Nonprofit corporation: Difference between revisions
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A '''nonprofit corporation''' is a legal and economic entity in the United States established under [[state law]] to govern, regulate and protect the assets of a range of charitable, educational, scientific, religious and other, similar activities and organizations and associations. Traditionally, nonprofit corporations are deemed legal individuals or "legal personalities" in their own right, separate from their founders and controllers and able to own property, enter into contracts, and incur debts of their own accord. | A '''nonprofit corporation''' is a legal and economic entity in the United States established under [[state law]] to govern, regulate and protect the assets of a range of charitable, educational, scientific, religious and other, similar activities and organizations and associations. Traditionally, nonprofit corporations are deemed legal individuals or "legal personalities" in their own right, separate from their founders and controllers and able to own property, enter into contracts, and incur debts of their own accord. | ||
Most nonprofit corporations differ from ordinary business corporations ([[C-corporation]]s and [[S-corporation]]s). | Most nonprofit corporations differ from ordinary business corporations ([[C-corporation]]s and [[S-corporation]]s) in important ways. Most notably, nonprofit corporations as a group are characterized by various forms of [[nondistribution constraint]]s that prohibit them from distributing "profits" (or operating surpluses in any form) to owners or shareholders. |
Revision as of 13:42, 25 September 2020
A nonprofit corporation is a legal and economic entity in the United States established under state law to govern, regulate and protect the assets of a range of charitable, educational, scientific, religious and other, similar activities and organizations and associations. Traditionally, nonprofit corporations are deemed legal individuals or "legal personalities" in their own right, separate from their founders and controllers and able to own property, enter into contracts, and incur debts of their own accord.
Most nonprofit corporations differ from ordinary business corporations (C-corporations and S-corporations) in important ways. Most notably, nonprofit corporations as a group are characterized by various forms of nondistribution constraints that prohibit them from distributing "profits" (or operating surpluses in any form) to owners or shareholders.