where the consolidated association is located and in the county or counties where each of the constituent
associations is located and a copy thereof certified by the register of deeds shall be filed in the office of the Secretary
of State. When said agreement is so certified, recorded and filed, the separate existence of all of the constituent associations,
or all of such constituent associations except the one into which such constituent associations shall have been consolidated,
shall cease and the constituent associations, whether consolidated into a new association or merged into one of such constituent
associations, as the case may be, shall become the consolidated association by the name provided in said agreement, possessing
all the rights, privileges, powers, franchises and immunities as well of a public as of a private nature, and being subject
to all the liabilities, restrictions and duties of each of such associations so consolidated and all and singular the rights,
privileges, powers, franchises and immunities of each of said associations, and all property, real, personal and mixed, and
all debts due to any of said constituent associations on whatever account, and all other things in action of or belonging
to each of said associations shall be vested in the consolidated association. All property, rights, privileges, powers, franchises
and immunities, and all and every other interest shall be thereafter as effectually the property of the consolidated association
as they were of the several and respective constituent associations, and the title to any real estate, whether by deed or
otherwise, under the laws of this State, vested in any of such constituent associations, shall not revert or be in any way
impaired by reason thereof. All rights of creditors and all liens upon the property of any of said constituent associations
shall be preserved unimpaired, limited to the property affected by such liens at the time of the consolidation, and all debts,
liabilities and duties of the respective constituent associations shall henceforth attach to said consolidated association
and may be enforced against it to the same extent as if said debts, liabilities and duties had been incurred or contracted
by it.
[1977, c. 522, § 10 (amd).]
Section History:
PL 1977,
Ch. 522,
§10
(AMD).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1952. Voluntary dissolution
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 5: Consolidation and Dissolution
§1952. Voluntary dissolution
1. Dissolution.
A. The members of an association may at any regular meeting, or any special meeting called for the purpose, upon 30 days' notice
of the time, place and object of the meeting having been given as prescribed in the bylaws, by 23 of the voting power voting
thereon, discontinue the operations of the association and direct that the association be dissolved and its affairs settled.
The meeting shall by like vote designate a committee of 3 members who, as trustees on behalf of the association and within
the time fixed in their designation or any extension thereof, shall liquidate its assets, pay its debts and divide any remainder
among the members or other patrons in accordance with their respective rights and interests under their contracts with the
association and the articles and bylaws. Upon final settlement by such trustees, the association shall be deemed dissolved
and shall cease to exist. The trustees shall make a report, in quadruplicate, of the proceedings had under this section, which
shall be signed and sworn to and filed as required for the filing of the articles of incorporation.
B. The trustees may bring and defend all actions by them deemed necessary to protect and enforce the rights of the association.
C. Any vacancies in the trusteeship may be filled by the remaining trustees.
2. Power of courts. In the case of an association dissolving pursuant to this section, the Superior Court, upon the petition of the trustees
or a majority of them, or a proper case upon the petition of a creditor or member, or upon the petition of the Attorney General,
upon notice to all of the trustees and to such other interested persons as the court may specify, from time to time may order
and adjudge in respect to the following matters:
A. The giving of notice by publication or otherwise of the time and place for the presentation of all claims and demands against
the association, which notice may require all creditors of and claimants against the association to present in writing and
in detail at the place specified in their respective accounts and demands to the trustees by a day therein specified, which
shall not be less than 40 days from the service or first publication of such notice;
B. The payment or satisfaction in whole or in part of claims and demands against the association or the retention of moneys
for such purpose;
C. The presentation and filing of intermediate and final accounts of the trustees, the hearing thereon, the allowance or disallowance
thereof and the discharge of the trustees, or any of them, from their duties and liabilities;
D. The administration of any trust or the disposition of any property held in trust by or for the association;
E. The sale and disposition of any remaining property of the association and the distribution or division of such property
or its proceeds among the members or persons entitled thereto; and
F. Such matters as justice may require.
3. Orders and judgments binding. All orders and judgments shall be binding upon the association, its property and assets, its trustees, members, creditors
and all claimants against it.
4. Application of section. This section shall apply to all associations heretofore or hereafter incorporated in this State.
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1953. Legislative findings and purpose
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 6: Maine Agricultural Marketing and Bargaining Act of 1973
§1953. Legislative findings and purpose
Because agricultural products are produced by numerous individual farmers, the marketing and bargaining position of individual
farmers will be adversely affected unless they are free to join together voluntarily in cooperative organizations as authorized
by law. Furthermore, membership by a farmer in a cooperative organization can only be meaningful, if a handler of agricultural
products is required to bargain in good faith with an agricultural cooperative organization as the representative of the members
of such organization who have had a previous course of dealing with such handler. The purpose of this Article is to provide
standards for the qualification of agricultural cooperative organizations for bargaining purposes, to define the mutual obligation
of handlers and agricultural cooperative organizations to bargain with respect to the production, sale and marketing of agricultural
products and to provide for the enforcement of such obligation.
[1973, c. 621, § 1 (new).]
Section History:
PL 1973,
Ch. 621,
§1
(NEW).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1954. Short title
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 6: Maine Agricultural Marketing and Bargaining Act of 1973
§1954. Short title
Article 6 shall be known and may be cited as the "Maine Agricultural Marketing and Bargaining Act of 1973."
[1973, c. 621, § 1 (new).]
Section History:
PL 1973,
Ch. 621,
§1
(NEW).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1955. Definitions
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 6: Maine Agricultural Marketing and Bargaining Act of 1973
§1955. Definitions
As used in this Article, unless the context otherwise requires, the following words shall have the following meanings.
[1973, c. 621, § 1 (new).]
1. Association of producers. "Association of producers" means any association of producers of agricultural products organized and existing under this
subchapter.
[1973, c. 621, § 1 (new).]
2. Board. "Board" means the Maine Agricultural Bargaining Board provided for in this Article.
[1973, c. 621, § 1 (new).]
3. Handler. "Handler," in the case of potatoes, means "processor" as defined under Title 7, section 1012, subsection 14 and in the case
of other agricultural products means any person engaged in the business or practice of:
A. Acquiring agricultural products from producers or associations of producers for processing or sale;
[1973, c. 621, § 1 (new).]
B. Grading, packaging, handling, storing or processing agricultural products received from producers or associations of producers;
[1973, c. 621, § 1 (new).]
C. Contracting or negotiating contracts or other arrangements, written or oral, with or on behalf of producers or associations
of producers with respect to the production or marketing of any agricultural product; or
[1973, c. 621, § 1 (new).]
D. Acting as an agent or broker for a handler in the performance of any function or act specified in paragraph A, B or C.
[1973, c. 621, § 1 (new).]
[1973, c. 621, § 1 (new).]
4. Person. "Person" includes one or more individuals, partnerships, corporations and associations.
[1973, c. 621, § 1 (new).]
5. Producer. "Producer" means a person engaged in the production of agricultural products, excluding forest products, as a farmer, planter,
rancher, poultryman, dairyman, fruit, vegetable or nut grower, or independent agricultural contractor as specified in section
1774, subsections 6-A and 8-A. If producer is also a handler, he shall be considered only a handler for the purposes of this
Act.
[1973, c. 621, § 1 (new).]
6. Qualified association. "Qualified association" means an association of producers accredited in accordance with section 1957.
[1973, c. 621, § 1 (new).]
Section History:
PL 1973,
Ch. 621,
§1
(NEW).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1956. Maine Agricultural Bargaining Board
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 6: Maine Agricultural Marketing and Bargaining Act of 1973
§1956. Maine Agricultural Bargaining Board
1. Board. The Maine Agricultural Bargaining Board, established by Title 5, section 12004-B, subsection 7, and located in the Department
of Agriculture, Food and Rural Resources, shall administer this article.
[1989, c. 503, Pt. B, §69 (amd).]
2. Membership. The Maine Agricultural Bargaining Board established by Title 5, section 12004-B, subsection 7, shall consist of 5 members
and 2 alternates, who shall be appointed by the Governor. One member and one alternate shall be appointed from a list of
names submitted by agricultural producer organizations organized under this subchapter and chapter 81. One member and one
alternate shall be appointed from a list of names submitted by processors of agricultural products. In appointing these members
and alternates, the Governor shall seek to represent as many different agricultural products as possible and a member and
the alternate for that member may not be associated with the same agricultural product, unless suitable persons cannot otherwise
be appointed. An alternate shall serve when for any reason the respective member is unable to serve. Three members shall
be representatives of the public. A public member may not hold any interest or stock or securities in any producer, dealer,
processor or other person whose activities are subject to the jurisdiction of the board.
A. The term of office for all members and alternates shall be 3 years. Members selected from lists submitted by agricultural
producer organizations and by processors of agricultural products may serve no more than 2 terms in succession, not to include
the current term of a member serving at the time this section becomes effective. The limitation to 2 successive terms may
not apply to the public members or to alternates.
[1989, c. 703, §1 (amd).]
B. Board members serving at the time this section becomes effective shall continue as members for the duration of their present
terms. The Governor shall appoint 2 alternate members in accordance with this subsection. The initial terms of these alternates
expire at the same time as that of the current respective members. The Governor shall designate one of the public members
to be the board's chair. In the event of a vacancy, the Governor shall, within one month, appoint a successor to fill the
unexpired term. All appointments to the board must be made in conformity with the foregoing plan. Members shall take the
oath of office prescribed for state officers.
[1989, c. 503, Pt. B, §70 (amd); c. 703, §1 (amd).]
[1989, c. 503, Pt. B, §70 (amd); c. 703, §1 (amd).]
3. Removal. Members of the board shall be removed by the Commissioner of Agriculture, Food and Rural Resources upon notice and hearing
for neglect of duty or malfeasance in office but for no other cause. If a member is absent from 3 successive meetings of
the board and if the board finds the member's reasons for the absence to be without merit, that member's conduct shall be
considered to be neglect of duty.
[1987, c. 155, § 3 (amd).]
4. Quorum. A vacancy in the board shall not impair the right of the remaining members to exercise all of the powers of the board. Three
members of the board shall, at all times, constitute a quorum of the board, provided that reasonable notice has been given
to all members of the board of the subject matter and date of any meeting at which the board is to exercise any of its powers.
[1973, c. 621, § 1 (new).]
5. Expenses. Members and alternate members of the board shall be compensated according to the provisions of Title 5, chapter 379 and shall
receive necessary expenses.
[1987, c. 155, § 4 (amd).]
6. Rules. The board shall have authority from time to time to adopt, amend and repeal, in the manner prescribed by the Maine Administrative
Procedure Act, such rules and regulations as may be necessary or appropriate to carry out this Article. The board shall act
as expeditiously as possible to adopt interpretive and procedural rules for carrying out the purposes of this article.
[1987, c. 155, § 5 (amd).]
7. Board's staff and attorney. In hearings under sections 1958 and 1965, neither the board's staff nor its attorney shall function as an advocate for any
party.
[1987, c. 155, § 6 (new).]
8. Annual report. The board shall issue an annual report to the Commissioner of Agriculture, Food and Rural Resources and to the joint standing
committee of the Legislature having jurisdiction over agriculture on or before January 15th of each year regarding the operation
of this subchapter. This annual report shall take into consideration the following issues as the Maine Agricultural Bargaining
Board reviews the effectiveness of the Maine Agricultural Marketing and Bargaining Act of 1973:
A. Unfair practices;
[1987, c. 155, § 6 (new).]
B. Qualification of grower associations;
[1987, c. 155, § 6 (new).]
C. Funding of the Maine Agricultural Bargaining Board;
[1987, c. 155, § 6 (new).]
D. Investigation and hearing procedures;
[1987, c. 155, § 6 (new).]
E. Any other issues relating to this subchapter; and
[1987, c. 155, § 6 (new).]
F. Any recommended changes to this subchapter.
[1987, c. 155, §6 (new).]
[1987, c. 155, § 6 (new).]
Section History:
PL 1973,
Ch. 621,
§1
(NEW).
PL 1977,
Ch. 564,
§67,68
(AMD).
PL 1977,
Ch. 694,
§277
(AMD).
PL 1979,
Ch. 731,
§19
(AMD).
PL 1983,
Ch. 812,
§95,96
(AMD).
PL 1987,
Ch. 155,
§2-6
(AMD).
PL 1989,
Ch. 503,
§B69,B70
(AMD).
PL 1989,
Ch. 703,
§1
(AMD).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1957. Qualification of associations of producers
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 6: Maine Agricultural Marketing and Bargaining Act of 1973
§1957. Qualification of associations of producers
1. Qualification. Only those associations of producers that have been qualified in accordance with this section shall be entitled to the benefits
provided by this Article.
[1973, c. 621, §1 (new).]
2. Petition. An association of producers desiring qualification shall file with the board a petition for qualification. The petition shall
contain such information and be accompanied by such documents as shall be required by the regulations of the board.
[1973, c. 621, §1 (new).]
3. Hearing. The board shall provide notice and opportunity for a hearing, provided in a manner consistent with the provisions as to adjudicatory
proceedings of the Maine Administrative Procedure Act. The board shall qualify such association, if based upon the evidence
at such hearing, the board finds:
A. That under the charter documents or the bylaws of the association, the association is directly or indirectly producer-owned
and controlled;
[1973, c. 621, §1 (new).]
B. The association has membership agreements signed by each of its members which authorize the association to represent the
member for the purposes of this article;
[1987, c. 155, §7 (amd).]
C. The association is financially sound and has sufficient resources and management to carry out the purposes for which it
was organized;
[1973, c. 621, §1 (new).]
D. The association represents 51% of the producers or produced at least 12 of the volume of a particular agricultural product
for a specific handler involved with those producers and that agricultural product during the previous 12 months, not including
any volume produced by the handler, its subsidiaries, agents or employees or procured by the handler from sources other than
producers; for the purposes of this article, members of farmer cooperatives are counted as individual farmer members; if the
board has reasonable cause to question such representation, the board shall require a secret ballot election to certify the
percentage of representation; and
[1991, c. 116 (amd).]
E. The association has as one of its functions acting as principal or agent for its producer-members in negotiations with handlers
for prices and other terms of contracts with respect to the production, sale and marketing of their product.
[1973, c. 621, § 1 (new).]
[1991, c. 116 (amd).]
4. Refiling of petition. If after the hearing, the board does not deem an association qualified, it shall, in a manner consistent with the Maine Administrative
Procedure Act, Title 5, chapter 375, clearly specify the reasons for such failure to qualify in its decision and, upon the
refiling of the petition, shall reconsider its decision within 30 days after the date on which the petition was filed. An
association seeking reconsideration shall refile its petition within 30 days of receipt of the board's initial decision.
[1987, c. 155, §8 (amd).]
5. Notice. After the board qualifies such association, it shall give notice of such qualification to all known handlers that, in the
ordinary course of business, purchase the agricultural commodities that such association represents.
[1973, c. 621, §1 (new).]
6. Annual report. A qualified association shall file an annual report with the board in such form as shall be required by the regulations of
the board. The annual report shall contain such information as will enable the board to determine whether the association
continues to meet the standards for qualification, except that an association which the board has determined to be qualified
shall not be required to have its qualification redetermined until it has negotiated and entered into a contract with a handler,
with or without resort to arbitration.
[1985, c. 578, §1 (amd).]
7. Revocation. If a qualified association ceases to maintain the standards for qualifications set forth in subsection 3, the board shall,
in a manner consistent with the Maine Administrative Procedure Act, apply to the District Court to revoke the qualification
of such association, except that the board shall not seek revocation of an association's qualification during the period set
out in subsection 6 in which the association cannot be required to have its qualification redetermined.
[1985, c. 578, §2 (amd); 1999, c. 547, Pt. B, §78 (amd); §80 (aff).]
8. Confidentiality. Information provided to the board by an association regarding the identification of its members and information provided
to the board by a handler regarding its volume of purchases of agricultural products and the identification of producers from
whom it purchased those products shall be treated by the board as confidential information not to be disclosed to the adverse
party or any other person without the consent of the association or the handler, respectively, until the board has rendered
its final decision as to the qualification of the association. After a final decision has been rendered, the information
is no longer confidential information, but its disclosure shall be governed by Title 1, section 402, subsection 3, paragraph
B.
[1987, c. 155, §9 (new).]
Section History:
PL 1973,
Ch. 621,
§1
(NEW).
PL 1977,
Ch. 694,
§278-280
(AMD).
PL 1985,
Ch. 578,
§1,2
(AMD).
PL 1987,
Ch. 155,
§7-9
(AMD).
PL 1991,
Ch. 116,
§
(AMD).
PL 1999,
Ch. 547,
§B78
(AMD).
PL 1999,
Ch. 547,
§B80
(AFF).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1958-A. Final offer arbitration for the potato industry (REPEALED)
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 6: Maine Agricultural Marketing and Bargaining Act of 1973
§1958-A. Final offer arbitration for the potato industry (REPEALED)
Section History:
PL 1981,
Ch. 274,
§
(NEW).
PL 1985,
Ch. 578,
§3,4
(AMD).
PL 1987,
Ch. 155,
§14
(RP ).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1958-B. Dispute resolution
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 6: Maine Agricultural Marketing and Bargaining Act of 1973
§1958-B. Dispute resolution
1. Voluntary mediation. At any time prior to the commencement of required mediation under subsection 2, a handler and a qualified association may
mutually agree to obtain or may unilaterally obtain the services of a mediator. Regardless whether mediation is sought mutually
or unilaterally, both parties shall participate in mediation in good faith. The parties must use the services of the State's
Panel of Mediators for mediation and must share all costs of mediation equally. Costs of mediation and any applicable state
cost allocation program charges must be paid into a special fund administered by the Maine Labor Relations Board. The Executive
Director of the Maine Labor Relations Board shall authorize mediation services and expenditures incurred by members of the
panel. All costs must be paid from that special fund. The executive director may estimate costs upon receipt of a request
for services and collect those costs prior to providing the services. The executive director shall bill or reimburse the
parties, as appropriate, for any difference between the estimated costs that were collected and the actual costs of providing
the services. Once one party has paid its share of the estimated cost of providing the service, the mediator is assigned.
A party who has not paid an invoice for the estimated or actual cost of providing services within 60 days of the date the
invoice was issued is, in the absence of good cause shown, liable for the amount of the invoice together with a penalty in
the amount of 25% of the amount of the invoice. Any penalty amount collected pursuant to this provision remains in the special
fund administered by the Maine Labor Relations Board and that fund does not lapse. The executive director is authorized to
collect any sums due and payable pursuant to this provision through civil action. In such an action, the court shall allow
litigation costs, including court costs and reasonable attorney's fees, to be deposited in the General Fund if the executive
director is the prevailing party in the action. Voluntary mediation may not last for more than 3 days for annual crops; voluntary
mediation for all other commodities may not last more than 5 days. Mediation may be extended by mutual agreement by the bargaining
parties.
[1991, c. 798, §1 (amd).]
2. Required mediation. Any matters remaining in dispute between the handler and a qualified association 30 days prior to the contract date, as
defined in subsection 4, must be submitted by the parties to required mediation. No later than 30 days prior to the contract
date, the parties must have mutually agreed on a mediator and on sharing the costs of mediation or must have notified the
board that the services of the State's Panel of Mediators will be needed. If services of the State's Panel of Mediators are
used, the parties shall share all costs of mediation equally. Mediation may not continue for more than 3 consecutive business
days for annual crops; all other commodities may not last more than 5 days, unless the mediator earlier declares that resolution
by mediation is not possible. Mediation may be extended by mutual agreement by the bargaining parties. At the end of the
mediation period or upon the mediator's earlier declaration, the mediator shall promptly prepare a report specifying all agreements
reached in mediation and recommending that the parties either resume bargaining as to all matters remaining in dispute for
a period of time not to exceed 2 days or that the parties submit all matters remaining in dispute to arbitration. The parties
shall proceed according to the mediator's recommendation. If the parties are to resume bargaining, that bargaining must
commence on the day after the day on which the mediator makes the recommendation. Any matters remaining in dispute at the
end of the specified bargaining period must be submitted to arbitration.
[2003, c. 329, §5 (amd).]
3. Different contract date. Once a contract date has been established as provided in subsection 2, the parties may mutually agree to a different contract
date, provided that they do so no less than 45 days prior to the contract date established as provided in subsection 4.
[1987, c. 155, §15 (new).]
4. Definition. The term "contract date" as used in subsection 2, shall have the following meaning.
A. Where, on the effective date of this section, there is no contract under this article in existence between the parties,
the contract date shall be the date set by the board, in consultation with the parties, as the date by which a contract must
be signed by both parties. After that date, as between those parties, the contract date shall be the anniversary of the date
set by the board initially.
[1987, c. 155, §15 (new).]
B. Where, on the effective date of this section, a contract under this article exists between the parties, the contract date
shall be the anniversary of the date upon which that contract was signed by both parties.
[1987, c. 155, §15 (new).]
[1987, c. 155, §15 (new).]
5. Arbitration. The parties shall notify the board and the Commissioner of Agriculture, Food and Rural Resources at the commencement of
required mediation and an arbitrator must be selected as provided in paragraph D. One day after the mediator recommends arbitration
or one day after the conclusion of the period of further bargaining, as provided in subsection 2, each party shall submit
to the arbitrator its final offer in which it shall identify all matters as to which the parties agree with contractual language
setting forth these agreements, and all matters as to which the parties do not agree with contractual language setting forth
the party's final offer for resolution of those disagreements.
A. For all matters submitted to arbitration, the arbitrator shall choose between the final offers of the parties. If the parties
reach an agreement on the matters under arbitration before the arbitrator issues a decision, they may submit a joint final
offer that the arbitrator shall accept and render as the decision. The arbitrator may hold hearings and administer oaths,
examine witnesses and documents, take testimony and receive evidence, and issue subpoenas to compel the attendance of witnesses
and the production of records. A person who fails to obey the subpoena of an arbitrator may be punished for contempt of court
on application by the arbitrator to the Superior Court for the county in which the failure occurs. The arbitrator may utilize
other information in addition to that provided by or elicited from the parties. The arbitrator shall issue a decision within
10 days of the commencement of arbitration and that decision shall be binding on the parties. If the parties reach an agreement
on the matters in the arbitrator's decision prior to signing the contract, they may submit a joint final offer to the arbitrator.
The arbitrator shall rescind the previous decision and accept and render the joint final offer as the decision.
[1989, c. 703, §2 (rpr).]
B. Within 5 days of the arbitrator's decision, the board shall prepare a contract which must include all terms agreed to by
the parties in bargaining or settled by voluntary or required mediation or by arbitration and must present the contract to
the parties who shall sign the contract within 2 days of its presentation.
[1989, c. 703, §2 (rpr).]
C. The commissioner, in consultation with the board, shall establish a panel of arbitrators, who must be qualified by education,
training or experience to carry out the responsibilities of an arbitrator under this article.
[1989, c. 703, §2 (rpr).]
D. Upon notification by the parties as provided in this subsection, the commissioner shall submit to the parties a list containing
an odd number of names of members of the panel of arbitrators who are available for the specific pending arbitration and have
expressed a willingness to serve. The parties shall alternately strike names from the list until a single name is left, who
shall serve as the arbitrator. The order of striking names must be determined by chance.
[2003, c. 329, §6 (amd).]
E. All costs of arbitration must be borne equally by the parties. The arbitrator shall submit a statement of charges and expenses
to the parties and to the board. Each party shall pay the arbitrator directly.
[1989, c. 703, §2 (rpr).]
[2003, c. 329, §6 (amd).]
5-A. Criteria for arbitrator decisions. The arbitrator shall consider the following factors in making a decision pursuant to subsection 5:
A. Prices or projected prices for the agricultural commodity paid by competing handlers in the market area or competing market
areas;
[1989, c. 703, §3 (new).]
B. The quantity of the commodity produced or projections of production in the production area or competing market areas;
[1989, c. 703, §3 (new).]
C. The relationship between the quantity produced and the quantity handled by the handler;
[1989, c. 703, §3 (new).]
D. The producer's costs of production including the cost that would be involved in paying farm labor a fair wage rate;
[1989, c. 703, §3 (new).]
E. The average consumer prices for goods and services, commonly known as the cost of living;
[1989, c. 703, §3 (new).]
F. The impact of the award on the competitive position of the handler in the market area or competing market areas;
[1989, c. 703, §3 (new).]
G. The impact of the award on the competitive position of the agricultural commodity in relationship to competing commodities;
[1989, c. 703, §3 (new).]
H. A fair return on investment;
[1989, c. 703, §3 (new).]
I. The kind, quality or grade of the commodity involved;
[1989, c. 703, §3 (new).]
J. Prior agreements of the parties; and
[1989, c. 703, §3 (new).]
K. Other factors which are normally or traditionally taken into consideration in determining prices, quality, quantity and
the costs of other services involved.
[1989, c. 703, §3 (new).]
[1989, c. 703, §3 (new).]
6. Violation. Failure by a party to comply with any of the requirements of this section is a violation of this article.
[1987, c. 155, §15 (new).]
Section History:
PL 1987,
Ch. 155,
§15
(NEW).
PL 1989,
Ch. 201,
§1,2
(AMD).
PL 1989,
Ch. 703,
§2,3
(AMD).
PL 1991,
Ch. 622,
§O1
(AMD).
PL 1991,
Ch. 798,
§1
(AMD).
PL 2003,
Ch. 329,
§5,6
(AMD).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1958. Bargaining
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 6: Maine Agricultural Marketing and Bargaining Act of 1973
§1958. Bargaining
1. Definition. As used in this article, "bargaining" is the mutual obligation of a handler and a qualified association to meet at reasonable
times and negotiate in good faith with respect to the price, terms of sale, compensation for commodities produced or sold,
or both, under contract and other contract provisions relative to the commodities that such qualified association represents
and the execution of a written contract incorporating any agreement reached if requested by either party. Such obligation
on the part of any handler shall extend only to a qualified association that represents producers with whom such handler has
had a prior course of dealing. Such obligation does not require either party to agree to a proposal or to make a concession.
The obligation to bargain continues until the commencement of required mediation, as provided in section 1958-B, subsection
2.
[1987, c. 155, § 10 (amd).]
2. Prior course of dealing. A handler shall be deemed to have had a prior course of dealing with a producer if such handler has purchased commodities
produced by such producer in any 2 of the preceding 3 years, provided that the sale by a handler of his business shall not
negate any prior course of dealing that producers have had with this business.
[1973, c. 621, § 1 (new).]
3. Contracts. Nothing in this Article shall be deemed to prohibit a qualified bargaining association from entering into contracts with
handlers to supply the full agricultural production requirements of such handlers.
[1973, c. 621, § 1 (new).]
4. Limitation.
[1987, c. 155, § 11 (rp).]
5. Further limitation. It shall be unlawful for a handler to purchase a product from other persons under terms more favorable to such persons than
those terms negotiated with a qualified bargaining association for such product, unless such handler has first offered to
purchase said product under said more favorable terms from the members of the qualified association of producers and said
members have failed to supply the required product within a reasonble time according to said more favorable terms.
[1973, c. 621, § 1 (new).]
6. Notice; opportunity for hearing. Whenever it is charged that a qualified association or handler refuses to bargain, as that term is defined in subsection
1, the board shall provide that person with notice and opportunity to be heard, in a manner consistent with the Maine Administrative
Procedure Act, Title 5, chapter 375, as to adjudicatory hearings.
[1987, c. 155, § 12 (amd).]
7. Hearing. Hearings held pursuant to subsection 6 shall be held in a manner consistent with the Maine Administrative Procedure Act as
to adjudicatory hearings. The board shall request that the Attorney General, or any attorney in his department designated
by him, be present at these hearings and shall advise the board on procedure and on the admissibility of any evidence.
[1977, c. 694, § 282 (rpr).]
8. Findings. If, upon a preponderance of the evidence, the board determines that the person complained of has refused to bargain, in violation
of this article, it shall state its findings of fact and shall issue an order requiring him to bargain as that term is defined
in subsection 1 and shall order such further affirmative action, excluding an award of damages, as will effectuate the policies
of this article. Failure to comply with such an order is a violation of this article. If the board determines that the person
complained of has not refused to bargain, it shall state its findings of fact and shall issue an order dismissing the charges.
[1987, c. 155, § 13 (amd).]
9. Dismissal.
[1977, c. 694, § 283 (rp).]
10. Modification. Until the record in a case has been filed in a court, as provided in section 1959, the board may at any time, upon reasonable
notice and in such manner as it deems proper, modify or set aside, in a whole or in part, any finding or order made or issued
by it.
[1973, c. 621, § 1 (new).]
Section History:
PL 1973,
Ch. 621,
§1
(NEW).
PL 1977,
Ch. 694,
§281-283
(AMD).
PL 1987,
Ch. 155,
§10-13
(AMD).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1959. Enforcement of orders and judicial review
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 6: Maine Agricultural Marketing and Bargaining Act of 1973
§1959. Enforcement of orders and judicial review
1. Complaint. The board shall have power to complain to the Superior Court for the enforcement of its orders made under sections 1958 and
1965 and for appropriate temporary relief or restraining order, and shall file in the court the original or certified copy
of the entire record in the proceeding, and shall cause notice of such complaint to be served upon such person, and said court
shall thereupon have jurisdiction of the proceeding and of the question determined therein, and shall have power to grant
such temporary relief or restraining order as it deems just and proper, and to make and enter a judgment enforcing, modifying
and enforcing as so modified, or setting aside in whole or in part, the order of the board. No objection that has not been
urged before the board may be considered by the court, unless the failure or neglect to urge such objection shall be excused
because of extraordinary circumstances. The findings of the board with respect to questions of fact, if supported by substantial
evidence on the record considered as a whole, shall be conclusive. If either party shall apply to the court for leave to adduce
additional evidence and shall show to the satisfaction of the court that such additional evidence is material and that there
were reasonable grounds for the failure to adduce such evidence in the hearing before the board, the court may order such
additional evidence to be taken before the board and to be made a part of the record. The board may modify its findings as
to the facts, or make new findings, by reason of additional evidence so taken and filed, and it shall file such modified or
new findings, which findings with respect to questions of fact if supported by substantial evidence on the record considered
as a whole shall be conclusive, and shall file its recommendations, if any, for the modification or setting aside of its original
order.
[1987, c. 155, § 16 (amd).]
2. Appeal.
[1977, c. 694, § 284 (rp).]
3. Stay. The provisions of Title 5, section 11004, shall govern with respect to any application for a stay of an order of the board.
[1987, c. 155, § 17 (amd).]
4. Procedure.
[1977, c. 694, § 286 (rp).]
5. Penalties. In an action to enforce an order or in a separate action, the board may seek civil penalties for violation of this article.
In any such action, a violation shall be punishable by a civil penalty of not more than $5,000. When the violation is a
refusal to bargain under section 1958 or an unfair practice under section 1965, each day that such conduct occurred shall
constitute a separate violation. If a qualified association is found to have committed a violation under sections 1958 and
1965, and if a civil penalty is imposed, and if the court finds that the association is unable to pay the civil penalty, the
court shall instead issue an order suspending for one year the association's rights as a qualified association under this
article.
[1987, c. 155, § 18 (new).]
Section History:
PL 1973,
Ch. 621,
§1
(NEW).
PL 1973,
Ch. 788,
§54
(AMD).
PL 1977,
Ch. 694,
§284-286
(AMD).
PL 1987,
Ch. 155,
§16-18
(AMD).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1960. Copy evidence; oaths; subpoenas (REPEALED)
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 6: Maine Agricultural Marketing and Bargaining Act of 1973
§1960. Copy evidence; oaths; subpoenas (REPEALED)
Section History:
PL 1973,
Ch. 621,
§1
(NEW).
PL 1987,
Ch. 155,
§19
(RP ).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1961. Contempt (REPEALED)
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 6: Maine Agricultural Marketing and Bargaining Act of 1973
§1961. Contempt (REPEALED)
Section History:
PL 1973,
Ch. 621,
§1
(NEW).
PL 1987,
Ch. 155,
§20
(RP ).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1962. Service (REPEALED)
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 6: Maine Agricultural Marketing and Bargaining Act of 1973
§1962. Service (REPEALED)
Section History:
PL 1973,
Ch. 621,
§1
(NEW).
PL 1987,
Ch. 155,
§21
(RP ).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1963. Subpoena
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 6: Maine Agricultural Marketing and Bargaining Act of 1973
§1963. Subpoena
In any proceeding before the board under this article, the board may issue subpoenas for the attendance of witnesses, or for
the production of documents and may examine witnesses under oath provided that:
[1987, c. 155, § 22 (amd).]
1. Upon written application of a party to a proceeding, the board shall issue subpoenas for the attendance of witnesses or
for the production of documents;
[1973, c. 621, § 1 (new).]
2. A person who fails to obey the subpoena of the board may be punished as for contempt of court on application by the board
to the Superior Court for the county in which such failure occurs;
[1973, c. 621, § 1 (new).]
3. Witnesses who are summoned before the board or its agents shall be entitled to the same witness and mileage fees as are
paid to witnesses subpoenaed in the District Courts of the State.
[1973, c. 621, § 1 (new).]
Section History:
PL 1973,
Ch. 621,
§1
(NEW).
PL 1987,
Ch. 155,
§22
(AMD).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1964. Antitrust
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 6: Maine Agricultural Marketing and Bargaining Act of 1973
§1964. Antitrust
The activities of qualified associations and handlers in bargaining with respect to the price, terms of sale, compensation
for commodities produced under contract or other contract terms relative to agricultural commodities produced by the members
of such qualified associations shall be deemed not to violate any antitrust law of this State. Nothing in this Article shall
be construed to permit handler to contract, combine or conspire with one another in bargaining with qualified associations.
[1973, c. 621, § 1 (new).]
Section History:
PL 1973,
Ch. 621,
§1
(NEW).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1965. Unfair practices
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 2: AGRICULTURAL MARKETING AND BARGAINING
Article 6: Maine Agricultural Marketing and Bargaining Act of 1973
§1965. Unfair practices
1. Producers of agricultural commodities are free to join together voluntarily in associations as authorized by law without
interference by handlers. A handler shall not engage nor permit an employee or agent to engage in any of the following practices,
defined as unfair practices:
A. To coerce a producer in the exercise of his right to join and belong to or to refrain from joining or belonging to an association
or to refuse to deal with a producer because of the exercise of his right to join and belong to an association except as provided
in section 1958, subsection 5;
[1987, c. 155, §23 (amd).]
B. To discriminate against a producer with respect to price, quantity, quality or other terms of purchase, acquisition or other
handling of agricultural products because of his membership in or contract with an association;
[1973, c. 621, §1 (new).]
C. To coerce or intimidate a producer to breach, cancel or terminate a membership agreement or marketing contract with an association
or a contract with a handler;
[1973, c. 621, §1 (new).]
D. To pay or loan money, give anything of value or offer any other inducement or regard to a producer for refusing or ceasing
to belong to an association;
[1973, c. 621, §1 (new).]
E. To make or circulate unsubstantiated reports about the finances, management or activities of associations or handlers;
[1973, c. 621, §1 (new).]
F. To conspire, combine, agree or arrange with any other person to do or aid or abet the doing of any practice which is in
violation of this Act;
[1973, c. 621, §1 (new).]
G. To refuse to bargain with an accredited association with whom the handler has had prior dealings or with an accredited association
whose producers in the bargaining units have had substantial dealing with the handler prior to the accreditation of the association;
or
[1973, c. 621, §1 (new).]
H. To negotiate with a producer included in the bargaining unit after an association is accredited.
[1973, c. 621, §1 (new).]
[1987, c. 155, §23 (amd).]
2. An association shall not engage or permit an employee or agent to engage in the following practices, defined as unfair practices:
A. To act in a manner contrary to the bylaws of the association;
[1973, c. 621, §1 (new).]
B. To refuse to bargain with a handler with whom the accredited association has had prior dealing or with whom its producers
have had substantial dealing prior to the accreditation of the association;
[1973, c. 621, §1 (new).]
C. To coerce or intimidate a handler to breach, cancel or terminate a membership agreement or marketing contract with an association
or a contract with a producer;
[1973, c. 621, §1 (new).]
D. To make or circulate unsubstantiated reports about the finances, management or activities of other associations or handlers;
[1973, c. 621, §1 (new).]
E. To conspire, combine, agree or arrange with any other person to do or aid or abet the doing of any practice which is in
violation of this Act;
[1973, c. 621, §1 (new).]
F. To hinder or prevent, by picketing, threats, intimidations, force or coercion of any kind, the pursuit of any lawful work
or employment, or to obstruct or interfere with entrance to or egress from any place of employment, or to obstruct or interfere
with free and uninterrupted use of public roads, streets, highways, railways, airports or other ways of travel or conveyance;
[1973, c. 621, §1 (new).]
G. To exercise coercive pressure by picketing, patrolling or otherwise business establishments other than the premises owned
or controlled by the handler in order to cause such parties to cease doing business with such handler.
[1973, c. 621, §1 (new).]
[1973, c. 621, §1 (new).]
3. Notice; opportunity for hearing. Whenever it is charged that a qualified association or a handler has committed an unfair practice under this section, the
board shall provide that person with notice and opportunity to be heard, in a manner consistent with the Maine Administrative
Procedure Act, Title 5, chapter 375, as to adjudicatory hearings.
[1987, c. 155, §24 (new).]
4. Hearing. Hearings held pursuant to subsection 3 shall be held in a manner consistent with the Maine Administrative Procedure Act,
Title 5, chapter 375, as to adjudicatory hearings. The board shall request that the Attorney General or any attorney in his
department designated by the Attorney General, be present at these hearings and shall advise the board on procedure and on
the admissibility of any evidence.
[1987, c. 155, §24 (new).]
5. Findings. If, upon a preponderance of the evidence, the board determines that the person complained of has committed an unfair practice,
in violation of this article, it shall state its findings of fact and shall issue an order requiring the person to cease and
desist from such conduct and shall order such further affirmative action, excluding an award of damages, as will effectuate
the policies of this article. Failure to comply with such an order is a violation of this article. If the board determines
that the person complained of has not committed an unfair practice, it shall state its findings of fact and shall issue an
order dismissing the charges.
[1987, c. 155, §24 (new).]
6. Frivolous charges. If the board determines that a charge of unfair practice is frivolous, it shall state its findings of fact and may issue
a reprimand to the person making the charge. Where the board determines that a person who made a charge which was determined
to be frivolous did so knowing the charge to be frivolous, it shall state its findings of fact and shall issue an order requiring
that person to pay the reasonable attorneys fees and double the amount of other reasonable costs incurred by the person against
whom the charge was made in defending against the charge before the board. Where it is disputed, reasonableness shall be determined
by the board. The order shall also require that person to reimburse the State for the per diem payments made to board members
for their attendance at the hearing on the charge. Failure to comply with such an order is a violation of this article.
[1987, c. 155, §24 (new).]
Section History:
PL 1973,
Ch. 621,
§1
(NEW).
PL 1987,
Ch. 155,
§23,24
(AMD).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1971. Title
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 3: EMPLOYEE COOPERATIVE CORPORATIONS
§1971. Title
This subchapter shall be known and may be cited as the "Employee Cooperative Corporations Act."
[1983, c. 136 (new).]
Section History:
PL 1983,
Ch. 136,
§
(NEW).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1973. Application of other laws
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 3: EMPLOYEE COOPERATIVE CORPORATIONS
§1973. Application of other laws
Except as otherwise provided in this subchapter, employee cooperative corporations are governed by Title 13-C, the Maine Business
Corporation Act.
[RR 2001, c. 2, Pt. B, §30 (cor); §58 (aff).]
Section History:
PL 1983,
Ch. 136,
§
(NEW).
RR 2001,
Ch. 2,
§B30
(COR).
RR 2001,
Ch. 2,
§B58
(AFF).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1974. Registration of securities
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 3: EMPLOYEE COOPERATIVE CORPORATIONS
§1974. Registration of securities
Employee cooperatives are subject to Title 32, chapter 13. The fee charged for registration or renewal shall be $10.
[1983, c. 136 (new).]
Section History:
PL 1983,
Ch. 136,
§
(NEW).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1975. Formation of employee cooperative corporation; revocation
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 3: EMPLOYEE COOPERATIVE CORPORATIONS
§1975. Formation of employee cooperative corporation; revocation
1. Election. Any corporation organized under former Title 13-A or Title 13-C may elect to be governed as an employee cooperative under
this subchapter, by so stating in its articles of incorporation or articles of amendment filed in accordance with Title 13-C.
[RR 2001, c. 2, Pt. B, §31 (cor); §58 (aff).]
2. Revocation. An employee cooperative may revoke its election under this subchapter by a vote of 23 of the members and through articles
of amendment duly filed in accordance with Title 13-C.
[RR 2001, c. 2, Pt. B, §31 (cor); §58 (aff).]
Section History:
PL 1983,
Ch. 136,
§
(NEW).
RR 2001,
Ch. 2,
§B31
(COR).
RR 2001,
Ch. 2,
§B58
(AFF).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1976. Use of words "cooperative," "co-op"
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 3: EMPLOYEE COOPERATIVE CORPORATIONS
§1976. Use of words "cooperative," "co-op"
No person, firm, corporation or association, domestic or foreign, hereafter commencing business in this State may use the
word "cooperative" or "co-op" as a part of its corporate name, unless it has complied with this subchapter or some other statute
of this State relating to cooperative associations. A foreign association organized under and complying with the cooperative
law of the state of its creation shall be entitled to use the term "cooperative" or "co-op" in this State if it has obtained
the privilege of doing business in this State.
[1983, c. 136 (new).]
Section History:
PL 1983,
Ch. 136,
§
(NEW).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1977. Membership in employee cooperative corporation
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 3: EMPLOYEE COOPERATIVE CORPORATIONS
§1977. Membership in employee cooperative corporation
The articles of incorporation or the bylaws shall establish qualifications and the methods of acceptance and termination of
members. No person may be accepted as a member unless employed by the employee cooperative on a full-time or part-time basis.
[1983, c. 136 (new).]
Section History:
PL 1983,
Ch. 136,
§
(NEW).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1978. Membership shares; fees
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 3: EMPLOYEE COOPERATIVE CORPORATIONS
§1978. Membership shares; fees
1. Issuance of shares. An employee cooperative shall issue a class of voting stock designated as membership shares.
[1983, c. 136 (new).]
2. Payment. Each member of an employee cooperative corporation must be issued a membership share upon payment of a membership fee, the
amount of which must be determined from time to time by the directors. Title 13-C, section 621 does not apply to membership
shares.
[2003, c. 344, Pt. D, §8 (amd).]
3. Ownership limited. Each member shall own only one membership share, and only members may own those shares.
[1983, c. 136 (new).]
4. Voting stock limited. Unless otherwise provided in this subchapter or in the articles of incorporation of an employee cooperative, no other capital
stock other than membership shares may have voting power. In the event that proposed amendments to the articles of incorporation
would adversely affect any nonvoting class of shareholders, such action may not be taken without the vote of those shareholders,
as provided in Title 13-C, sections 1003 and 1004.
[2003, c. 344, Pt. D, §8 (amd).]
Section History:
PL 1983,
Ch. 136,
§
(NEW).
PL 2003,
Ch. 344,
§D8
(AMD).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1979. Amendment of bylaws
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 3: EMPLOYEE COOPERATIVE CORPORATIONS
§1979. Amendment of bylaws
The bylaws of an employee cooperative may only be amended by members, except as provided in Title 13-C, section 207.
[2003, c. 344, Pt. D, §9 (amd).]
Section History:
PL 1983,
Ch. 136,
§
(NEW).
PL 2003,
Ch. 344,
§D9
(AMD).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1980. Earnings or losses
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 3: EMPLOYEE COOPERATIVE CORPORATIONS
§1980. Earnings or losses
1. Apportionment. The net earnings or losses of an employee cooperative shall be apportioned and distributed at such times and in such manner
as the articles of organization or bylaws shall specify. Net earnings declared as patronage allocations with respect to a
period of time, and paid or credited to members, shall be apportioned among the members in accordance with the ratio which
each member's patronage during the period involved bears to total patronage by all members during that period.
[1983, c. 136 (new).]
2. Method. The apportionment, distribution and payment of net earnings required by this section may be in cash, credits, written notices
of allocation or capital stock issued by the employee cooperative.
[1983, c. 136 (new).]
Section History:
PL 1983,
Ch. 136,
§
(NEW).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1981. Accounting for earnings or losses
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 3: EMPLOYEE COOPERATIVE CORPORATIONS
§1981. Accounting for earnings or losses
1. Internal accounts. Any employee cooperative may establish in its articles of incorporation or bylaws a system of internal capital accounts to
reflect the book value and to determine the redemption price of membership shares, capital stock and written notices of allocation.
[1983, c. 136 (new).]
2. Redemption. The articles of incorporation or bylaws of an employee cooperative may permit the periodic redemption of written notices
of allocation and capital stock, and must provide for recall and redemption of the membership share upon termination of membership
in the cooperative. No redemption may be made if such redemption would result in the liability of any director or officer
of the employee cooperative under Title 13-C.
[RR 2001, c. 2, Pt. B, §32 (cor); §58 (aff).]
3. Interest. The articles of incorporation or bylaws may provide for the employee cooperative to pay or credit interest on the balance
in each member's internal capital account.
[1983, c. 136 (new).]
4. Collective reserve account. The articles of incorporation or bylaws may authorize assignment of a portion of retained net earnings and net losses to
a collective reserve account. For purposes of this chapter, a collective reserve account means an unindividuated account
on the corporate books representing the corporation's entire net book value minus balances in any other equity accounts.
Earnings assigned to the collective reserve account may be used for any and all corporate purposes as determined by the board
of directors.
[1983, c. 136 (new).]
Section History:
PL 1983,
Ch. 136,
§
(NEW).
RR 2001,
Ch. 2,
§B32
(COR).
RR 2001,
Ch. 2,
§B58
(AFF).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1982. Internal capital account cooperatives
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 3: EMPLOYEE COOPERATIVE CORPORATIONS
§1982. Internal capital account cooperatives
1. Types of accounts permitted. An internal capital account cooperative is an employee cooperative whose entire net book value is reflected in internal capital
accounts, one for each member, and a collective reserve account, and in which no persons other than members own capital stock.
In an internal capital account cooperative, each member shall have only one vote in any matter requiring voting by stockholders.
[1983, c. 136 (new).]
2. Allocation to accounts. An internal capital account cooperative shall credit the paid-in membership fee and additional paid-in capital of a member
to the member's internal capital account, and shall also record the apportionment of retained net earnings or net losses to
the members in accordance with patronage by appropriately crediting or debiting the internal capital accounts of members.
The collective reserve account in an internal capital account cooperative shall reflect any paid-in capital, net losses and
retained earnings not allocated to individual members.
[1983, c. 136 (new).]
3. Adjustment of accounts. In an internal capital account cooperative, the balances in all the internal capital accounts and collective reserve account,
if any, shall be adjusted at the end of each accounting period so that the sum of the balances is equal to the net book value
of the employee cooperative.
[1983, c. 136 (new).]
4. Exceptions. Title 13-C, section 1302 does not apply to an internal capital account cooperative.
[2003, c. 344, Pt. D, §10 (amd).]
Section History:
PL 1983,
Ch. 136,
§
(NEW).
PL 2003,
Ch. 344,
§D10
(AMD).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1983. Revocation of election as employee cooperative corporation
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 3: EMPLOYEE COOPERATIVE CORPORATIONS
§1983. Revocation of election as employee cooperative corporation
When any employee cooperative revokes its election in accordance with section 1975, the articles of amendment must provide
for conversion of membership shares and internal capital accounts or their conversions to securities or other property in
a manner consistent with Title 13-C.
[RR 2001, c. 2, Pt. B, §33 (cor); §58 (aff).]
Section History:
PL 1983,
Ch. 136,
§
(NEW).
RR 2001,
Ch. 2,
§B33
(COR).
RR 2001,
Ch. 2,
§B58
(AFF).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007Title 13 - §1984. Mergers
Title 13: CORPORATIONS
Part 2: CORPORATIONS WITHOUT CAPITAL
Chapter 85: COOPERATIVES
Subchapter 3: EMPLOYEE COOPERATIVE CORPORATIONS
§1984. Mergers
An employee cooperative that has not revoked its election under this subchapter may not consolidate or merge with another
corporation other than an employee cooperative. Two or more employee cooperatives may consolidate or merge in accordance
with Title 13-C, chapter 11.
[RR 2001, c. 2, Pt. B, §34 (cor); §58 (aff).]
Section History:
PL 1983,
Ch. 136,
§
(NEW).
RR 2001,
Ch. 2,
§B34
(COR).
RR 2001,
Ch. 2,
§B58
(AFF).
The Revisor's Office cannot provide legal advice or
interpretation of Maine law to the public. If you need legal
advice, please consult
a qualified attorney.
Office of the Revisor of Statutes
7 State House Station
State House Room 108
Augusta, Maine 04333-0007