Sec. 4. (a) A plan of domestication of a domestic domesticating entity may be amended:

(1) in the same manner as the plan was approved, if the plan does not provide for the manner in which it may be amended; or

Terms Used In Indiana Code 23-0.6-5-4

  • Amendment: A proposal to alter the text of a pending bill or other measure by striking out some of it, by inserting new language, or both. Before an amendment becomes part of the measure, thelegislature must agree to it.
  • Property: includes personal and real property. See Indiana Code 1-1-4-5
(2) by its governing persons or interest holders of the entity in the manner provided in the plan, but an interest holder that was entitled to vote on or consent to approval of the domestication is entitled to vote on or consent to any amendment of the plan that will change:

(A) the amount or kind of interests, securities, obligations, money, other property, rights to acquire interests or securities, or any combination of the foregoing, to be received by any of the interest holders of the domesticating entity under the plan;

(B) the public organic record, if any, or private organic rules of the domesticated entity that will be in effect immediately after the domestication becomes effective, except for changes that do not require approval of the interest holders of the domesticated entity under its organic law or organic rules; or

(C) any other terms or conditions of the plan, if the change would adversely affect the interest holder in any material respect.

     (b) After a plan of domestication has been approved by a domestic domesticating entity and before articles of domestication becomes effective, the plan may be abandoned as provided in the plan. Unless prohibited by the plan, a domestic domesticating entity may abandon the plan in the same manner as the plan was approved.

     (c) If a plan of domestication is abandoned after articles of domestication have been delivered to the secretary of state for filing, articles of abandonment, signed by the entity, must be delivered to the secretary of state for filing before the time the articles of domestication become effective. The articles of abandonment take effect on filing, and the domestication is abandoned and does not become effective. Articles of abandonment must contain:

(1) the name of the domesticating entity;

(2) the date on which articles of domestication were filed by the secretary of state; and

(3) a statement that the domestication has been abandoned in accordance with this section.

As added by P.L.118-2017, SEC.6.