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Royal Decree 2716 / 1982, Of 24 September, Laying Down The General Statutes Of The Schools Official Agronomists And Its General Council.

Original Language Title: Real Decreto 2716/1982, de 24 de septiembre, por el que se aprueban los Estatutos Generales de los Colegios Oficiales de Ingenieros Agrónomos y de su Consejo General.

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TEXT

The General Statutes of the Official Colleges of Agricultural Engineers now in force were approved by the Order of the Ministry of Agriculture of twenty-six October of a thousand nine hundred and sixty-eight.

By imperative of Law two/thousand nine hundred and seventy-four of thirteen of February, of Professional Colleges, and in accordance with the provisions of its sixth article two, the General Councils must draw up for all the Colleges of a the same profession, and ears, a General Statutes that will be submitted to the approval of the Government through the competent Ministry and in the same torma will be drawn up and approved the Statutes in the Colleges of national scope.

Likewise, the Constitution of a thousand nine hundred and seventy-eight, in its article thirty-six, establishes that the Law will regulate the peculiarities of the legal regime of the Professional Colleges and the exercise of the professions (i) the internal structure and the functioning of the schools will be democratic. It has also been taken into account, for the purposes of the autonomous structure of the State, the corresponding geographical constituencies.

The Higher Council of Official Colleges of Agricultural Engineers, ears the Professional Colleges of its specialty, has elevated proposal of Statutes to the consideration of the Ministry of Agriculture Fisheries and Food With the provisions of the aforementioned Law two thousand nine hundred and seventy-four.

In line with the above and the necessary administrative procedures, on a proposal from the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food, and after deliberation by the Council of Ministers at its meeting on 24 March September of a thousand nine hundred and eighty-two, I have:

Article unique. -The attached text of the General Statutes of the Official Colleges of Engineers Agonomos and its General Council, which will enter into force on the date of publication of this Royal Decree, is approved.

Given in Madrid to twenty-four September of a thousand nine hundred and eighty-two-JUAN CARLOS R. -Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food, José Luis García Ferrero.

GENERAL STATUTES OF THE OFFICIAL COLLEGES OF AGRONOMISTS AND THE GENERAL COUNCIL

TITLE FIRST

From the Official Colleges of Agricultural Engineers

CHAPTER FIRST

General provisions

Article 1. Nature.-The Official Colleges of Agricultural Engineers and its General Council are professional bodies governed by public law recognized and protected by Article 36 of the Constitution and governed by the Law of Professional Colleges, with own legal personality and full capacity for the fulfilment of its aims.

Art. 2. Relations with the Administration. -Official Colleges of Agricultural Engineers will relate to the Central Administration of the State through the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food and with the other Public Administrations through of the department or body competent in each case by reason of the matter.

CHAPTER II

Of the collegiates

Art. 3.-Classes of Collegiates.-The collegiates can be of two classes: of honor and number.

Art. 4.-Collegiate of honor.-The title of the collegiate of honor may be granted to the person who renders or has rendered outstanding services to the College or to the profession, whether or not Engineer Agronomo. Members of honour may be awarded by a given College or on a national basis.

In the first case, the reasoned proposal prepared by the corresponding Government Board will be raised to the General Board, which will have to approve it by a majority.

In the second case, once approved by the Board of Government of a College, in the form indicated in the previous paragraph, it will be raised to the Board of Decans, which will decide.

The title of the collegial of honor confers upon the persons who have obtained it the right to belong to the Proposer College, without being obliged to pay the rights of incorporation or the periodic quotas.

Art. 5. Number schoolgirls. -1. They shall have the right to be admitted as a number of members who, being in possession of the title of Agronomist Engineer, issued in accordance with Spanish legislation or officially validated-with professional effects-in Spain, are not disabled for the exercise of the profession, or are not suspended in the professional year, nor have they been the subject of final expulsion from the collegial organisation.

It will be an indispensable requirement for the exercise of a profession of Agronomist Engineer the incorporation to the College in whose territorial scope resides.

2. In order to be admitted to the College, the request will be addressed to the Dean, who will give an account of it at the first meeting of the Governing Board, which will grant the collegiation-which will be ratified, if necessary, by the General Council-to all those who meet with them. requirements set out in the previous number. For the collegiation of foreign agricultural engineers, it will be necessary to establish the legal provisions in force regarding the exercise of professional activities by non-nationals.

Once the application for admission has been resolved, it will be necessary, in order to formalize the admission, to pay the entry fee and to meet the conditions that govern at that time. You will be exempted from the payment of the entry fee to which you apply for the tuition within the year from the date of termination of the race.

It will be necessary to enroll in the mandatory minimum groups of forecast that are established by the General Council of Colleges.

In the cases of Engineers affected by the provisions of Article 8, 2., the application for admission shall not be resolved favourably and in sign until such time as the commitments entered into with other Colleges are resolved, as referred to in that paragraph.

3. The collegial shall have the power to pursue the profession throughout Spain, as provided for in Article 7, 8.

Enrollment automatically grants enrollment to the College of Residence. When a collegial changes his residence to the territorial demarcation of another College he must communicate it to him, so that, in turn, he will move it to the Council and be to the Dean of his former residence, in whose area it will cause low.

When a collegial pursues the profession in a College other than that of residence, he shall be subject to the provisions of that College's internal rules, not being able to invoke or to rely on the specific provisions in force in his College of residence or in any other other.

In the field of social benefits, the Colleges will be able to establish in their Rules of the Interior those clauses that assume a safeguard of the rights acquired by their Collegiates.

Art. 6. Rights. -All number members will be entitled to:

1. To exercise the profession in accordance with the Law and the present Statutes.

2. Participate in the use and enjoyment of the property of the College of Residence and the services it has established, as well as those determined by the General Council for all Colleges.

3. To take part in the deliberations and votes in these Statutes and in the Rules of Procedure.

4. Obtain the protection of the Government Board when they consider their rights or interests, professional, collective or those of the Corporation, injured or impaired.

5. To bring legal proceedings.

6. Carry out the professional work requested from the College by entities and individuals, which correspond to them according to previously established shifts.

7. How many are recognized in these Statutes.

Art. 7. Obligations. -They are obligations of the number of the following:

1. Strictly comply with the provisions of these Statutes and the Regulations that develop them as well as the agreements to be adopted by the Colleges and the General Council, subject to them.

2. To observe in the various professional works how many precepts and norms establish the corresponding legal provisions and those others aimed at maintaining and raising the dignity, prestige, decorum and professional ethics.

3. To pay the fees and duties that have been approved for the operation of the Council and the Colleges and for the development of the various purposes entrusted to them.

4. Notify the College of residence.

5. To report to the Colleges to those who carry out acts of their own in the profession of Agronomist Engineer without having the title which allows them to do so, to those who still have it not included in the existing Colleges, and to which, number, they fail to meet the obligations as such.

6. To fulfill, with respect to the governing bodies of the Colleges, the duties of discipline, and with respect to the collegiate, the professional harmony.

7. Submit, in matters of a professional nature that occur among the Agronomist Engineers, to the arbitration and conciliation of the College in the first instance, and of the General Council in the second instance.

8. To present for their visa the professional orders to the College in whose demarcation the object of the work is located, either directly attaching certificate of collegiation and recognition of signature extended by the College of residence, or to through this.

For the processing of a College to obtain the visa in another, you will receive the amount determined by the General Council.

Art. 8. Loss of collegial quality. -Colcollegiate condition is lost:

1. At its own request, requested in writing from the Dean of the College, provided that no professional or corporate obligations are pending.

2. As a disciplinary sanction, for non-compliance with the duties of the collegiate, in accordance with the provisions of these Statutes.

3. Where, after two consecutive years and after notification, the periodic quota of the collegiate has not been paid. If he subsequently applied for discharge, the College shall be entitled to receive the amount of the quotas for the two years mentioned.

4. By death.

Art. 9. Powers. The competence and professional privileges of the number of members in the free exercise of the profession shall be those which correspond to them in accordance with the laws in force and those which are subsequently issued.

CHAPTER III

Scope and functions of the Colleges

Art. 10. Territorial scope. The current number of Colleges is nine, with their respective offices and territorial areas being the following:

Designation * site * Territorial scope *

Andalusia * Seville * Almeria, Cadiz, Córdoba, Granada, Jaén, Huelva, Malaga and Seville *

Aragon, La Rioja, Navarra and the Basque Country * Zaragoza * Alava, Guipuzcoa, Huesca, La Rioja, Navarra, Teruel, Vizcaya and Zaragoza *

Castilla-Leon, Asturias and Cantabria * Valladolid * Burgos, Leon, Palencia, Santander, Valladolid, Zamora and Asturias. * Catalonia * Barcelona * Barcelona, Gerona, Lerida and Tarragona. *

Centro * Madrid * Ávila, Ciudad Real, Cuenca, Guadalajara, Madrid, Las Palmas, Salamanca, Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Segovia, Soria and Toledo. *

Extremadura * Badajoz * Badajoz and Cáceres *

Galicia * La Coruña * La Coruña Lugo, Orense and Pontevedra *

Levante * Valencia * Albacete, Alicante, Baleares, Castellón and Valencia *

Murcia * Murcia * Murcia. *

Art. 11. Alteration of the territorial scope of the Colleges.-

1. The territorial scope of the Colleges may be altered:

a) By merging or absorbing two or more Colleges.

b) By segregation on the part of one or more Colleges to add to another border, or to constitute another independent.

2. The changes in the territorial scope of the Colleges will be carried out taking into account the geographical limits of the Autonomous Communities and Preautonomic Entes, so that they are adapted-in any case-to the regional demarcations of the the territorial organization of the State, established in the corresponding Statutes of Autonomy and in the current regulations. Likewise, changes in the name of the Colleges shall be adjusted as far as possible to the official name of the Autonomous Community or Preautonomic Ente within whose demarcation they are understood.

3. The merger or absorption shall be initiated by agreement adopted by the General Boards of the Colleges to which it is concerned-approved by an absolute majority of the number of members of each of them-or, by application signed by more than 50%. by 100 of the collegiate members of each of the Colleges concerned. Such agreements, or, where appropriate, applications, shall be forwarded to the General Council for approval and further referral-for the line provided for in Article 2.-to the Public Administration responsible for resolving the applications in question.

4. The segregation of part of a College shall specify the following requirements

1. Written request addressed to his College by the absolute majority of the collegiate residents in the portion of the territory to be segregated. Applicants shall send a copy of the document to the General Council at the same time, and the General Council shall require the corresponding report of the College to which, where appropriate, further incorporation is sought.

2. Report of the General Board of the College to which the applicants belong, issued within one month from the date of filing of the application. Should the report not be in favour of segregation, it should be reasoned if the report is not issued within the prescribed period, the General Council may understand that the application for segregation has been informed. favourably.

3. Report, if appropriate, of the General Board of the College to which the incorporation is to be made, which shall be issued within one month of receipt of the written request.

4. Referral of the report or reports of the affected schools to the General Council which will decide on the request for segregation, deciding, if so, its subsequent elevation to the Public Administration responsible for its final approval, in the form prevented in Article 2.

5. The change of denomination of a College shall be promoted by agreement of its General Board adopted by an absolute majority, or by petition signed by more than 50 per 100 of the collegiates belonging to it. The agreement, or, where appropriate, the request, shall be forwarded to the General Council; if approved, it shall be submitted to the competent Public Administration.

Art, 12. Purpose and functions. -1. It is the essential purpose of the Colleges to order the exercise of the profession, the exclusive representation of the profession and the defense of the professional interests of the collegiate.

2 As the general functions of the Colleges are listed in an enunciative and non-limiting title, the following:

1.-To maintain an active and effective service of information on activities to be developed by the Agricultural Engineers, thus promoting the appropriate level of employment among the collegiate.

2. Advice to State Agencies, Autonomous Communities, Regional or Provincial, Local Corporations, Individuals or Private Entities and their own collegiates, issuing reports, resolving consultations or acting in arbitrations technical and economic at the request of the parties.

3. Inform all those amendments to the current legislation, as soon as it relates to the profession of Agronomist Engineer.

4. To promote the development of scientific, cultural and social work related to the profession.

5. Promote and organize the foresight and relief among the collegiate.

6. Cooperate with the Administration of Justice and other official bodies in the designation of Agricultural Engineers to carry out reports, opinions, appraisals or other professional activities, to which effect they shall be regularly provided to such bodies list of number members.

7. To appear before the Courts of Justice on behalf of the number of members of the Court, exercising the actions arising out of the fees accrued for them in the exercise of the profession provided that the conditions agreed by the General Council.

8. To ensure at all times for the rights and duties of the profession, defending it duly in all the private matters of its activity, especially those that are determined in Articles 6 and 7. of these Statutes, intervening at all times so that they do not become unknown or hinder their exercise.

9. To ensure the prestige, independence and decorum of the profession, both in the mutual relations of the collegial and in those that are maintained with the authorities, entities and individuals, as well as to establish norms for the contracts of work professional.

10. To prevent professional intrusion, and, where appropriate, to prosecute those who do not comply with the legal conditions established in order for professional practice.

11. To monitor the professional work that corresponds to the scope of its demarcation, once proven that they conform to the established norms.

12. Apply the fees of fees in force.

13. To arrange for the collection of fees accrued by the collegial and suplare, in accordance with the rules agreed by the General Council. Each College may freely establish the rules of perception of such fees, as well as their hiring with A unified model at national level.

14. To collect and channel the aspirations of the profession, to whose effect the Colleges will raise to the General Council how many suggestions they consider opportune in relation to the perfection and regulation of the services that the Agronomous Engineers can provide (both to official bodies and to private entities), as well as to the fixing of fees for fees.

15. To instruct the appropriate disciplinary files and to impose, where appropriate, the disciplinary measures relating to the collegial in the form set out in these Statutes.

16. Any other purposes agreed by the Governing Board or the General Meeting, provided that they do not object to the agreements which the General Council has taken on a compulsory and general basis.

17. How many other functions are in the interest of the professional interests of the schoolgirls.

CHAPTER IV

From the economic resources of the Colleges

Art. 13. Ordinary resources. -Fundamentally, the ordinary resources of the Colleges for the proper attention of corporate purposes and functions are as follows:

1. The regular regular quotas of the members of the General Council.

2. The rights of the work visa, consisting of a percentage of the professional fees, which may not exceed 15 per 100 or less than 5 per 100 calculated by the College, in accordance with the current rates, on the amount of the minute, in accordance with what is established by the General Council.

Visa rights will be perceived in any case, by the College, without being exonerated of the works that need a visa-to be carried out in the free exercise of the profession-authorized by Agronomist Engineers at the service of companies or the different Entes of the Administration.

In the case of visas referred to in Article 7., 8. the College that will pay quarterly to the College of Residence of the author of the work, in terms of management costs, the amount determined by the General Council at the last regular meeting of the Board of Decans of each year.

3. The products, income and interest of the goods or rights that make up the patrimony of the College.

4. The rights to be received by the College for the issue of certifications, opinions, reports and advice, which shall be set by the Governing Board.

5. The benefits to be obtained from the sale of publications, stamps and forms authorized by the Colleges.

Art. 14. Extraordinary resources. -Extraordinary resources will be constituted by:

1. Grants, donations, inheritances or legacies granted by the State, Official Corporations, Autonomous Communities, Public or private entities and private individuals.

2. The product of disposal of their goods, agreed in General Meeting.

3. The extraordinary quotas proposed by the General Board and approved by the General Council.

CHAPTER V

Organization of the Official Colleges of Agricultural Engineers

Art. 15. Organization. -Each College shall be governed and administered by the General Board of number and the Board of Governors.

Art. 16. General Board. -The General Board is the highest body of expression of the will of the College and forms part of it the totality of the collegiates not suspended in the exercise of their corporate rights The agreements of the General Meeting oblige all the schoolgirls.

The following functions are for the General Meeting:

1. The Knowledge and approval of the Annual Report or Report that the Board of Government will submit to you, summarizing its performance and that of the other Bodies and Commissions of the Colleges, as well as the professional events of greater relief.

2. The adoption of budgets and accounts of the year and extra-budgetary expenditure, as well as proposing to the General Council the approval of ordinary and extraordinary quotas.

3. The approval of the Rules of Procedure, drawn up by the Governing Board.

4. The implementation of corporate services and forecasting quotas.

5. The decision and the discussion of how many cases are submitted to them on a proposal from the Government Board or a group of members of a number of not less than 10 per 100 of the collegiate and provided that this number is not less than the 10 members.

6. The approval of the motion of censure, if appropriate, of the action of the members of the Governing Board.

7. Be informed of the agreements of the Board of Decans.

8. The proposal to amend the Statute.

9. The disposal or disposal of goods.

10. The proposal of appointments of collegiates of honor, or of any other kind of honorable distinction.

11. All other powers which have not been expressly conferred on other bodies.

Art. 17. Meetings of the General Board. The General Board shall meet regularly twice a year; one, in the last quarter, in which the examination and approval, if appropriate, of the budget, as well as the the proclamation, if any, of candidates elected to the Governing Board; and another, in the first half of the year, in which it will be obligatory on the agenda, both the approval of the accounts of the previous year, as well as the information in general on the progress of the College in all its aspects.

It will also meet with extraordinary character:

1. When deemed necessary by the Governing Board.

2. Where it is intended to amend the Statute or the Rules of Procedure.

3. In those cases where the number of members of the number of members of the group does not exceed 10 per 100 of the members of the school, and provided that the number is not less than 10 members. That General Meeting shall take place within the maximum period of thirty days to be counted from the entry registration of the petition

All meetings of the General Board shall be announced in writing and by individual notification with at least ten days ' notice. In those cases in which the Government Board considers the urgency of the issues to be dealt with, it may convene the General Meeting within a minimum of five working days.

The General Board shall be constituted in accordance with the provisions of the Rules of Procedure of each College.

The General Meeting shall hold its sessions presided over by the Dean and, in his absence, by the member of the Governing Board of the oldest collegial of the present, excluding the Secretary and the Financial Controller, in case of not being designated the accidental Dean provided for in Article 21 of these Statutes.

The agreements of the General Boards will be adopted by a majority of votes of the members present or represented.

However, a qualified majority of the two thirds will be required to agree on the content of paragraphs 6. and 9. of Article 16.

In no case will agreements be made on matters not included in the agenda.

From each meeting of the General Board, a copy of the minutes shall be forwarded to the General Council.

Art. 18. Board of Government. -The Governing Board is the body responsible for the implementation of the agreements of the General Board and assumes the direction and administration of the College, subject to the provisions of these Statutes.

The Governing Board shall be composed of the Dean, the Secretary, the Interventor, a Delegate for each province of his field, and the number of Vocals to be determined by each College.

Art. 19. Functions of the Governing Board. -Corresponding to the Governing Board the following functions:

1. The management and supervision of the compliance with the corporate tasks and the present Statutes.

2. The issuance of report in the cases established in the current regulations or when the College is required to express its opinion as such Corporation.

3. The designation of the Commissions or Ponies responsible for preparing opinions, reports and studies, or of making awards or arbitrations, as well as the establishment of the corresponding shifts and the appointment of representatives of the College in Courts, Juries and others.

4. The proposal to the General Board of the budgets and how much concerns the economic management of the Colleges.

5. Monitor the development of these, by raising and managing the funds.

6. Appoint and separate the administrative staff of the College.

7. To decide on the admission of applications for membership, without prejudice to their subsequent ratification by the General Council.

8. Call elections to provide the positions of the Governing Board.

9. Agree on the holding of General Boards, both ordinary and extraordinary.

10. Adopt the appropriate measures for the implementation of the agreements of the General Board and the General Council.

11. Ensure good professional conduct and initiate appropriate disciplinary proceedings.

12. The motion of censure shall be proposed to any member of the Governing Board, by a qualified majority of two-thirds, which shall, in the event of its success, involve the lifting of the motion to the General Meeting.

13. Keep the list of schoolgirls up to date.

14. To entrust to the provincial delegates the efforts of those matters in their field that the Government Board deems appropriate for effective action.

15. Draw up the College's Rules of

,

16. All other powers assigned to it in these Statutes and in the Rules of Procedure.

Art. 20. Meetings of the Governing Board. The Governing Board shall meet as many times as necessary the Dean, and compulsorily once a quarter, and also when requested by a third of its components. In this case, the meeting shall take place within 15 days of the receipt in the College of the required application signed by the petitioners, in which the reasons for the request of the meeting shall be expressed.

The components of the Governing Board may delegate their vote to another member of the Board, but each member may not have more than one voting delegation. The provincial delegates may appoint an alternate whenever there is justified cause. If the Dean is not present, he shall preside over the accidental Dean provided for in Article 21, and if he has not been appointed, he shall replace the Vocal of the Board of Government of the oldest collegial, with exclusion in any case of the Secretary and Interventor.

The decisions of the Governing Board will be approved by a simple majority, with the vote of the Dean of Quality.

Art. 21. Dean.-The Dean is responsible for the presidency and official representation of the College in all its relations with the authorities. Corporations, Courts and individuals, without prejudice to the fact that, in specific cases, the Board of Government may also be entrusted by the College, to entrust these functions to certain collegians or Commissions constituted for the purpose.

The Dean will preside over the General Boards, Government Boards, and all the Commissions to attend, directing the deliberations. It is also up to them to implement and implement the agreements of the General Council, the General Board and the Governing Board.

You will be considered to be vested with powers to require those who are reported pursuant to paragraphs 8. 9. and 10 of Article 12, so that they cease in their performance and instruct the appropriate verification file, terminated which, and verified the complaint, the Board of Government, and on behalf of the College, shall establish the appropriate legal actions.

In case of absence or illness it will be replaced by the accidental Dean designated by the Dean of the Government Board, and in default of both, by the Vocal of the oldest collegiation.

The Dean may also propose to the Governing Board the provisional designation of Vocals to cover the vacancies produced, until the corresponding election is made.

Art. 22. Secretary. -Corresponds to the Secretary of the College:

1. Prepare the list of cases to be served to the Dean to determine the agenda for each call.

2. Write the minutes.

3. Issue certificates of trade or at the request of an interested party.

4. To issue and process communications and documents, giving the same to the Dean.

5. To exercise the leadership of the personnel necessary for the accomplishment of the collective tasks.

6. Comply with and enforce the decisions of the Dean and the agreements of the Boards.

7. Take the books of minutes of meetings and the bookkeeping of visas.

8. To convene, by order of the Dean, the meetings of the General and Government Boards.

9. Write and organize all kinds of communications from the General and Government Boards.

10. Exercise any other functions not specially attributed to the other components of the Governing Board, and may replace the Vocal of the Government Board of more modern collegiation in the cases of absence, vacancy or impediment of any class, except in cases where there is a Technical Secretary.

In the development of these functions, you may be assisted by both the Technical Secretary and the staff assigned to the College office.

Art. 23. Technical Secretary. -Corresponds to the Technical Secretary of the College. It will be mandatory to be a collegiate Agronomist Engineer:

1. Replace in all his/her duties to the Secretary in case of absence or illness.

2. To exercise the material organization of the administrative and technical services of the College.

3. Carry out all those tasks entrusted to it by the Dean or the Secretary.

4. He will attend the meetings of the Governing Board with a voice but without a vote, whenever he is summoned.

Art. 24. Interventor. -Corresponds to the College's Interventor:

1. Prepare draft budgets, statements and balance sheets.

2. To intervene all the economic activities of the College.

3. Audit the economic management, inspection and regular control of the College's accounting.

Art. 25. Provincial delegates.-The following functions are the responsibility of the two provincial delegates:

1. Represent the Dean by express delegation of this.

2. The management of those matters which are entrusted to it by the Governing Board.

3. To ensure compliance with the corporate tasks and the present Statutes.

4. As a member of the Governing Board, he will serve as a liaison between the Board and the collegiates of his province and will inform the Board of the professional and collegial problems of his demarcation.

Art 26. Commissions.-By agreement of the General Meeting or the Governing Board, commissions may be created on specific areas of work.

These are the functions of these Commissions:

a) Advise the General Meeting or the Governing Board when they request it.

b) Develop the activities entrusted to you.

c) Propose initiatives to the Governing Board or, where appropriate, to the General Board.

The Governing Board will deliberate on the proposals made by the Commissions: regarding those it does not consider appropriate, it will adopt a reasoned agreement, and in respect of those that will be approved, it will have the appropriate means for its execution.

Of the activities developed by the Commissions will be given to the General Board in any case.

CHAPTER VI

Election Regime

Art. 27. Duration of the charges and elective system. The duration of the charges will be four years for the Dean and two years for the Secretary, Interventor, Vocals and Provincial Delegates, all of whom may be re-elected.

The Vowels and Delegates will be chosen for half each year, and the Secretary and the Interventor will enter alternate renewals.

The Dean, Secretary, Financial Controller and Vocals will be free to vote for the entire number of the number of members.

In the election of the Delegates corresponding to each province, the collegiate residents will be exclusively involved in their territorial scope.

Vacancies that occur in the Governing Board will be covered in a regulatory manner, within a maximum period of two months, and may in the meantime designate the Board of Government itself to the collegiates to be replaced. temporarily to the unemployed, as provided for in Article 21.

By covering any of these charges by election, the duration of the charges will only be reached until the next elections, in which you would have had to renew the replaced position.

Art. 28. Conditions to be eligible. -For all charges it will be necessary to be aware of your obligations to the College and not to be incourse in prohibition or statutory or statutory incapacity.

Also, for the post of Dean, a minimum of five consecutive years, and a minimum of three consecutive years, will have to be carried to the College. For provincial and vocal delegates, they will have to be part of the same two years.

The Dean, Secretary, and Interventor shall undertake to reside in the city where the College is based, and the Provincial Delegates shall reside in the relevant province.

Art. 29. Call. -By agreement of the Government Board the Secretary will direct a circular to all the collegiates, informing them of the charges that must be covered, granting at least a period of twenty working days for the presentation of candidates, to be counted from the day following that of the notification.

Art. 30. Admission of nominations. -Any collegiate who meets the conditions of eligibility laid down in Article 28 may submit in writing his candidacy to the posts of Dean, Secretary, Interventor, Vocal or Provincial Delegate, and shall be If you are a member of the Commission, you will be admitted if you are nominated by the number of schoolgirls listed below, making an express expression of your acceptance of the charge for your chosen case.

For the admission of Dean's candidacy it is required to have been proposed by a number not less than 20 collegiate, or 20 per 100 when the College does not reach the figure of 100 collegiate.

For the admission of the candidacy of Secretary and Interventor, it is required to have been proposed by 10 collegiates, at least, or by 10 per 100 when the College has less than 100 collegiate.

For the admission of the candidates for Vocal and Provincial Delegate, it will be enough to have been proposed by five collegians, provided that, with respect to the latter position, the proposing collegians reside in the province corresponding.

Art. 31. Proclamation of candidates. -In the given day and time and in the presence of. at least three collegias, the Registrar shall issue certification of the applications received.

The Governing Board will then meet and approve the list of candidates who will meet the eligibility conditions, which will be sent to all the members of the Board, announcing the date of the vote, which will not be shall be no later than 15 working days after the candidates ' proclamation.

The electoral propaganda, which can be initiated once the candidates are proclaimed, will cease twenty-four hours before the day indicated for the vote.

Art. 32. Vote Development.-The day that the vote will be held will be the electoral table, constituted, at least, by three collegians who are not candidates for the election and appointed by the Governing Board, of which at least one will have to vote. be a member of the latter, unless all of its components are candidates. The Board member shall preside over the Board member or, in another case, the oldest collegial among the appointees.

Each candidate may appoint a representative to the Bureau to witness the electoral operations and to make, where appropriate, the observations and protests that come.

Collegians will be able to vote personally upon identification by handing over the ballots to the Bureau so that, in their presence, they will be introduced into the ballot box.

Those who do not deposit their vote may be sent in advance by post to the College Secretariat, in the case of closed doors introduced in another envelope, and must be clearly stated in a flap attached to the inside of the name and signature of the voter. All the envelopes of the vote will be sealed with the record entry stamp of the College and reviewed in the corresponding book, not being valid the one that does not meet this requirement.

Art. 33. Scrutiny. -It will be carried out publicly at the end of the voting period, so that the elect can be proclaimed in the ordinary General Meeting that in these Statutes is foreseen for the last semester.

All votes shall be void in persons who do not appear in the approved candidates as well as the ballots containing phrases or expressions other than the name and position of the proposed candidate.

Once the vote has been completed, the President of the Bureau will proclaim those who are elected by a majority of votes. The vote and the outcome of the vote shall be drawn up in the following minutes, signed by all the members of the Bureau.

Art. 34. Inauguration. -Those who have been elected will take office at the meeting of the Board of Government after the General Meeting of the last semester, following the duties of the lawns until that day.

CHAPTER VII Legal framework for corporate acts

Art. 35. Books of Minutes. -1. Minutes shall be drawn up for each session, in which the place, date and time at which it starts and ends shall be recorded; the names of the persons who have attended; the main points of deliberation, the form and outcome of the vote and the content of the agreements adopted.

2. The minutes shall be signed by the Registrar with the approval of the President, and shall be adopted in the same or later session.

3. In each College, two books of minutes will be given perceptively to transcribe, respectively, those corresponding to the General Board and the Governing Board, or in the General Council, to transcribe those of the General Board of Representatives and the Board of Decans.

Art. 36. Effectiveness of the agreements. -1. The agreements of the corporate bodies shall have effect from the date on which they are adopted, unless otherwise provided for in them.

2. The effectiveness shall be delayed where the content of the act so requires or is subject to its notification, publication or higher approval.

Art. 37. Invalidity. -1. The acts of the collegiate bodies are null and void in the following cases:

(a) Those dictated by a manifestly incompetent body.

b) Those whose contents are impossible or are constitutive of crime.

(c) The dictates that they do not fully and absolutely dispense with the legally established procedure for this or the rules that contain the essential rules for the formation of the will of the collegiate bodies.

2. Acts that incur any infringement of the legal order, including the diversion of power, are nulliable.

Art. 38. Notifications. -1. Agreements affecting their rights or interests shall be notified to the parties concerned. Those who refuse to take over the course of work or their work or their orders and who in any other form involve restriction or limitation of the subjective rights, as well as those who resolve appeals, must be motivated with succinct reference facts, and fundamentals of law

2. Any notification shall be made within a maximum of 10 days from the decision or act notified and shall contain the full text of the act with the expression of the resources of the body before which it has been submitted and (a) period of time to be brought, without prejudice to the possibility of the parties concerned being able to exercise any other relevant opinion.

3. Notifications shall be made by means of a telegram letter or any other means enabling the receipt, the date and the identity of the notified act to be recorded, and shall be addressed to the address of the person concerned or to the place indicated by for notifications.

Art. 39. Corporate resources. -1. The acts and agreements of the organs of the Colleges shall be made available to the General Council: those dictated by the organs of the General Council shall be appealed to the body which issued them. The period of interposition for both resources shall be that of one month from the notification of the contested act.

2. The active legitimization in corporate resources is regulated by the provisions of the Law of the Jurisdiction-Administrative Jurisdiction. In any case, the State Administration and the territorial public administrations will be legitimized.

3. The appeal may be brought before the College which issued the act which is contested as before the General Council which must resolve it. If the appeal has been lodged with the College itself, the College must forward it to the General Council, together with the file and its report, within 10 working days, if it has been submitted to the General Council, send a copy to the College so that, within 10 days, it shall raise the relevant report with the file.

4. The resolution of a corporate resource will confirm, modify or revoke the contested act, thereby ending the corporate path, leaving the administrative-administrative way expedited.

5. After three months from the interposition of a corporate resource without notification of its decision, it may be considered to be dismissed for the purpose of deducting from this alleged dismissal the corresponding administrative-administrative appeal, or wait for the express resolution of the appeal. The alleged dismissal will not exclude the General Council's duty to issue an express resolution.

6. The interposition of any action on a corporate basis will not suspend the execution of the contested agreement, but the body to which it is competent to resolve it may suspend, either on its own initiative or at the request of a party, the implementation of the contested agreement, in the event that such enforcement may cause prejudice to impossible or difficult redress, or where the appeal is based on one of the grounds for full invalidity provided for in Article 37 of these Statutes.

7. The Law of Administrative Procedure shall be in addition to the rules laid down in this Chapter VII of the Statute.

TITLE II

From The General Council of Colleges

CHAPTER I

General provisions

Art. 40. Nature and dependency.-The General Council of Official Colleges of Agricultural Engineers is the representative body and the superior coordinator of the same, and has for all the effects the condition of Corporation of Public Law, with personality its own legal and full capacity for the fulfilment of its aims, in accordance with the Law of Professional Colleges.

Its headquarters in Madrid, although it will be able to hold meetings anywhere in the national territory.

It shall be related to the Administration in accordance with Article 2. of these Statutes.

CHAPTER II

Purposes and Functions

Art. 41. Purpose.-The essential purposes of the General Council of Official Colleges of Agricultural Engineers are the organization of the exercise of the profession, the exclusive representation of the same and the defense of the professional interests of the collegiate, in how much they have national scope or impact.

Art. 42. Duties.-As functions of the General Council, in addition to those attributed to it by the Law of Professional Colleges and other provisions in force, the following are listed as enunciative and not limited:

1. Represent and be a spokesperson for the National Agricultural Engineers ' Colleges.

2. To ensure the prestige of the profession of Agronomist Engineer, demanding compliance with the standards of professional ethics.

3. To issue the reports requested by the Administration and the official agencies regarding matters related to their purposes, as well as those that I formulated on their own initiative. Propose the regulatory reforms that you consider relevant, and must intervene in all matters that directly or indirectly affect the Agronomic Engineering.

4. To inform preceptively every draft amendment of the legislation on Professional Colleges.

5. To inform the projects of general provisions of a fiscal nature that affect concretely and directly to the profession of Agronomist Engineer, in the terms mentioned in article 130.4 of the Law of Administrative Procedure.

6. Assume the representation of the Spanish Agronomist Engineers before similar entities of other States.

7. To organize institutions and services of assistance and foresight on a national basis, and to collaborate with the Administration for the implementation of the most appropriate social security system.

8. Try to achieve the highest level of employment of the schoolgirls, collaborating with the Administration to the extent necessary.

9. To draw up the General Statutes of the Colleges, as well as their own.

10. Approve the Professional Deontology Standards.

11. Endorse the Regulations of the Internal Regime of the Colleges within the general rules to be established.

12. Address the conflicts that may arise between the different Colleges.

13. To resolve the remedies against the acts of the Colleges and therefore to review the agreements adopted in this respect, to confirm, revoke or reinforce them.

14. To take the necessary measures to ensure that the Colleges and the collegial comply with the decisions of the General Council in the matter of their jurisdiction.

15. To exercise disciplinary functions with regard to members of the Boards of Government of the Colleges and of the Council itself. Likewise, you will know and resolve the proposals for sanctions that the Colleges will make regarding their collegiate members for very serious mistakes.

16. Approve their budgets, regulate and equitably fix the contributions of the Colleges, as well as determine the amount that is set out in point 2 in terms of management costs. of Article 13.

17. To approve, in the ears of the Colleges, the unified norms for the visa of the professional works.

18. Ensure that the conditions required by the laws and the present Statutes are met for the presentation and proclamation of the candidates for the posts of the Boards of Government of the Colleges.

19. Take the measures you consider appropriate to provisionally complete with the oldest schoolgirls the Boards of Government of the Colleges when the vacancies of more than half of the posts of those are produced. The Provisional Board, thus constituted shall exercise its functions until they take possession of the appointed by virtue of election which shall be held in accordance with the statutory provisions.

20. To prevent, by all means of law, the intrusive, clandestine and illegal competition in the exercise of the profession, for whose denunciation and, where appropriate, sanction, is the General Council wide and especially authorized, without prejudice to the initiative and competence of each College.

CHAPTER III

Economic resources

Art. 43. Economic resources. The economic resources of the Council shall be as follows:

1. The unique tuition fees.

2. The revenue from the sale of publications or printed by the General Council.

3. The official grants, donations and legacies that the Council may receive.

4. The fixed contributions of the Colleges, in proportion to the number of their members, the amount of which shall be fixed annually by the Board of Decans and which, as a whole, may not exceed the third part of the Council's budget.

5. The difference between the budgeted and the provisions of the preceding paragraph shall be equal to 25 per 100 equal shares between the Colleges and the remaining 75 per 100 in proportion to the amount of the respective visa rights for the last financial year closed.

s. The contributions of the Colleges for extraordinary expenses agreed upon by the Board of Decans, upon proposal and approval by the two thirds of the same.

7. The other resources that the General Council can obtain in accordance with the rules governing them.

CHAPTER IV

Organization

Art. 44. Composition. The General Council shall be composed of the following bodies:

-A President.

-The General Board of Representatives.

-The Board of Dean.

-The Permanent Commission.

-A general secretary.

For the performance of the corresponding charges it will be required to be duly collegiate and in the full enjoyment of the rights derived from this condition.

Art. 45. President.-To be elected President of the Council there is no need for more than three Colleges to be proposed and for a minimum of five years to be taken as a collegiate.

It is for the President to hold the maximum representation of the General Council of Official Colleges of Agricultural Engineers, a standard assigned to the exercise of the rights and duties attributed to him by the Law of Colleges. Professionals and the present Statutes in all relations with the public authorities, Entities, Corporations and individuals, provided that they are matters that are general in nature for the profession.

It is also up to the President to execute or give appropriate instructions for the implementation of the agreements that the General Board of Representatives, the Board of Decans, or the Permanent Commission, if any, adopt.

He will preside and raise the sessions of the General Board of Representatives, the Board of Decans, and the Permanent Representatives; he will maintain order and the use of the word and will decide with a vote of quality on the votes. It shall authorise the minutes and certificates which it shall carry out and shall preside over whether or by its delegation any committees are appointed, as well as any meeting to which it shall attend.

You will authorize and endorse the funds movements of the accounts opened in the name of the General Council.

The President may appoint, by agreement of the General Board or the Board of Decans, the Commissions or working groups that he deems necessary for the best development of the collegial function. In case of urgency you can do it directly, giving the Board of Decans

In addition to the exercise of the preceding privileges, inherent in his office, he will try to maintain the greatest harmony and brotherhood between the Collegians and the Collegians, trying to ensure that any dispute between them is resolved within the collegial organisation.

In case of absence or illness, it will be replaced by the accidental President, appointed by the President himself from among the Decans, and, failing that, by the oldest Dean.

Art. 46. Election of President. -For the election of the President of the General Council, the President-in-Office will call upon all members of the Board of Decans, in which he will point out a maximum period of thirty working days for the presentation. of candidates

Before a week has elapsed since the expiry of the deadline for the submission of candidates, the Secretary-General shall proceed to the proclamation of the candidates, the result of which shall give immediate communication to all the members of the the Board of Decans. A period of not more than one month shall also be established on the basis of the proclamation for the conclusion of the election.

The vote will be held in the Board of Decans, called for this purpose. as follows:

In the first round, the vote will be public and nominative.

To be proclaimed President in the first vote will require the absolute majority of the members of the law. If this is not achieved, the candidate or the candidates with the lowest number of votes will be eliminated, with successive secret votes, in which the same elimination criterion will be followed.

The term of office will be for four years, and may be reeligible.

He who has been elected will take office at the next meeting of the Board of Dean, continuing in his duties the outgoing until that day

Art. 47. General Board of Representatives. -The General Board of Representatives is the representative body of the Boards of Government of the Colleges, and shall be constituted by the President, the Dean, the Secretary-General and Secretaries of the Colleges and the all provincial delegates and a number of Vocals from the Government Boards of each College according to the following table:

* Vocals *

Up to 100 Collegiates * 1 *

Up to 500 collegiates * 2 *

Up to 1,000 collegiates * 3 *

Up to 1,500 collegiates * 4 *

Over 1,500 schoolgirls * 5 *

The Presidency of the General Meeting shall be held by the President of the Council and, in case of urgency or illness, by the oldest Dean.

The General Board of Representatives shall meet at least every two years at the place to be determined by the Board of Decans and upon convocation by the President of the Council, corresponding to the Secretary-General, with the advice from the Standing Committee, the organisation and programme of the session.

The General Board of Representatives will have direct knowledge of the functioning of the Colleges and the General Council, and will have to decide on the professional problems and the specific questions that will be submitted to it. the President, for each of the Dean and initiative of their respective Boards of Government of the Colleges or in writing signed by the 10 per 100 of all the collegiate.

The General Board agreements will be adopted by a majority of the attending members, being executive and mandatory for all the collegians.

In particular, it is up to the General Board of Representatives to approve by a majority of two-thirds of the members of law, the motion of censure against the President of the Council to be proposed by the Board of Decans.

The General Board may meet with extraordinary character as many times as requested by the Board of Dean or three Colleges with the signatures of 10 per 100 of all the collegians. In this case, the extraordinary session shall be held within 15 working days with the same requirements as in the case of ordinary meeting.

Art. 48. Board of Dean. -The Board of Dean is constituted by the President of the General Council, the Dean and the Secretary-General.

It is up to the management and administration of the General Council, assuming all the powers of the General Council that are not expressly attributed to another body.

Your performance will be governed by these Statutes and will be subject to the agreements adopted by the General Board of Representatives.

Art. 49. Operation of the Board of Decans. -The Board of Decans will meet compulsorily, at least three times a year; in the first, second and fourth quarters. In the first quarter meeting, we will give the budget approval, and in the fourth quarter, to the approval of the budget; at the meeting of the second quarter, the Board of Decanos will know the summaries of the entry for visa rights.

In addition to ordinary meetings, it shall hold extraordinary meetings, when deemed appropriate by the President of the Council or at the request of at least three of the Members of the Council.

In the deliberations of the Board, the President of the General Council of Colleges, Dean and Secretary-General will have a voice and vote, and the Technical Secretary will assist with a voice but without a vote.

The representation and vote of the Dean may be delegated to a member of the Board of Government of the College, designated for that purpose.

The Board of Dean's meetings will be announced ten days in advance, at least, and will be held if one half of the components are present or represented. The notice shall be accompanied by the order of the day, no agreements may be adopted on matters not covered by it, unless all members of the collegiate body are present and the urgency of the matter is declared by the favourable vote of the majority. In those cases where, in the opinion of the President, the urgency of the issues so requires, the President may convene the meetings within the time limit which he considers appropriate.

It may be included in the pleas and questions section at the request of a member of the Council a specific case which, communicated to the other members in sufficient time, can be discussed and voted on the Board to be held.

Agreements will be made by a majority of members present and represented.

Art. 50. Standing Committee.-To achieve the greatest continuity and effectiveness in its functions, the General Council will be assisted by a Permanent Commission, constituted by the President and Secretary-General, who will be the Commission, and three Dean of Colleges, elected by the Board of Dean. The Technical Secretary shall attend when convened by the President.

They will meet as many times as required by the President or request two Decans.

Calls shall be made by the Secretary-General on the order of the President at least one week in advance, except in cases of urgency, and compulsorily written or telegraphed.

The Permanent Commission will understand the matters entrusted to it by the Board of Decans, as well as those that are of notable urgency, bearing in mind what has been done at the next meeting.

The agreements will be adopted by a majority of the attendees, and in case of a tie will decide the president's vote of quality.

Decans who are members of the Permanent Commission may delegate their representation to a member of the respective Governing Board.

Art. 51. Secretary-General. -The Secretary-General will be freely appointed by the Board of Dean among number of Collegiates with more than three years of collegiation. He will have to establish his residence in Madrid, and the term of office will be four years, and he can be re-elected.

It's the Secretary-General's competence:

1. To carry out, on behalf of the President, the orders of the General Board of Representatives, the Board of Dean or the Permanent Commission.

2. Assist in its mission to the President and guide and promote how many professional technical initiatives need to be taken.

3. To convene, on the order of the President, the meetings of the General Board of Representatives, the Board of Decans and the Permanent Commission, preparing the list of cases to be served to the President to determine the agenda of each meeting.

4. To draw up the minutes of the meetings of the General Board of Representatives, the Board of Decans and the Standing Committee, and to extend the certificates that they have obtained on their own initiative or at the request of an interested party.

5. To assume the leadership of the staff and the offices of the General Council, acting with full powers in the exercise of the functions of his office. He shall direct the services established by the General Council.

In the development of these functions, you can be assisted by a Technical Secretary.

Art. 52. Technical Secretary-The Technical Secretary of the General Council is a professional position to be provided by means of a competition called for the effect by the Board of Decans among the number of collegiate Agronomists.

It is up to you to perform the following functions:

1. Replace the Secretary-General in the event of absence or illness.

2. To take particular care of the organization of the administrative, technical and economic services of the Council, as well as of the relations with all the Colleges.

3. Carry out all those activities entrusted to him by the President and the Secretary General.

TITLE III

Disciplinary jurisdiction

Art. 53. Powers. -1. Disciplinary jurisdiction is exercised by the Boards of Government of the Colleges and by the Board of Decans of the General Council, which will resolve the sanctioning cases instructed by violations of the rules of professional ethics. The Government Boards are competent to impose sanctions for minor and serious infringements. The Board of Decans is responsible for the application of penalties for very serious infringements.

2. The classification of faults and their classification in light, serious and very serious shall be established in the rules of professional ethics to be adopted by the General Council, as provided for in Article 41 (10) of this Statute.

Art. 54. Sanctioning procedure.-The imposition of any disciplinary sanction requires the prior formation and processing of the corresponding sanctioning file, which must conform to the following rules:

1. The opening of the file may be made on its own initiative, either on its own decision of the Board of Government of the College or by virtue of a complaint made by any corporate, collegiate or entity body or public or private person. At the same time, the appointment of an Instructor is to be carried out, which shall be notified to the collegiate subject to the file.

In this procedure, the collegial concerned may raise an incident of recusal of the Instructor, whose decision corresponds to the Board of Government without further appeal, without prejudice to the fact that, when resorting, he can again claim the recusal.

2. It is up to the Instructor, assisted by the Secretary, to practice how many tests and actions lead to the clarification of the facts and to determine the responsibilities that can be sanctioned. A statement of objections shall be drawn up in the light of the action taken, in which the facts imputed, or the proposal gives an overstatement and file of the file.

3. The statement of objections shall be notified to the person concerned, giving him a period of 15 working days to enable him to reply. In the process of discharge the collegiate concerned must contribute. and, if necessary, propose. all proof that you try to use it, proceeding the Instructor to your practice.

4. The statement of objections-or the time limit for doing so-has been answered and the relevant test will be carried out, the Instructor will make a proposal for a resolution, which will be notified to the person concerned, so that within 15 working days he can plead as soon as possible. Consider convenient to your defense. During the same period of time, the measures will be taken into account.

5. The motion for a resolution, acting in full, shall be submitted to the Governing Board which, after having been informed of the regularity of the procedure followed, shall give the decision as appropriate, or raise it to the General Council where the proposal is penalty for a very serious infringement.

6. The sanctions resolutions must contain the relation of proven facts, the determination of the faults appreciated and the qualification of their gravity. The factual relationship must be consistent with the statement of objections made to the issue.

Art. 55. Application of penalties. -For the classification of the severity of the faults, the following circumstances shall be assessed in any case:

1. The importance of the injury caused to the general interest concerned, in relation to the degree of social protection which it deserves.

2 The willfulness of the conduct in relation to the inexcusable professional diligence and the fulfillment of the regulatory formalities required.

3. The external impact of the facts with the detriment of the due prestige for the profession or the authority the collegial Corporation.

4. Damage or injury caused to other collegiates or to third parties

5. The existence of an illegitimate profit made possible by the performance of the Collegiate Agronomist.

6. Recidivism or reiteration

Art. 56. Penalties. -1. The penalties that can be imposed, depending on the severity of the fault or fault, are as follows:

1. Private admonition.

2. Warning by trade, with annotation in the personal file.

3. Reproof published in the collegial newsletter or circular.

4. Suspension in the free exercise of the profession for a period not exceeding six months.

5. Suspension in the free exercise of the profession for a period exceeding six months and less than one year.

6. Suspension in the free exercise of the profession for more than one year and less than five years.

7. Final expulsion from the College.

2. The penalties provided for in the previous paragraph are imposed on the following faults:

(a) Sanctions 1, 2. and 3., by the commission of minor faults.

b) Sanctions 4. and 5. by the committee on serious misconduct.

c) The penalty 6. for repeated or repeated serious misconduct.

d) The penalty 7. by the committee of very serious faults.

Art. 57. Time-limits for Description and Cancellation of Sanctions.-

1 Faults and penalties prescribe:

(a) Sanctions 1, 2. and 3. of the previous article and the faults that give rise to its imposition, within two months.

b) Sanctions 4. and 5. and the faults that give rise to their imposition, at two years.

c) Other sanctions or faults, at six years of age.

2. Penalties are cancelled:

(a) Sanctions 1, 2. and 3. a year.

(b) Other, except for expulsion, at five years.

Cancellation deadlines are counted from the date the corresponding penalty has been executed or finished.

Complementary PROVISIONS

Art. 58 Processing of work. -In no dependency of the Public Administration, understanding therefore the Central, Autonomous, Local and other territorial administrations will be admitted nor will they process technical and optional works, any class, signed by Engineer Agronomo if they are not endorsed by the corresponding College of Agricultural Engineers.

The same rules should apply to the Courts of any order and jurisdiction, when such works are presented by Engineer Agronomo.

Art. 59. Dissolution. -In case of dissolution of the Colleges, the General Council will agree on the fate to be given to the funds and properties of the same ones that will not be able to be any other than to the Beneficial Entities or the Previsión, constituted by Agronomist Engineers.