Agency
Partnerships
Corporations
Fiduciary Duties
LLC
100

Who is involved in an agency relationship? (2 people)

Principal and Agent

100

How is a general partnership formed? 

When two or more persons carry on as co-owners of a business, regardless of their intent to form a partnership.

100

When does a corporation come into existence?

When the AOI are filed with the department of state

100

What are the elements for a breach of fiduciary duty under Florida law?

Under Florida Law, the elements of a claim for breach of fiduciary duty are (1) the existence of a fiduciary duty, (2) breach of that duty, and (3) the breach is the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s damages.

100

What is the default for how profits and losses are distributed in an LLC?

absent contrary agreement, most statutes allocate profits and losses on the basis of the value of members contributions

200

Define "Agency"

Agency is the fiduciary relationship that arises when one person (a principal) manifests assent to another person (an agent) that the agent shall act on the principal’s behalf and subject to the principal’s control, and the agent manifests assent or otherwise consents so to act.

200

What creates a presumption of a partnership? (2 things)

Profit Sharing and Control

200

What is a promoter and are they an agent of the corporation?

A promoter is someone acting on a corporations behalf pre-incorporation. The promoter will be held jointly and severally liable for all liabilities created while acting on behalf of a corporation that the promoter knows has not yet been incorporated. There is no principal-agency relationship because the principal does not yet exist, so the promoters are liable. However, the corporation can become liable by express adoption or implied adoption. The promoter will remain liable even after the corporation adopts the contracts unless the corporation executes a novation with the promoter.

200

Define Duty of Loyalty and the 3 ways it can be breached

A director breaches the duty of loyalty when they put their own financial interests ahead of the corporations. A director is not acting in the best interests of the corporation when they compete with the organization, takes an opportunity that rightfully belongs to the corporation, or sits on both sides of the transaction (self dealing).

200

Who owes fiduciary duties in a member managed vs manager managed LLC?

Member-Managed: All members owe fiduciary duties (care and loyalty)

Manager-Managed: Managers owe fiduciary duties (care and loyalty)

300

What are the 3 categories of authority in an agency relationship?

(1) actual, (2) apparent, (3) inherent

300

What are the Four Types of Partnerships? Give brief explanation of liability

General Partnership, Limited Partnership, Limited Liability Partnership, Limited Liability Limited Partnership

(GP, LP, LLP, LLLP)

300

What is a corporation by estoppel?

Arises when a third party deals with a person (or persons) believing they are a corporation, the third party may be estopped from later denying the existence of the corporation. Only applicable to contract issues (NOT torts) and is Raised by the promoter as a defense.

300

Explain a Caremark Claim 

Closely related to the fiduciary duty of care, directors also owe an affirmative duty to implement and monitor corporate information or reporting systems (AKA corporate oversight systems). The duty to implement and monitor corporate oversight systems is often referred to as a caremark duty which is a subset of the fiduciary duty of loyalty. A director breaches his caremark duty when the director (1) utterly fails to implement any reporting or information system or (2) having implemented such a system continuously fails to monitor or oversee its operations.

300

Can someone sell their financial interests in the LLC? If so, can the buyer acquire additional rights? If so, how?

Yes - (Unless otherwise provided in the LLC’s operating agreement, a member may assign his financial interest in the LLC), 

Yes - An assignee of a financial interest in an LLC may acquire other rights only by being admitted as a member of the company if all the remaining members consent or the operating agreement so provides (like partnership)

400

Explain the concept of "ratification" and the two types of ratification.

Ratification is when the Principal adopts an agents contract, the two types are Express and Implied ratification

400

Explain what is Partnership Property, Presumed to be Partnership Property, and Presumed NOT to be Partnership Property

what is key inquiry? (100 bonus points)

Partnership Property - If acquired in the partnerships name

Presumed to be partnership property - If purchased using partnership assets (even if not in partnerships names)

Presumed not to be partnership property - If acquired by the partner without an indication in the instrument transferring title that the property belongs to the partnership, even if it is used for partnership purposes. However, property acquired in the name of a partner is partnership property if the instrument transferring title indicates that the partner was acting in her capacity as a partner.

Key Inquiry = Intent

400

Explain Corporate Veil Piercing and list at least 3 factors courts will consider.

The doctrine which holds that the corporate structure with its attendant limited liability of stockholders may be disregarded, and personal liability imposed on stockholders, officers, and directors in the case of fraud or other wrongful acts done in the name of the corporation. Courts will exercise veil piercing cautiously and reluctantly. Courts apply the same factor test to determine if veil piercing is appropriate regardless of if shareholders are legal or natural person.

Veil piercing is disregarding the corporate form to permit a creditor to collect from a dominant shareholder.

Factors to consider: (courts generally require a showing of multiple factors)

  • Undercapitalization (not enough funding to cover prospective liabilities)
  • Concentrated ownership
  • Failure to observe corporate formalities
  • Insolvency of the corporate debtor at the time of the transaction in question
  • Siphoning of funds
  • Non-functioning of corporate directors or directors
  • Absence of corporate records
  • No payment of dividends to shareholders
  • Corporation is mere façade of dominant shareholders (alter ego theory)
  • fraud
400

Define duty of care

The duty of care requires directors to act on an informed basis, taking into account reasonably available information and alternatives. They must act with the care that an ordinary prudent person in a like position would reasonably believe appropriate under similar circumstances. The standard is gross negligence, which is an extreme departure from ordinary care.

400

What is the name of the agreement of the members of an LLC?

Operating Agreement

500

Explain Disclosed, Unidentified, and Undisclosed Principals, including who is liable for contract under each type

Disclosed: P is disclosed if, at the time of making the contract in question, the other party to the contract has notice that the agent is acting for a specifically identified P. If A acts with actual or apparent authority: P and 3rd party are parties to the contract, A is not a party (unless A and third party agree otherwise). P is liable.

Unidentified: P is unidentified if, at the time of making the contract in question, the other party to the contract has notice that the agent is acting for a principal, but the principals identity remains unknown. If A acts with actual or apparent authority, P and 3rd party are parties to the contract AND A is also a party (unless A and 3rd party agree otherwise). P is liable; A is liable. 

Undisclosed: P is undisclosed if, at the time of making the contract in question, the other party has no notice that the agent is acting for a principal (or that the principal exists). If A acts with actual authority, P and third party are parties to the contract, and A is also a party. P is liable; A is liable.

500

Explain a partnership's liability to creditors and how a creditor may recover assets


A partnership is a separate legal entity, so the partnership is liable for its contracts and torts. However, the partners are also jointly and severally liable for all partnership obligations.

Creditors must first obtain a judgment against the partnership and attempt to execute against the assets of the partnership (via a writ of execution). If that effort fails, the creditor may pursue the individual partners assets.

Other ways to reach the partners:

  • The partnership is a debtor in a bankruptcy
  • The partnership agrees that the creditor need not exhaust partnership assets
  • A court grants permission
  • Liability is imposed on a partner by law or by contract

 

A creditor can always sue a partner for their torts. 

500

What is the approval process for fundamental changes?

(1) Board must approve (watch out for duty of care and loyalty)

(2) Board notifies shareholders of recommendations

(3) Special meeting noticed and held to conduct shareholder vote

(4) If fundamental change approved, some shareholders who noted “no” may have buyout rights (dissenting shareholders)

(5) File documents with the department of state

500

Explain the burden shifting framework and define the business judgment rule

(1) Plaintiff: prove existence of fiduciary duty

(2) Plaintiff: prove affirmative evidence that defendant failed to engage in deliberative process/rely on all reasonably available information, and that the injury was proximately caused by the defendant-director

(3) If Plaintiff Unsuccessful = Business Judgment Rule, If Plaintiff Successful = Entire Fairness Review & burden shifts to defendant-director

Business Judgment Rule: a presumption that the directors were acting in good faith and in the corporations best interest. Unless the presumption is overcome, courts will not second guess directors decisions, even when such decisions have disastrous outcomes for the corporation

500

Explain the potential liability of members of an LLC

Members stand to lose capital contributions, but their personal assets are not subject to attachment

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