| A Guide to Taking
Perfectly Proper Minutes
Author: Gurdon H. Buck
Publish Date: November/December 1987
Origin: Common Ground
Most attorneys who specialize in community association law
find themselves being asked about the procedure and rules
for taking minutes at meetings of the board or members of
a community association. The following guide to minute taking
addresses this issue.
To begin with, the worst basis for a set of good minutes
is a bad meeting. If the president or chair does not follow
parliamentary procedure, or understand the fundamentals of
running a meeting, the resulting minutes will reflect the
inevitable chaos. Minutes are the record of the official action
of the assembly. Thus there must be a vote of the assembly
to have any official action. if a meeting goes by without
a vote being taken, that isn't a meeting, but rather a random
collection of people, "a fortuitous gathering of citizens."
It is also a waste of time. Such a gathering should generate
no minutes, except to reflect the opening of the meeting and
its adjournment.
As their name implies, minutes should be brief. Brevity,
however, often requires more effort and thoughtfulness than
longwindedness does.
As a minimum, the minutes should contain the following elements:
1. The exact corporate name of the association, and
the words "Minutes of the meeting of (name of body)."
2. The date and place of the meeting.
3.The location and time of the meeting.
4. The names of the persons present in an official
capacity. If there is an open meeting, the non-voting
audience need not be included. However, if the meeting is
a membership meeting, a roll should be taken, and the number
of persons or votes present should be announced, or at least
a quorum announced, and entered into the minutes.
5. The resolutions, exactly as finally made, seconded,
and passed. There is no reason to include the summary
of the debate, the discussion, the side remarks, the various
drafts, and revisions of the motions, who said what, or any
discussion on any item. None of these is the official action
of the assembly. The resolution appearing in the minutes should
be as voted upon and passed. If there are reports, they should
be accepted by resolution without adoption of recommendations,
if in fact they are not adopted, and their text appended to
the minutes.
The resolution should have in it such background and introduction
as the assembly has before it for discussion, and approval.
Again, the remarks of individual members of the assembly,
need not be included in the minutes. Those remarks are not
the action of the assembly, and can be used in a misleading
manner in later interpretations of action of the assembly.
In a well run meeting, the text of the motion will have been
presented in writing before it is brought to action. If it
is placed on the agenda for the meeting, or as a conclusion
in a committee report, or as a written recommendation by the
manager, it is more likely that the assembly will not stray
from the issues at hand, and thus make a more reasoned decision,
based on revisions and narrowly discussed amendments.
In light of the above reasoning, the motion should be made
before any discussion of the topic. No motion, no discussion.
A discussion without a motion is not only officially "out
of order, " but also creates chaos. A committee report
can be made, ending in a motion, if action is required. If
no action is required, there must still be a motion to accept
the report without action.
Minutes need to reflect correct parliamentary procedure.
The group should not be discussing anything that is not properly
"on the floor," that is, presented in the form of
a motion that the group can act upon.
The worst examples of minute taking contain extraneous material.
Taking minutes is not the same thing as taking dictation.
The secretary's notes are for the purpose of getting the wording
of the motions exactly as passed. If the secretary, or any
member of the assembly, is uncertain about the wording of
the motion, it should be re-read to the assembly before final
passage.
In a fast moving meeting, it may be while to make a recording
of the actions to assist the secretary in reproducing the
wording of the various motions. The recording, ever, is not
the recording of the action of the group. Neither are the
secretary in notes. The action is only what the group actually
approved.
It is not necessary for the secretary to be a member of the
board. Often a professional secretary, or assistant secretary
is hired to take the minutes, or a clerk might be employed
to take the minutes and submit them to the secretary for approval
and execution. This frees the secretary to participate in
the debate. if a secretary is also a director and expected
to take part in the debate, it is doing a great disservice
to the elected position of the officer to saddle him or her
with the job of taking minutes. in a community association,
it is sometimes the manager or other employee who records
the minutes of the meeting.
A motion is the agreed upon solution to a problem. The actual
direction for action by an assembly should start with the
word resolved, which is the resolution of the problem stated
in the background statement and discussed in the debate. Thus,
a motion that has passed is properly described as a "resolution."
6.The vote. If the vote is "without
objection," the fastest method of passing routine motions,
it should be so stated in the minutes. if the vote is by voice,
only the ruling of the chair need be noted, that is "the
motion passed." if a member of the assembly successfully
moves to divide the assembly by standing, a show of hands,
or a paper ballot, the count should be recorded. In a small
assembly, it is proper to show the names of those voting in
favor, abstaining and in opposition to a resolution; Because
of the fiduciary status of the board of a community association,
it is advisable to list those voting with respect to all action
motions. It is especially important to list those dissenting,
so that they are not responsible for the consequences of an
action with which they disagree.
7. The signature of the secretary, preceded by the
word submitted. The minutes are not official until
they are approved by the assembly at a subsequent meeting.
Once approved, they are the official action of the assembly,
no matter what actually occurred. Thus, by approving the minutes
with a differing statement of a resolution, an assembly can
effectively change its mind.
8. Inclusion in the corporate record book.
The maintenance of the official records of the corporation
is the principal function of the secretary. The minute book
is the principal record of the corporation. The records should
be on good paper, in an official notebook, which should be
turned over to the succeeding secretary upon appointment or
election to office.
Minutes are the sole, official reflection of the acts of
the association. Without them, an association cannot, and
has not acted. Sloppy minutes, that merely reflect the voices
and words of the assembly, without putting down its actions,
do not support any action.
Gurdon H Buck is secretary to the Connecticut Chapter
of CAI, and is secretary to the CAI Research Foundation. He
is a former CAI National Trustee, and was organizer of the
Connecticut Chapter of CAI. Buck is an author of many books
and articles on community associations, is a newspaper columnist,
and has appeared in many panels. He is an attorney, practicing
community associations law in Hartford, Connecticut and was
the winner of CAI's Byron Hanke Award in 1987.
|