N.Y.
Cooperative Corporations Law Section 93
Internal capital account cooperatives
1.
A worker cooperative may provide in its by-laws that it shall operate as an internal capital account cooperative. An internal account cooperative is a worker cooperative whose entire net book value is reflected in internal capital accounts, one for each member, and a collective reserve account, and in which no persons other than members own capital stock. In an internal capital account cooperative, each member shall have one and only one vote in any matter requiring voting by stockholders.2.
An internal capital account cooperative shall credit the paid-in membership fee and additional paid-in capital of a member to the member’s internal capital account, and shall also record the apportionment of net retained proceeds or net losses to the members in accordance with patronage by appropriately crediting or debiting the internal capital accounts of members. The collective reserve account in an internal capital account cooperative shall reflect any paid-in capital, net losses and net retained proceeds not allocated to individual members.3.
In an internal capital account cooperative, the balances in all the individual internal capital accounts and collective reserve account, if any, shall be adjusted at the end of each accounting period so that the sum of the balances is equal to the net book value of the worker cooperative.4.
Section six hundred twenty-three of the business corporation law shall not apply to an internal capital account cooperative.
Source:
Section 93 — Internal capital account cooperatives, https://www.nysenate.gov/legislation/laws/CCO/93
(updated Sep. 22, 2014; accessed Oct. 26, 2024).