Sentences with phrase «into charitable purposes»

Through state programs that funnel the interest from these accounts into charitable purposes, lawyers» trust accounts have became major sources of funding for legal services.

Not exact matches

I asked how many hospitals Mother Teresa built with the millions she collected that was supposed to be used for charitable purposes and instead went into the Vatican's general fund.
No one knows how those millions were spent, as they went into the Vatican's general fund, despite being designated for charitable purposes.
Refused to give dying patients appropriate pain medication, consorted with known felons and dictators to get huge donations, never built a state of the art hospital despite raking in millions in unaccounted for funds, which went into the Vatican's general expense account despite being designated specifically for charitable purposes?
In practice this means that money received for charitable purposes is paid into the parish account.
: Yes, family trusts and corporations are built into the family financial plan as author Chris Clarke shows how you can use best business practices to shape leaders and transform your family into an effective team with a common financial and charitable purpose.
The notional cash value attributed for the purposes of enabling a Member to convert GC Award Points into charitable donations has no bearing to the real value of the GC Award Points which is zero.
The Act created new charitable purposes, explicitly mirroring government policies and, more crucially, appeared to attempt to convert a non-ministerial regulatory body, the Charity Commission, into a law making one, with power, in the guise of satisfying the public benefit test, to end the life of any of the 183,506 registered charities — Catholic adoption agencies and public schools being its most recent targets.
Charities Act 2006 (Commencement No 4, Transitional Provisions and Savings) Order 2008 (SI 2008/945) Brought into force, intralia, the fol lowing provisions of the Charities Act 2006 on 1 April 2008: s 1 (meaning of charity); s 2 (meaning of «charitable purpose»); s 3 («public benefit» test); s 4 (6)(guidance as to the operation of the public benefit requirement); s 5 (1)(special provisions about recreational charities, sports clubs etc); s 5 (2)(special provisions about recreational charities, sports clubs etc); s 29 (1)(duty of auditor etc. of charity which is not a company to report matters to the Commission); s 30 (Group Accounts); s 33 (duty of auditor etc of charitable company to report matters to the Commission); and s 38 (power of Commission to relieve trustees, auditors etc from liability for breach of trust or duty.
(Commencement No 4, Transitional Provisions and Savings) Order 2008 (SI 2008/945) Brought into force, intralia, the fol lowing provisions of the Charities Act 2006 on 1 April 2008: s 1 (meaning of charity); s 2 (meaning of «charitable purpose»); s 3 («public benefit» test); s 4 (6)(guidance as to the operation of the public benefit requirement); s 5 (1)(special provisions about recreational charities, sports clubs etc); s 5 (2)(special provisions about recreational charities, sports clubs etc); s 29 (1)(duty of auditor etc. of charity which is not a company to report matters to the Commission); s 30 (Group Accounts); s 33 (duty of auditor etc of charitable company to report matters to the Commission); and s 38 (power of Commission to relieve trustees, auditors etc from liability for breach of trust or duty.
Just as the courts avoid deciding whether an alleged charitable purposes are for the public benefit, preferring just to slot them into ready - made categories, so too they should avoid deciding if an alleged religious principle is more important than another in a non-legal setting.
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