Business associations
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«BUSINESS ASSOCIATIONS»
BUSINESS
ASSOCIATIONS
Corporate bargain--limited liability
I.CHARACTERISTICS OF A CORPORATION
A.PRINCIPAL CHARACTERISTICS OF A CORPORATION
a)Entity Status--a
corporation is a legal entity created under the authority of legislature
b)Limited Liability--as a
legal entity, a corp is responsible for its own debts; its sh’s liability is
limited to their investment;
c)Free Transferability of Interest--shares,
representing ownership interests, are freely transferable;
d)Centralized Management and
Control--a corp’s management is centralized in a board of dirs and
officers. Shs have no direct control over the board’s activities;
e)Duration--Continuity of
Existence--a corp is capable of perpetual existence;
f)Taxation--a corp, as an
entity, pays taxes on its own income; shs are taxed only on dividends;
g)Remember Attributes of the
Corporation--CLIFF:
1)Centralization of management;
2)Limited liability;
3)Forever (perpetual duration);
4)Freely alienable (shares can be
sold).
B.CORPORATIONS DISTINGUISHED FROM OTHER FORMS OF
BUSINESS ASSOCIATIONS.
1.GENERAL PARTNERSHIPS--in most
states, p’ships are governed by the Uniform Partnership Act (UPA). However, the
Revised UPA (RUPA) has been adopted by a few states
a)Aggregate Status--a
p’ship is an aggregation of two or more persons who are engaged in business as
co-owners. Although not a legal entity, a p’ship is treated as one for certain
purposes, e.g., ownership and transfer of property. RUPA confers entity status
on p’ships;
b)Unlimited Liability--every
partner is subject to unlimited personal liability on p’ship debts;
c)Transferability of Interests--a
partner cannot make a transferee a member of the p’ship. She can, however,
assign his interest in the p’ship, thus permitting the assignee to receive
distributions of profits. Because the assignee does not become a member of the
p’ship, he is not entitled to participate in p’ship business or management.
d)Duration and Dissolution--a
p’ship cannot have perpetual existence. It is terminable at will unless a
definite term is expressed or implied, and is also dissolved by death,
incapacity, or withdrawal of any partner.
1)Wrongful dissolution--p’ships
can also be dissolved in contravention of the p’ship agreement, by the express
will of any partner, by a court or by a partner’s conduct. Upon wrongful
dissolution, nonbreaching partners may seek damages for breach and, if they
choose to do so, may continue the p’ship upon payment to the breaching partner
of the value of his interest.
1)Compare--dissociation under RUPA--termination
results in either the winding up of the p’ship or buyout of the dissociating
partner, depending on the event triggering the termination. A buyout may be
reduced by damages if dissociation was wrongful.
e)Management and Control--absent
a contrary agreement, every partner has a right to participate equally in the
partnership management.
f)Autority--each partner,
as an agent of the firm, may bind the p’ship by acts done for the carrying on,
in the usual way, the business of the p’ship.
1)RUPA--a p’ship is bound by a
partner’s act for carrying on in the usual way either the actual p’ship
business or a business of the kind carried on by the p’ship.
g)Ownership of Property--title
may be held in the name of the p’ship, but property is owned by the
individual partners as tenants in p’ship. There is no tenancy in p’ship under
RUPA, which provides that property acquired by p’ship is owned by p’ship, not
individual partners.
h)Capacity to Sue and be Sued--under
the UPA, a lawsuit may be brought by or against individual partners, rather
than p’ship. Partners are jointly and severally liable for wrongful acts and
breaches of trust; they are only jointly liable for debts and obligations of
the p’ship.
1)Statutory reforms--many
state statutes specifically allow a p’ship to be sued in its own name. Other
states make all p’ship liabilities joint and several. Other reforms provide
that not all joint obligors need to be joined in a suit.
2)RUPA--a p’ship may sue and
be sued in its own name, and partners are jointly and severally liable for all
p’ship obligations. A claim against the p’ship cannot be satisfied from a
partner’s personal assets unless p’ship assets have been exhausted.
2.JOINT VENTURE--a p’ship formed for
some limited investment or operation, as opposed to a continued business
enterprise. Joint ventures are governed by the rules applicable to p’ships
3.LIMITED PARTNERSHIP--this is a
p’ship consisting of two classes of partners: general partners
(with rights and obligations as in an ordinary p’ship) and limited partners
(with no control and limited liability).
4.LIMITED LIABILITY PARTNERSHIPS--in
a LLP, a general partner is NOT personally liable for all p’ship
obligations arising from negligence, wrongful acts, and misconduct absent his
involvement in the misconduct. There is no exclusion for liability for
contractual obligations.
5.LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANIES--LLC is
a non-corporate business entity whose owners (members) have limited liability
and can participate actively in its management. An LLC may be either for a term
or at will. It can be managed either by its members or nonmember managers.
Depending on the statute, distributions are made either equally to each member
or in proportion to each member’s contribution.
a)Withdrawal and Dissolution--some
statutes provide that any event that terminates a member’s membership (death,
resignation) causes dissolution. Other statutes distinguish between fault
events(member misconduct...) and non-fault events (death, bankruptcy), and some
provide that dissolution can be avoided by paying the withdrawing member fair
value for his interest.
b)Advantages of LLCs--An
LLC for a business association, not publicly held, has strong advantages:
partnership taxation, virtually no restrictions in structuring ownership
interests and management, limited liability for owners and managers, and no
limitations on the number or nature of owners.
C.DISREGARD OF CORPORATE ENTITY--since a
corp is a distinct legal entity, shs are normally shielded from corporate
obligations. In certain instances, however, the corporate entity will be
disregarded.
1.PIERCING THE CORPORATE VEIL--(Suits
by corporate creditors against shs)--it’s more common in contract
claims than in tort claims. The most important elements considered by the
courts:
a)Commingling of Assets--commingling
of corp assets and personal assets of shs (e.g., paying private debts with corp
funds) may lead to piercing of the corporate veil;
b)Lack of Corporate Formalities--whether
basic corp formalities (e.g., regular meetings, corporate records maintained,
issuance of stock) were followed is also relevant. Statutory close corps are
permitted more flexibility regarding corp formalities;
c)Undercapitalization--if
the corp was organized without sufficient capital or liability insurance to
meet obligations reasonably expected to arise, the corp veil may be pierced;
d)Domination and Control By
Shareholder--the corp veil is often pierced when an individual or other
corp owns most or all of the stock, so that it completely dominates policy or
business decisions.
e)”Alter Ego,” “Instrumentality,”
“Unity of Interest”--when no separate entity exists and the corp is
merely the alter ego or instrumentality of its shs (could be a corporate
shareholder), or when there is a unity of interest between the corp and its
shs, the corp veil is often pierced. These terms are usually applied only if
other grounds are present;
f)Fraud, Wrong, Dishonesty, or
Injustice--generally, the veil will be pierced only if one of these
elements is available, e.g., no piercing of veil if there is a lack of corp
formalities without resultant injustice. Piercing the veil usually involves
corps with a small number of shs.
2.PIERCING HAPPENS MOST OFTEN WHEN:
1)The number of shs is small--the
chance of one sh dominating the corp is greater;
2)Deception--There is some
kind of deception;
3)Agency--individual is a
“principal” and corp is his “agent”
4)Estoppel--outsider was led
to believe that he was dealing with an individual, while
in fact he was dealing with the corporation.
5)Direct tort--individual and
corp acted together and should be jointly/severally liable
6)Instrumentality requirement is
satisfied:
I)control of a subsidiary by
parent
ii)to commit fraud
iii)to cause loss or injury.
3.PIERCING THE WALL BETWEEN AFFILIATED
CORPORATIONS--this occurs when a P with a claim against one corp attempts
to satisfy the claim against the assets of an affiliated corp under common ownership.
This type of aggregation is permitted only when each affiliated corp is NOT a
free-standing enterprise but merely a fragment of an entity composed of
affiliated corps.
4.USE OF CORPORATE FORM TO EVADE
STATUTORY OR CONTRACT OBLIGATIONS--the corp form may be ignored when it is
used to evade a statutory or contractual obligation. The issue is whether the
contract or statute was intended to apply to the shs as well as the
corporation. Only third parties, not the corp or its shs, are generally
allowed to disregard the corp entity.
5.TWO EXTREMES TO AVOID IN PIERCING THE
CORPORATE WALL:
a)Old model--Superman (sh)
used corp as his puppet;
b)New Model--Superman (sh)
and corp are inseparable (alter ego)
D.SUBORDINATION OF SHAREHOLDER DEBTS--”DEEP ROCK”
DOCTRINE--if a corp goes into
bankruptcy, debts to its controlling shs may be subordinated to claims of other
creditors. When subordination occurs, shareholder loans are treated as if they
were invested capital (stock). Major factors in determining whether to
subordinate include fraud, mismanagement, undercapitalization, commingling,
excessive control, etc.
II.ORGANIZING THE CORPORATION--generally, corps are created under and according to
statutory provisions of the state in which formation is sought.
A.FORMALITIES IN ORGANIZING CORPORATION:
1.CERTIFICATE OR ARTICLES OF
INCORPORATION--state law governs the content of the articles, which are
filed with the secretary of the state. Usually, the articles must specify the
corp name, number of shares and classes of stock authorized, address of the
corp’s initial registered office, name of initial registered agent, and the
name and address of each incorporator.
a)Purpose Clause--under
most statutes, no elaborate purpose clause is needed. It is sufficient to state
that the purpose of the corp is to engage in any lawful business activity.
b)State of Incorporation--incorporators
need to consider how flexible the state’s corporate law is versus the costs
associating with incorporating in that state
2.ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING--filling the
articles in proper form creates the corporation, after which an organizational
meeting is held by either the incorporators or dirs named in the articles.
Matters determined at meeting:
1)Incorporators elect directors, if
no dirs are named in the articles;
2)Directors choose officers;
3)Directors ratify pre-incorporation
transactions;
4)Directors authorize issuance of
shares
5)Directors adopt by-laws (if necessary),
corporate seal and stock certificate
B.DEFECTS IN FORMATION PROCESS--”DE JURE” AND “DE
FACTO” CORPS--when there is a defect
or irregularity in formation, the question is whether the corp exists “de
jure,” “de facto,” “by estoppel,” or not at all. This issue usually arises when
a third party seeks to impose personal liability on would-be shs. Another
method of challenging corporate status, used only by the state, is a quo
warranto proceeding. Note: where there has not been compliance with the
statute, we apply principles of de facto, de jure and corp by estoppel. Where
there has been compliance with the statute, we apply principles of disregard of
corporate fiction, a/k/a “piercing the corporate veil,” which is an exception,
rather than a rule.
1.DE JURE CORPORATION--this exists
when the corp is organized in compliance with the statute. Its status
cannot be attacked by anyone--not even the state. Most courts require only
“substantial compliance”; others require exact compliance with the mandatory
requirements.
2.DE FACTO CORPORATION (substantially
abolished)--this exists when there is insufficient compliance as to the state
(i.e., state can attack in quo warranto proceeding), but the steps taken are
sufficient to treat the enterprise as a corp with respect to its dealings with
third parties. Requirements:
1)Colorable or apparent attempt;
2)Good faith;
3)Some use of corporate franchise;
Then ct will recognize status as to all but state
3.CORPORATION BY ESTOPPEL
a)Definition--estoppel is
an equitable evidentiary rule which prevents a party from denying the existence
of a fact notwithstanding that he fact is not true. Thus, certain parties are
estopped from asserting defective incorporation when they have dealt with the
corp as though properly formed.
b)Example--shs who claimed
corp status in an earlier transaction are estopped to deny that status in a
suit brought against the corp. The estoppel theory normally does NOT apply to
bar suits against would-be shs by tort claimants or other involuntary
creditors.
c)Overlap With De Facto--many
of the facts which we would point to support a claim of de facto status are the
same ones we point for estoppel. However, substantial abolition of de facto
concept doesn’t necessarily abolish estoppel.
d)De Facto is For All; Estoppel is
For One--estoppel depends on relationship between party and corp.
4.WHO MAY BE HELD LIABLE--when a
would-be corp is not a de jure or de facto or a corp by estoppel, the modern
trend imposes personal liability against only those owners who actively
participated in management of the enterprise.
5.EFFECT OF STATUTES:
a)On De Facto Doctrine--states
following the prior version of the Model Act have abolished the de facto
doctrine, thus making all purported “shs” jointly and severally liable for all
liabilities incurred as a result of the purported “incorporation.” However,
statutes based on Revised Model Business Corporation Act require a person
acting on behalf of the enterprise to know that there was no incorporation
before liability attaches.
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