Wisconsin Code § 612.25

Voluntary dissolution of town mutuals
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
A town
mutual may be dissolved in the following way:
(1) PLAN FOR DISSOLUTION. The board shall adopt a plan for
dissolution stating:
(a) The reasons for the proposed action;
(b) The proposed terms, conditions and procedures for and estimated expenses of implementing the dissolution; and
(c) The financial condition of the town mutual, in such detail
as the commissioner reasonably requires.
(2) SUBMISSION TO COMMISSIONER. The town mutual shall
file with the commissioner the plan and any explanatory statement proposed to be issued to the members. The commissioner
may require that any additional information reasonably necessary
to enable the members to make a decision be added to the proposed explanatory statement.
(3) APPROVAL BY MEMBERS AND COMMISSIONER. The plan
shall thereupon be submitted to the members. If the members
adopt the plan, the corporation shall file with the commissioner
for approval a copy of the resolution of the members, stating the
number of members entitled to vote, the number of members voting and the number of votes cast in favor of the plan, stating separately the mail votes and the votes cast in person. The commissioner shall approve the plan unless he or she finds, after a hearing, that the town mutual is insolvent or may become insolvent in
the process of dissolution unless it makes an assessment. If an assessment would be required, the commissioner shall institute proceedings under s. 645.41 (10).
(4) IMPLEMENTATION OF PLAN. When the plan has been
completely implemented, that fact shall be reported to the commissioner and the commissioner shall certify that the town mutual no longer has a legal existence.
(5) CONVERSION TO CH. 645 LIQUIDATION. If it appears at
any time that the approved dissolution plan cannot be implemented according to its terms, or that there are grounds for involuntary liquidation, the commissioner may petition under s.
645.41 for liquidation of the town mutual.

‹ Prev All Wisconsin sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.