- 2025 69th Legislature 2025 SB 134 - 1 - Authorized Print Version – SB 134 ENROLLED BILL AN ACT CREATING THE SAFEGUARDING ENDOWMENT GIFTS ACT; PROVIDING DEFINITIONS; PROVIDING PROTECTIONS AFFORDED TO ENDOWMENTS AND GIFTS TO CERTAIN ENTITIES; PROVIDING REQUIREMENTS FOR CERTAIN ENTITIES RELATING TO ENDOWMENTS AND GIFTS; AND PROVIDING AN IMMEDIATE EFFECTIVE DATE AND A RETROACTIVE APPLICABILITY DATE.” BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MONTANA: Section 1. (1) [Sections 1 through 3] may be cited as the "Safeguarding Endowment Gifts Act". (2) [Sections 1 through 3] are necessary to provide legal recourse to individual charitable donors when their giving restrictions are not followed by a recipient charitable organization according to an endowment agreement. Section 2. For the purposes of [sections 1 through 3], the following definitions apply: (1) "Charitable organization" means an organization arranged and operated exclusively for religious, charitable, scientific, literary, educational, or other specified purposes or for testing for public safety and that has a tax-exempt designation under the provisions of section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C. 501(c)(3). (2) "Donor" means an individual or entity who has made a contribution of property or money to either an existing endowment fund or a new endowment fund of a charitable organization or of a charitable trust pursuant to the terms of an endowment agreement that may include donor-imposed restrictions or other conditionsgoverning the use of the contribution. (3) "Donor-imposed restriction" means a written statement within an endowment agreement that specifies obligations on the management or purpose of the endowment fund. - 2025 69th Legislature 2025 SB 134 - 2 - Authorized Print Version – SB 134 ENROLLED BILL (4) "Endowment agreement" means a written agreement between a charitable organization and a donor or a charitable trust and a donor regarding the contribution made by the donor and accepted by the charitable organization or the charitable trust that may include donor-imposed restrictions or other conditions governing the use of the contribution. (5) (a) "Endowment fund" means an institutional fund or part of an institutional fund that, under the terms of a gift instrument, is not wholly expendable by the institution on a current basis. (b) The term does not include assets that an institution designates as an endowment fund for its own use. (6) "Gift instrument" means a record or records, including an institutional solicitation, under which property is granted to, transferred to, or held by an institution as an institutional fund. (7) "Legal representative" means the administrator or executor of a person's estate, if made known by the donor to the charitable organization, a surviving spouse if a court judgment has settled the accounts of the estate, or a person designated in an endowment agreement, whether or not the person has been born at the time of the designation, to act in place of a party to the agreement for all matters expressed in the agreement and all of the actions the agreement contemplates, including without limitation interpreting, performing, and enforcing the agreement and defending its validity. (8) "Property" means real property, personal property or money, cryptocurrency, stocks, bonds, or any other asset or financial instrument. Section 3. (1) Except where specifically required or authorized by federal or state law, a charitable organization that accepts a contribution pursuant to a written donor-imposed restriction may not violate the terms of that restriction without potential penalty. (2) If a charitable organization violates a donor-imposed restriction contained in an endowment agreement, the donor or that person's legal representative, 90 days after written notification is provided to the charitable organization at the organization's address of record, may file a complaint within 6 3 years after discovery for breach of the endowment agreement. The complaint may be filed in a court of general jurisdiction in the county where a charitable organization named as a party has its principal office or principal place of carrying out its charitable purpose or in a court of the United States whose district includes the county. The - 2025 69th Legislature 2025 SB 134 - 3 - Authorized Print Version – SB 134 ENROLLED BILL complaint may be filed regardless of whether the agreement expressly reserves a right to sue or enforce, and it may not seek a judgment awarding damages to the plaintiff. (3) In the event a charitable organization is unable to fulfill a term in an endowment agreement, the donor or that person's legal representative must be notified 30 90 days in advance and offered an alternative solution that closely matches the initial term in the endowment agreement. (4) A charitable organization may obtain a judicial declaration of rights and duties expressed in an endowment agreement containing donor restrictions as to all of the actions the agreement contemplates, including without limitation the interpretation, performance, and enforcement of the agreement and the determination of its validity. The charitable organization may seek the declaration in any suit brought under this section or by filing a complaint. (5) If the court determines that a charitable organization violated a donor-imposed restriction in an endowment agreement, the court may order one or more remedies consistent with the charitable purposes expressed in the endowment agreement. The court may not order the return of donated funds to the donor or the donor's legal representative or estate. (6) Nothing in this act affects the authority of the attorney general to enforce any restriction in an endowment agreement, limits the application of the judicial power of cy pres, or alters the right of an institution to modify a restriction on the management, investment, purpose, or use of an endowment fund in a manner permitted by the endowment agreement and by the Montana Uniform Prudent Management of Institutional Funds Act, Title 72, chapter 30. Section 4. [Sections 1 through 3] are intended to be codified as a new part in Title 72, chapter 30, and the provisions of Title 72, chapter 30, apply to [sections 1 through 3]. Section 5. on passage and approval and applies retroactively, within the meaning of 1-2-109, to any endowment agreement entered into on or after January 1, 1975. - END - I hereby certify that the within bill, SB 134, originated in the Senate. ___________________________________________ Secretary of the Senate ___________________________________________ President of the Senate Signed this _______________________________day of____________________________________, 2025. ___________________________________________ Speaker of the House Signed this _______________________________day of____________________________________, 2025. SENATE BILL NO. 134 INTRODUCED BY G. HERTZ AN ACT CREATING THE SAFEGUARDING ENDOWMENT GIFTS ACT; PROVIDING DEFINITIONS; PROVIDING PROTECTIONS AFFORDED TO ENDOWMENTS AND GIFTS TO CERTAIN ENTITIES; PROVIDING REQUIREMENTS FOR CERTAIN ENTITIES RELATING TO ENDOWMENTS AND GIFTS; AND PROVIDING AN IMMEDIATE EFFECTIVE DATE AND A RETROACTIVE APPLICABILITY DATE.”