David K. Ford, Esq. General Counsel, New York City Public Development Corporation
You have requested an opinion from our office concerning the Public Development Corporation's ("PDC") authority to enter into real property transactions upon the approval of the executive committee or another standing committee of PDC's board of directors.
PDC is a local development corporation which was created pursuant to Not-For-Profit Corporation Law, §
Section
"No purchase of real property shall be made by a corporation and no corporation shall sell, mortgage or lease its real property unless authorized by the vote of two-thirds of the entire board, provided that if there are twenty-one or more directors, the vote of a majority of the entire board shall be sufficient."
Clearly the literal interpretation of section 509 precludes the delegation of the approval of real estate transactions to the executive committee or any other standing committee. The explanatory memorandum to the Not-for-Profit Corporation Law (McKinney's Not-For-Profit Corporation Law, Explanatory Memorandum, p xv) indicates that the requirement of the special vote was continued from prior statutes. However, section
You have informed us that PDC has 31 members on its board of directors. Accordingly, a majority vote of the board of directors is sufficient to approve real estate transactions. PDC's certificate of incorporation parallels section 509 and requires a majority of the board of directors to authorize real estate transactions.
You request our opinion as to whether PDC may delegate approval of the real property transactions to the executive committee or another standing committee of the board in light of PDC's alleged difficulties in conducting business and closing deals because the board only meets quarterly and there are so many members.
You note that authorizing real property transactions is not an activity which cannot be delegated by the board of directors under section
We are of the opinion that section
