Trustee Indemnity Insurance
In May 2006, one month after the implementation of the Charities and Trustee Investment (Scotland) Act 2005, OSCR identified that Trustee Indemnity Insurance (TII) was a potentially difficult issue for charity trustees and for OSCR.
As a result of the new rules restricting the circumstances under which charity trustees may be remunerated, TII would in most cases fall foul of these new rules (section 67 and 68 of the CTI(S) Act 2005). (For more detail see OSCR’s original position statement on TII of May 2006 below).
OSCR recognised that this may have unfortunate consequences in discouraging or deterring some potential or existing charity trustees. We have therefore been working with the Scottish Executive to find a solution to the problem. In the meantime no applicants for charitable status have been turned down because of this issue.
We now welcome the positive statement made by the Deputy Minister for Communities, with clarification that the issues arising from Section 67 AND 68 of the Act in relation to TII were “unintended”. The Minister has given a commitment to remove restrictions on its provision through amendment of the Charity and Trustee Investment (Scotland) Act 2005. We look forward to contributing to the development of revisions to the legislation in due course. (For details of the Deputy Minister’s statement see OSCR’s News item of 14 November 2006)
The statement by the Deputy Minister will help ease concerns within the sector. In the light of this statement and the commitment made by the Deputy Minister to seek an amendment to the legislation OSCR will continue to act proportionately and will not take action against charities because trustee indemnity insurance is in place. New applications of organisations that have such insurance in place or have the power to put such insurance in place will not be affected by this and will not be turned down because of it.
Published November 2006
OSCR's Position statement (May 2006)
Introduction
Section 67
- The charity trustees are satisfied that it is in the interests of the charity for the charity trustee to provide a service to the charity for a particular amount;
- That this amount is reasonable;
- There is a written agreement between the charity trustee and the charity that sets out the maximum amount of the payment;
- The majority of charity trustees remain unpaid; and
- The constitution does not expressly forbid payments to trustees.
Interpreting section 67
Section 68 defines remuneration as including ‘benefit in kind’ which can include both direct and indirect benefit. Trustee indemnity insurance will fall within the definition of remuneration in section 68 of the Act and accordingly be subject to the same conditions and restrictions as any other type of remuneration. Because most policies benefit all trustees they will fall foul of the rule that only a minority of trustees can benefit
The practical implications



