Royal Blind Society of New South Wales Act 1901 No 56



An Act to constitute the members of the Sydney Industrial Blind Institution a body corporate; to confer and impose upon that body certain powers, duties, rights, and liabilities; to transfer to and vest in it the property of the said institution and the Institution for the Blind, Strathfield; to discharge the trustees of the last-named institution from certain liabilities; and generally to carry out the said objects and the objects for which the said institutions were established.
Preamble
WHEREAS an association known as the Sydney Industrial Blind Institution has been established in Sydney for some years—having for its objects the teaching of trades to blind persons, and generally for promoting the welfare of such persons: And whereas in order to more effectually carry out the objects of the said institution it is deemed expedient to constitute the members of the said institution a corporate body, to make provision for the constitution of such body, and to confer upon it certain powers, and to provide for the management of such institution: And whereas associations having similar objects to those of the aforesaid institution, and known as the Home Teaching Society and Industrial Home for Blind Women, or collectively as the Institution for the Blind, Strathfield, have also been in existence for some years: And whereas in order to more effectually and economically carry out the objects of the said institutions, it is deemed expedient that their property, rights, and liabilities should be respectively transferred to and vested in the said corporate body:
Be it therefore enacted by the King’s Most Excellent Majesty, by and with the advice and consent of the Legislative Council and Legislative Assembly of New South Wales in Parliament assembled, and by the authority of the same, as follows:
1   Name of Act
This Act may be cited as the Royal Blind Society of New South Wales Act 1901.
s 1: Subst 1970 No 3, sec 2 (1) (a).
1A   Definitions
In this Act:
council means the council of management referred to in section 6.
Society means the Royal Blind Society of New South Wales.
s 1A: Ins 1970 No 3, sec 2 (1) (a). Subst 1996 No 121, Sch 1.17 (1).
2   Incorporation of members of Sydney Industrial Blind Institution
For the purposes of the teaching of trades to blind persons and generally for promoting the welfare of such persons a body corporate is hereby constituted, which shall consist of all persons who are now members of the association known as the Sydney Industrial Blind Institution together with all persons who may in pursuance of this Act become members of the said body corporate. The body corporate so constituted shall be known by the name of the Sydney Industrial Blind Institution, and by that name shall have perpetual succession and a common seal, and may sue and be sued, or otherwise appear and answer, be answered, or proceed or be proceeded against in all Courts.
2A   Change of name of corporation
(1)  As from the commencement of the Royal Blind Society of New South Wales Act 1952:
(a)  the name of the body corporate constituted by section 2 shall be the Royal Blind Society of New South Wales,
(b)  a reference in any Act or other instrument to the Sydney Industrial Blind Institution shall be read and construed as a reference to the Royal Blind Society of New South Wales.
(2)  Nothing contained in the Royal Blind Society of New South Wales Act 1952, shall prejudice or affect in any way the continuity of the body corporate constituted by section 2, but the same shall continue notwithstanding the provisions of the said Act.
(3)  The alteration of name effected by subsection (1) shall not affect any property, powers, rights, authorities, duties, functions, liabilities or obligations of the body corporate constituted by section 2, or render defective any legal or other proceedings instituted or to be instituted by or against the said body corporate.
Any legal or other proceedings may be continued or commenced by or against the body corporate by the name of the Royal Blind Society of New South Wales that might have been continued or commenced by or against the body corporate by the name of the Sydney Industrial Blind Institution.
s 2A: Ins 1952 No 25, sec 2.
2B   Change of objects of Society
On and from the date of assent to the Statute Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act (No 2) 1996, the objects of the Society are (despite section 2) the following:
(a)  to promote in New South Wales and elsewhere the interests of blind and vision-impaired persons generally,
(b)  to provide (directly or indirectly) services to assist blind and vision-impaired persons to develop and use their abilities fully and to achieve their aspirations for participation in general community life.
s 2B: Ins 1996 No 121, Sch 1.17 (2).
3   Transfer and vesting of property
(1)  All real and personal property vested in or held by any person in trust for or on behalf of the association known as the Sydney Industrial Blind Institution, or for the associations known as the Home Teaching Society and Industrial Home for Blind Women, or collectively as the Institution for the Blind, Strathfield, is hereby transferred to and vested in the said body corporate; and all other persons are hereby divested of any such property of which they are seized or possessed; and all rights and liabilities accrued or accruing to any person on behalf of either of such institutions are hereby respectively vested in and may be enforced by and against the said body corporate.
(2)  The trustees of the said last-named institution are hereby discharged from all liabilities which they may have incurred by reason of the transfer by them of the management or control of such institution, or by reason of any acts done by them in connection with such transfer.
4   Society may purchase and hold property
The body corporate is hereby empowered to take, purchase, hold, and enjoy to them and their successors for ever all real or personal property necessary or proper for the purpose of the said body, and to sell, grant, convey, assure, demise, or otherwise dispose of either absolutely or by way of mortgage, any real or personal property, other than the land described in Schedule 1, vested in such body corporate.
s 4: Am 1963 No 12, sec 2 (a); 1996 No 121, Sch 1.17 (3) (4).
4A   Revocation of conditions, trusts and dedications affecting lands in Schedule 1
(1)  Any conditions, trusts or dedications affecting the lands described in Schedule 1 immediately before the commencement of the Royal Blind Society of New South Wales (Amendment) Act 1963, are hereby revoked and annulled but the said body corporate shall not be capable of alienating, charging or in any way disposing of the said lands except in accordance with the provisions of subsection (4).
(2)  No title to the said lands described in Schedule 1 shall be held bad either at law or in equity by reason of any breach or non-performance before the commencement of the Royal Blind Society of New South Wales (Amendment) Act 1963, of any condition, trust or proviso contained in the grants by the Crown of such lands and every provision for forfeiture or reverter in respect of any such breach or non-performance shall be deemed to have been waived and released by the Crown as from the date of each such Crown grant.
(3)  On application by or on behalf of the body corporate and on production of Crown grants Volume 511 Folio 53 and Volume 7335 Folio 24 the Registrar-General shall issue to the said body corporate a certificate of title for an estate in fee-simple in respect of the said lands described in Schedule 1 free from any notification or caveat that the said lands are affected by any conditions, trusts or dedications.
(4)  The said body corporate is hereby empowered to sell, demise or mortgage the said lands described in Schedule 1:
Provided that no such sale or mortgage shall be made unless the same has been previously sanctioned by a resolution of a general or special meeting of the members of the said body corporate.
s 4A: Ins 1963 No 12, sec 2 (b). Am 1996 No 121, Sch 1.17 (5).
5   Classes of membership of Society
The Society is to have the following classes of members:
(a)  honorary life members,
(b)  life members,
(c)  ordinary members.
s 5: Am 1963 No 12, sec 2 (c); 1965 No 33, sec 4 (2). Subst 1970 No 3, sec 2 (1) (b); 1996 No 121, Sch 1.17 (6).
5AA   Honorary life members
(1)  Honorary life members of the Society are the persons on whom the council has conferred honorary life membership.
(2)  The council may, by resolution, confer honorary life membership of the Society on any person who, in the opinion of the council, has made a very significant contribution to the work of the Society.
s 5AA: Ins 1996 No 121, Sch 1.17 (7).
5A   Life members
(1)  The persons who are life members of the Society on the date of assent to the Statute Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act (No 2) 1996 are life members of the Society.
(2)  A person who makes a donation of, or of more than, $1,000 (or such other amount as the members at an annual general meeting or a special general meeting may from time to time determine by resolution) to the Society becomes, on making the donation, a life member of the Society.
(3)  A life member of the Society is not required to pay any further subscription to the Society.
s 5A: Ins 1970 No 3, sec 2 (1) (b). Subst 1996 No 121, Sch 1.17 (8).
5B   Ordinary members
(1)  The persons who are members (other than life members) of the Society on the date of assent to the Statute Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act (No 2) 1996 are ordinary members of the Society until the 30 June next following that date without further payment of any subscription.
(2)  A person who makes a donation of $10 or more (but less than the amount that qualifies a person as a life member) to the Society becomes, on making the donation, an ordinary member of the Society until:
(a)  the 30 June next following the date of the donation, or
(b)  the conclusion of the annual general meeting next following the date of the donation,
whichever is the later.
s 5B: Ins 1970 No 3, sec 2 (1) (b). Subst 1996 No 121, Sch 1.17 (9).
6   Council of management
The affairs of the said body corporate shall be managed and controlled by a council of management consisting of 15 persons, elected by the members of the said body corporate.
s 6: Subst 1963 No 12, sec 2 (d); 1970 No 3, sec 2 (1) (b). Am 1996 No 121, Sch 1.17 (10).
6A   Election of council
(1)  The members of the council shall be elected in accordance with this section.
(2)  At each annual general meeting of the Society after the date of assent to the Statute Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act (No 2) 1996, 5 members are to be elected to the council.
(3)  The members so elected are, subject to this Act, to hold office until the third annual general meeting after the meeting at which they were elected.
(4)  A retiring member of the council shall, if he is otherwise qualified, be eligible for re-election.
s 6A: Ins 1970 No 3, sec 2 (1) (b). Am 1996 No 121, Sch 1.17 (11).
6B   Casual vacancy
(1)  A casual vacancy occurring on the council by death, resignation or otherwise shall be filled by a person appointed by the council for the purpose.
(2)  A person appointed under subsection (1) shall:
(a)  subject to this Act, hold office for the residue of his predecessor’s term of office,
(b)  be deemed, for the purposes of section 6A, to have been elected a member of the council at the annual general meeting at which his predecessor was elected, and
(c)  if he is otherwise qualified, be eligible for re-election.
s 6B: Ins 1970 No 3, sec 2 (1) (b). Am 1996 No 121, Sch 1.17 (12).
6C   Persons of or above 72 years on council
(1)  A person who has attained the age of seventy-two years shall not be eligible to be nominated for election at an annual general meeting as a member of the council, unless a resolution is passed at that meeting authorising him to hold office if elected.
(2)  Where a member of the council is of or above the age of seventy-two years immediately before the commencement of an annual general meeting and his term of office would, but for this subsection, have continued after that meeting, he shall, notwithstanding any resolution passed at any previous annual general meeting in respect of him under this section, be considered to have vacated his seat at that commencement, unless a resolution is passed at that meeting authorising him to continue in office.
(3)  A reference in this section to a resolution that is passed at an annual general meeting is, notwithstanding section 14, a reference to a resolution of which not less than seven days’ notice has been given by advertisement published in at least two daily newspapers and passed by a majority of not less than three-quarters of the members of the said body corporate present and voting at that meeting.
(4)  A person who has attained the age of seventy-two years shall not be eligible to be appointed under section 6B.
(5)  No act done or omitted to be done by the council shall be invalid by reason of the fact that a person was nominated for election as, or was holding office as, a member of the council in contravention of any provision of this section.
s 6C: Ins 1970 No 3, sec 2 (1) (b). Am 1996 No 121, Sch 1.17 (12).
7   Election of president etc
The council shall elect a president, two vice-presidents, a secretary, and a treasurer out of their own body.
s 7: Am 1963 No 12, sec 2 (e).
8   Annual general meeting
The secretary shall call an annual general meeting, to be held at such date as the council may determine.
s 8: Am 1963 No 12, sec 2 (f); 1996 No 121, Sch 1.17 (12).
9   Special general meeting
The secretary, when instructed by the council, shall also convene a special general meeting of members to be held at such time as the council directs, and shall convene such meeting whenever requested in writing to do so by members having unitedly fifty votes.
s 9: Am 1963 No 12, sec 2 (g).
9A   Notice of meetings
(1)  Every annual general meeting and special general meeting of the council is to be advertised, at least 3 weeks before the day on which the meeting is to be held:
(a)  on at least 1 occasion in at least 2 newspapers that are published on at least 5 days per week and that circulate in the Sydney metropolitan area, and
(b)  on at least 1 occasion in each of at least 2 public media that are accessible to blind and vision-impaired people.
(2)  In this section:
on-line service means a service provided by or through the facilities of a computer communication system and accessed through a telecommunications network that allows for:
(a)  the input, output or examination of computer data or computer programs, or
(b)  the transmission of computer data or computer programs from one computer to another, or
(c)  the transmission of computer data or computer programs from a computer to a terminal service.
public media includes any radio or television broadcast and any on-line service (such as a bulletin board or a service providing information through a system connected to the internet).
s 9A: Ins 1996 No 121, Sch 1.17 (13).
10   Qualifications of voters
Any person shall be qualified to vote at any annual or special general meeting if he is for the time being a member of the said body corporate.
s 10: Subst 1970 No 3, sec 2 (1) (c).
11   Scale of voting power
At every meeting every member of the institution qualified to vote shall have one vote.
12   Constitution of general meetings
No annual or special general meeting shall be deemed to be duly constituted, unless ten members at least are present.
13   Nomination of council
(1)  Except as provided in section 6C, any member of the said body corporate qualified to vote as aforesaid may be nominated for and elected as a member of the council at the annual general meeting.
(2)  No person shall be elected as a member of the council unless at the meeting for the election of the council he is proposed and seconded by two members qualified to vote as aforesaid and, except in the case of a person who was a member of the council immediately before the commencement of the meeting, unless a notice had been sent or delivered to the office of the Society so as to be received thereat not later than two weeks before the meeting, stating that it is proposed that he be nominated for election at the meeting.
(3)    (Repealed)
s 13: Am 1963 No 12, sec 2 (h); 1970 No 3, sec 2 (1) (d); 1996 No 121, Sch 1.17 (12) (14).
14   Matters arising at all meetings and all elections to be determined by majority of votes
All matters arising at any meeting of the said corporate body or of the council, and every election held at any such meeting, shall be determined by majority of votes of members present, as declared by the chairman of the meeting. In the event of an equality of votes the chairman shall have a second or casting vote.
s 14: Am 1963 No 12, sec 2 (i).
15   Common seal
The council shall have the custody and use of the common seal of the said body corporate, and the form thereof and all other matters relating thereto shall from time to time be determined by the council; and a majority of the members of the council present at any meeting shall have power to use or direct the use of such seal for all purposes requiring to be evidenced by the corporate seal of the said body corporate: Provided that it shall not be necessary to require such seal to be affixed as evidence of the appointment of an attorney or solicitor by the said body corporate in or for the prosecution of any action, suit, or other proceeding.
s 15: Am 1963 No 12, sec 2 (j).
16   Meetings of council
The council shall meet at least once a month, and 6 members at any such meeting shall form a quorum, and any elected member of the council absenting himself without leave from the meetings of the council for four successive months shall be considered to have vacated his seat.
s 16: Am 1963 No 12, sec 2 (k); 1996 No 121, Sch 1.17 (15).
17   Council may appoint officers and sub-committees
The council may from time to time appoint such officers as they deem necessary to manage the affairs of the said body corporate, and may also appoint sub-committees, and delegate to such sub-committees any of the powers herein conferred upon the council: Provided that every resolution of a sub-committee shall be confirmed by the council.
s 17: Am 1963 No 12, sec 2 (l).
18   Council may make by-laws
The council may make by-laws and rules for the general regulation of the affairs of the said body corporate and of the council.
The by-laws and rules of the association known as the Sydney Industrial Blind Institution at present in force are hereby confirmed, and shall, except so far as repealed, altered, or amended by any by-laws and rules made under this Act, be and continue binding on the members of the said body corporate and all other persons as effectually as if they had been made under this Act, and a printed copy of any such by-laws and rules, or of any by-laws and rules made under the authority of this Act, sealed with the seal of the said body corporate, and purporting to be certified by the secretary of the said body corporate for the time being as correct, shall be received in all courts as conclusive evidence of such by-laws and rules, and of the same having been duly made under the authority of this Act.
s 18: Am 1963 No 12, sec 2 (m).
19   Report of council and treasurer
At the annual general meeting the council shall submit a report of their proceedings, and of the state and prospects of the said body corporate, and the treasurer shall present an account, approved of by the council, of the receipts and disbursements of the said body corporate.
s 19: Am 1963 No 12, sec 2 (n); 1996 No 121, Sch 1.17 (12).
20   Savings, transitional and other provisions
Schedule 2 has effect.
s 20: Ins 1996 No 121, Sch 1.17 (16).
Schedule 1 Land
(Section 4A)
Schedule 1 (formerly Schedule), hdg: Subst 1996 No 121, Sch 1.17 (17).
ALL that piece or parcel of land containing by admeasurement 1 rood 32 perches be the same more or less situate in the parish of St James, county of Cumberland, being the site for an Asylum for the Indigent Blind, dedicated on 17 March 1876, and comprising the whole of the land in Crown grant Volume 511 Folio 53, and shown on plans catalogued S399–858 and C7787–2030 in the Department of Lands.
ALSO ALL that piece or parcel of land containing by admeasurement 12¾ perches be the same more or less situate in the parish of St James, county of Cumberland, being portions 1 and 2 being an area of 11¾ perches dedicated on 26 September 1900, and an area of 1 perch dedicated on 2 August 1905, as additions to the site for an Asylum for the Indigent Blind, and comprising the whole of the land in Crown grant Volume 7335 Folio 24 and shown on plan catalogued C7787–2030 in the Department of Lands.
Schedule 1 (formerly Schedule): Ins 1963 No 12, sec 2 (o). Renumbered 1996 No 121, Sch 1.17 (17).
Schedule 2 Savings, transitional and other provisions
(Section 20)
1   Definition
In this Schedule:
2   Reduction in membership of council
Section 6, as amended by the amending Act, is to be construed as if the reference to 15 persons were:
(a)  a reference to 18 persons, until the first annual general meeting of the Society after the commencement of the section as amended, and
(b)  at that annual general meeting, and until the second such annual general meeting, a reference to 17 persons, and
(c)  at that second annual general meeting, and until the third such annual general meeting, a reference to 16 persons.
3   Continuity of council
(1)  A person who was a member of the council immediately before the repeal and re-enactment of section 6A (2) and (3) by the amending Act is taken to have been elected in accordance with that section as in force after that repeal and re-enactment.
(2)  The person is to hold office for the balance of the person’s term in accordance with section 6A (3) before the repeal and re-enactment of that subsection.
Schedule 2: Ins 1996 No 121, Sch 1.17 (18).