Philanthropy
When Should Charities Refuse Donations

The decision about when to accept a donation or turn it down is complex. With sources of wealth often a cause for controversy, and reputations on the line, this is a significant topic within philanthropy.
What arguments apply when charities choose whether to accept
or refuse a donation? In this era of heightened focus (not always
fair, perhaps) on certain practices and sources of wealth, this
is an important topic. It also feeds into how philanthropy is
pregnant with reputational considerations, both for potential
donors and recipients. (This, by the way, also reminds us of the
role of the philanthropy advisor, a topic this news service has
discussed here.)
To delve into the details are Ella Pudney and Roman Kubiak, at
Hugh James’s
Private Wealth and Legacy Disputes team. They discuss the Charity
Commission’s plans to update its guidance for charity trustees
regarding when they can accept or refuse donations and how this
reconciles with the High Court decision in Butler-Sloss and
Others v The Charity Commission for England and Wales [2022] EWHC
974 (Ch) regarding charity investment policies.
The editors are pleased to share these insights; the usual
disclaimers apply with outside contributors’ views. Jump into the
conversation! Email tom.burroughes@wealthbriefing.com
Charities refusing donations
The refusal or return of donations is a delicate topic for
charity trustees having to balance the purposes of the charity
with the need to ensure continued funding and maximise returns
and financial support, while assessing the potential impact of
controversial decisions on future donations.
Orlando Fraser KC, chair of the Charity Commission, recently
lectured on a trustee’s ability to refuse or return charitable
donations. The Charity Commission guidance will be published in
early 2024 with the aim of impelling (though some may say
compelling) trustees to consider their choices in accepting or
refusing donations.
This is all against the backdrop of a time when charities, and
other institutions, are carefully looking to protect their brand
while ensuring they can thrive into the future for the benefit of
their stakeholders. It is also a time when the monuments and
legacies of those who built our cities off the back of slavery
and moral corruption are being questioned while states with, at
the very least, questionable human rights records are freely
investing in the sports and media spaces of apparently civilised
societies.
The previous guidance came hot on the heels of the scandal
of the Presidents Club Charitable Trust. That guidance was
withdrawn on 6 November this year.
Refusing a donation is an immediate loss for a charity. In a time
when many of those who rely on the support of charities are
struggling financially, scrutiny has increased on not only the
decision itself, but the reasons behind it. Arguments can be, and
have been, made that the refusal of a donation from a specific
individual or group may ultimately further a charity’s purposes.
As many readers will know, in Butler-Sloss and Others v The
Charity Commission, the trustees of two charitable trusts sought,
and were granted, permission to adopt an investment policy which
specifically excluded investments which were at odds with the
Paris Climate Agreement. They successfully argued that, while
charity trustees have a duty to maximise financial returns, that
does not need to be at the expense of the furtherance of that
charity’s purposes, in this case environmental protection.
However, in comments which some may feel are at odds with that
approach, and others may feel simply seek to remind trustees of
their overriding fiduciary duties, Fraser draws a clear
distinction between what he calls “the personal squeamishness
around sources of philanthropic funding [which] may benefit the
sense of righteous progressiveness of a trustee or chief
executive” but which likely do not “serve the beneficiary reliant
on the services a charity provides” on the one hand, and in
ensuring existing charity policies on returning or refusing
donations are “fundamentally in the best interests of the
charity, rather than reflecting the opinions of those who wrote
them” on the other.
While charities can refuse donations for illegality or
reputational risk, the focus is likely to be on personal moral
conflicts. Fraser went on to comment that “given the financial
detriment to a charity from refusing or returning a donation, the
counterweighing reasons justifying the refusal or return will
need to be significant.”
At first glance this appears to be slightly at odds with the
Commission’s view just four years ago when Sarah Watkinson, then
director of policy, planning and communications for the
Commission, commented that: “From where I stand, it seems that
the sector is increasingly emboldened by its own values, not just
in what it does, but also in how it acts and behaves. As
regulator, we welcome this. Charities are more than just a sum of
their balance sheet and services they provide to a community.
They belong to the public, and exist for the betterment of
society, so it is right that they are considering what the
public, their beneficiaries and volunteers think and feel about
sensitive issues when making decisions about money.”
Changes in the sector, financial pressures and the evolving
landscape may have influenced this shift.
Conclusion
Mr Justice Michael Green hearing the Butler-Sloss case, and
Orlando Fraser KC as chair of the Charity Commission, have
demonstrated the potential disparities in the power trustees have
when making financial decisions.
While trustees now arguably have more power, or at least, freedom
to scrutinise the source of donations and to refuse them where
appropriate, to what extent the updated guidance will marry up
with the Butler-Sloss decision remains to be seen. It will
inevitably see a shift from the earlier guidance potentially
making trustees’ roles more complex and open to challenge.
Ultimately, what appears to underpin the changes which are likely
to come into effect is a desire to ensure that the sector
continues to benefit from philanthropy to avoid what Fraser
describes as “the immediate alternative to high net worth
individuals giving generously to charity,” namely “high net
worth individuals not giving generously to charity and keeping
their wealth to themselves and their families.”
Charity trustees and chief executives will no doubt be paying
close attention.