MC Partnerships & LLCs Flashcards
What is a partnership
An association of two or more persons to carry on as co-owners a business for profit. Partnership law is based on the law of contract and agency. Florida partnerships are governed y the Revised Uniform Partnership Act (RUPA).
Except with respect to partners’ personal liability for partnership obligations, is a partnership a legal entity distinct from its partners?
yes
Is title to land allowed to be held in the partnership name
yes
May a partnership sue or be sued in the partnership name?
yes
How does the governing law of a partnership work?
Generally, the RUPA provides a default set of rules. Partners are free to agree–through a partnership agreement–to abide by different rules for governing the relationships among themselves, and the RUPA will govern only those issues not provided for in the partnership agreement.
Note, however, that certain RUPA provisions cannot be waived (e.g., the duty of loyalty, the right of a court to expel a partner).
What level of agreement is needed for partnership formation
No formal agreement is required to form a partnership; the parties’ intent may be implied from their conduct
Is writing required to form a partnership; what is the consequence if no writing is used
No writing is required to form a partnership. However, because of the Statute of Frauds, if partners wish to have an enforceable agreement to remain partners for more than one year, they generally must execute a writing reflecting their agreement
What is the capacity requirement for partnership formation
Anyone who is capable of entering into a binding contract may be a partner. A would-be partner who lacks capacity is liable only to the extent of his capital contribution, but the partnership with such person is not void; it will continue to exist until steps are taken to dissolve it
What happens if a partnership is formed to achieve an illegal purpose
A partnership formed to achieve an illegal purpose is void, and the court will not compel an accounting or a settlement of a void partnership’s affairs
What consent is required for one to become a partner in the partnership
Unless otherwise agreed, no one can become a partner without the express or implied consent of all partners
How can one find proof of partnership existence
Since no formalities are required to form a partnership, it is sometimes difficult to determine whether the relationship between the parties is a partnership or something else. To determine whether a partnership exists, courts generally look to the intent of the parties. If they intended to carry on a business as co-owners, there is a partnership even if they did not subjectively intend to be partners. Where the parties’ intent is uncertain, the court considers certain rules.
Where the parties’ intent to form a partnership is uncertain, the courts consider what five things?
(i) the sharing of profits raises presumption of partnership unless the share was received as payment of a debt, for services rendered, as rent payment, as an annuity or other retirement benefit, as interest on a loan, or for the sale of goodwill of a business (this is the loan factor that raises a presumption of partnership);
(ii) Title to property is held in joint tenancy or in common;
(iii) the parties designate their relationship as a partnership;
(iv) the venture undertaken by the parties requires extensive activity (e.g., if A and B each contribute $100,000 to buy a building of rental apartments that must be managed, it is more likely that they are partners than if they each contributed $100,000 to buy shares in a company that manages real estate); and
(v) sharing of gross returns
What is the liability of a person who by words or conduct represents himself as a partner or consents to being represented by another as a partner
He will be liable to third parties who extend credit to the partnership in reliance on the representation
Is it true that a person held by another as a partner is not liable as a partner unless he actually consents to the holding out (the mere failure to deny a representation of partnership would not give rise to liability as a purported partner)
Yes
What is the liability of a person who holds another out as a partner
He thereby makes that person his agent to bind him to third parties. (If there is a partnership, only those partners who know of or consent to this holding out will be bound.)
What is includable in partnership property
There is no restriction on what may be partnership property, and sometimes it is not always obvious whether property is partnership property or the individual property of a partner. The RUPA has a number of provisions concerning ownership of titled property (both titled personal property and real property)
Under the RUPA, titled property is deemed to be partnership property if: one of what two things
1) it is titled in the partnership name; or
2) it is titled in the name of one or more partners and the instrument transferring title notes the titleholder’s capacity as a partner or the existence of a partnership
Under the RUPA, when is property presumed to be partnership property
if it was purchased with partnership funds, regardless of in whose name title is held. “Partnership funds” includes not only the partnership’s cash, but also the partnership’s credit.
Under the RUPA, if property is held in the name of one or more partners and (what two things), the property is presumed separate property, even if the property is used for partnership purposes
(i) the instrument transferring title does not indicate the person’s capacity as a partner or mention the existence of a partnership and
(ii) partnership funds were not used to acquire the property
In cases not governed by the explicit RUPA provisions (e.g., in cases of property that is not titled), in determining whether property is partnership property or the separate property of a partner, courts will probably continue to look to the following common law criteria which tend to indicate that the property was intended to be partnership property (6)
a. Acquisition of the property with partnership funds;
b. Use of the property by the partnership in conducting the partnership’s business;
c. Entry of the property in the partnership books as a partnership asset;
d. A close relationship between the property and the business operations of the partnership;
e. Improvement of the property with partnership funds; and
f. Maintenance of the property with partnership funds
What are the rights of a partner in partnership property
A partner is not a co-owner of partnership property and has no transferable interest in specific property of the partnership. Thus, a partner’s creditor may not reach partnership property to satisfy the personal obligations of a partner.
What is a partner’s interest in the partnership
Each partner has a transferable interest in the partnership, which consists of his share of partnership profits, losses, and distributions. Absent an agreement to the contrary, a partner shares equally in the partnership profits and must contribute to the losses in proportion to his share of the profits.
- the interest in the partnership is treated as personal property;
- the interest is transferable without dissolving the partnership or causing the transferring partner’s dissociation; and
- It is attachable
Does the transfer of a partner’s interest give the transferee rights with regard to the operation of the partnership?
No. It merely entitles the transferee to receive profits to which the transferring partner would otherwise be entitled. Also note that a partner may not sell his partner status (i.e., may not make another a partner) without the unanimous consent of the other partners
all partners have equal rights in the management of the partnership business absent what
an agreement to the contrary
what portion of vote is required for decisions involving (i) decisions made within the ordinary course of business, and (ii) matters outside the ordinary course of business
decisions involving matters within the ordinary course of business can be controlled majority vote, but matters outside the ordinary course of business require unanimous consent.
each partner owes what two duties to the partnership
the duty of loyalty and the duty of care
what three things does the duty of loyalty require
that the partner (i) account for all profits or other benefits derived by the partner in connection with partnership business; (ii) not deal with the partnership as one with an adverse interest; and (iii) not compete with the partnership
what does the duty of care require
the partner refrain from engaging in negligent, reckless, or unlawful conduct or intentional misconduct
is there generally a right to remuneration for services rendered to the partnership
no, absent an agreement to the contrary, except for services performed in winding up the business
where a partner has impliedly or expressly promised to devote time to the partnership and fails to do so, what happens
she may be charged in an accounting for damages caused to the partnership
how does indemnification and other repayment work where one partner is required to pay or satisfy more than his share of a partnership debt
he may require the other partners to contribute their pro rata shares
where must books and information be kept
the chief executive office
does each partner have a right to inspect and copy the partnership books
yes
upon demand, must each partner render true and full information of all things affecting the partnership
yes
does a judgment against the partnership alone count the same as a judgment against the individual partners
no. to reach partner’s personal assets, there must be a judgment against the partner. note that actions may be brought against the partnership and the partners in the same action
what two things may a partnership bring an action against a partner for
breach of the partnership agreement or of fiduciary duty
for what may a partner bring an action against the partnership or other partners
to enforce any right created by the partnership agreement or the RUPA, or that otherwise belongs to the partner
is every partner considered an agent of the partnership
yes, for business purposes. an act performed by any partner either with actual or apparent authority, or that is ratified by the partnership, will bind the partnership and thereby other partners.
what is the three part provision for apparent authority in RUPA
(i) the act of any partner;
(ii) for apparently carrying on in the ordinary course the partnership business or business of the kind carried out by the partnership;
(iii) binds the partnership unless:
1) the partner had no authority to act for the partnership in the particular matter; and
2) the person with whom the partner was dealing knew or had received notification that the partner lacked authority
Note that partners only have apparent authority to bind the partnership to any contract within the scope of the partnership business (which includes transactions for the purpose of carrying on business). if a contract is outside the scope of partnership business, the partnership generally will not be bound unless the partner has actual authority
may any partner transfer property held in the name of the partnership?
yes
what happens if partnership property is held in the name of one or more partners (who are identified as such) but the partnership is not named and the partnership wants to transfer the property
transfer by the titleholders in their own names is effective. In either case, if the transferring partner lacked authority, the partnership may recover the property from the initial transferee but not from a subsequent bona fide purchaser
if the partnership’s interest is not indicated in the instrument transferring the property, what happens
the transfer may be made by those in whose name the property is held. if the transferee gives value without notice or lack of authority, she takes free of the partnership interest
is a partnership bound by an act of a partner if the partner has actual authority
yes
what is actual authority and from where can it come
actual authority is the authority a partner reasonably believes he has based on the communications between the partnership and the partner. Such actual authority can come from the partnership agreement or a vote of the partners. A majority vote is required to authorize ordinary business; a unanimous vote is required to authorize extraordinary acts
what is a statement of authority
it grants or limits a partner’s authority to enter into transactions on behalf of the partnership. the statement must be filed with the department of state and, for real property transfers, with the county recorder. Note that a grant of authority in a properly filed statement of authority is conclusive in favor of a bona fide purchaser for value
what is a limitation of authority
a properly filed limitation of authority to transfer real property gives purchasers constructive knowledge of a lack of authority, but filing a limitation does not give constructive knowledge of the limitation with regard to any other transaction