Monday, April 15, 2013

A free e-book on Limited Liability Partnership (LLP) - 2005

To download the full version of the free e-book on Limited Liability Partnership (LLP) - Click on the below link: http://bit.ly/YoFR3K
 
Limited Liability Partnership
This book was written in 2005 and aims to cogitate the raison d'ĂȘtre, which beget the evolution of the limited liability partnership (LLP) form of business structure. It discusses the LLP Statutes in United States of America, Channel Island of Jersey, United Kingdom, United Arab Emirates, Singapore and Australia. It further draws a comparison of the limited liability partnership laws prevalent in these places and identifies the best practices, which with apposite adaptations can be made a part of a similar legislation in India.
Methodology
This book adopts a desk research method, which involves Internet research, literature review and analysis, and correspondence with the relevant authorities in the places studied.
Acknowledgement
I would like to acknowledge the valuable contributions made by a number of people who helped me in the development and refinement of this text. First I would like to thank Prof. Prem Sikka, Professor of Accounting, Department of Accounting, Finance and Management, University of Essex, UK for his guidance on the subject.
Special thanks go to Ms. Toh Wee San, Senior Assistant Registrar ACRA, Singapore who gave my queries a patient listening and guided me in understanding the most technical issues of the subject.
CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION
INTRODUCTION
The inclination to collaborate to accomplish certain commercial objectives has a long history. The commercial magnetism of such collaborations and a need to govern their business ultimately led to the codification of corporate and partnership laws.
Corporations and Partnerships have been a primary form of business structure for a long time now. For more than a century, partnership law has offered an all-embracing and lucid alternative to corporate law. Although, the two bodies of law have much in common, historically they differed sharply on the role of the contract and private ordering in structuring the firm.
Partnership law encourages private ordering through bargaining by providing a set of statutory default norms that, with only a few exceptions, yield to agreements negotiated by partners. In contrast, corporate law historically has provided a mandatory framework for firm structure highly resistant to shareholders’ attempts to define their relationships through bargaining[1]. Proponents of private ordering within firms prefer the freedoms of partnership law to the mandates of corporate law, and over time they have enjoyed success in extending the bargaining model from partnership law to corporate law.
However, the inherent limitations of both these forms of businesses have made them unsuitable for certain businesses and ultimately hybrid forms of business structures such as limited partnerships, limited liability partnership, limited liability limited partnerships etc. evolved.
GENESIS AND DEVELOPMENT OF PARTNERSHIP LAWS
Partnership laws around the world have evolved over a period of time in consonance with the changing business requirements. Broadly, the partnership laws can be classified in three generations viz. General Partnership Laws (First Generation), Limited Partnership Laws (Second Generation) and Limited Liability Partnership Laws (Third Generation).
First Generation
The UK Partnership Act, 1890 is an archetypal example of first generation of partnership laws. A general partnership firm is not a separate legal entity. A partner is considered as the agent of the firm and of other partners for the purpose of the business of the firm. Further, every partner is liable, jointly and severally with all the other partners, for all acts of the firm done while he is a partner. Where, by the wrongful act or omission of a partner acting in the ordinary course of the business of a firm, or with the authority of his partners, loss or injury is caused to any third party, or any penalty is incurred, the firm is liable therefore to the same extent as the partner.
General partnership is regarded by the public as the type of business structure providing the optimal protection to members of the public, because partners are not protected by limited liability and the claimants can always go after the personal assets of each partner to meet his or her claim.[2]
The characteristic of "unlimited liability" ensures that the partners maintain a direct interest in the affairs of the partnership and conduct of its partners, especially in small practices where the partners are likely to work in the same location. For large practices, they may have offices in several places, and thus partners may not be able to keep track of all aspects and transactions of the partnership. Nonetheless, under a general partnership, partners still have to share the liabilities for the negligence of those partners whom they may barely know or meet.[3]
The advantage of this structure is that its business affairs are entirely private. A partnership agreement is also a private confidential document providing the flexibility in which the partners can determine how the internal structure and relationship between partners and between partners and the partnership are governed.[4]

Second Generation

The UK Limited Partnership Act, 1907 is an archetypal example of second generation of partnership laws. A limited partnership is different from a general partnership to the extent that it classifies the partners into two classes: a general partner and a limited partner. Limited partnerships must have at least one general and one limited partner. The essence of a limited partnership is that it bestows on the partnership the benefit of limited liability to a certain extent. In a limited partnership, the liability of the limited partner is limited to the amount of his contribution. He is like an investor and usually does not take part in the management or day-to-day running of the firm.
However, if a limited partner takes part in the management, he can be held liable for all debts and obligations of the firm incurred while he so takes part in the management, as though he were a general partner. As against this, the general partner is responsible for the management of the firm and has unlimited liability. Further, limited partnerships do not specifically deal with the issue of joint and several liabilities. Partners can still be held liable for the wrongful acts or omissions of their fellow partners. For tax purposes, a limited partnership is not considered as a taxable entity and its income and capital transactions flow through to the partners. Limited Partnerships are increasingly being used for private equity and fund investment businesses.
Third Generation
The UK Limited Liability Partnership Act, 2000 is an archetypal example of third generation of partnership laws. A limited liability partnership (LLP) is an alternative corporate business vehicle that not only provides the benefits of limited liability but also allows its partners the flexibility of organizing their internal structure as a general partnership. The limited liability partnership is a separate legal entity and, while the LLP itself will be liable for the full extent of its assets, the liability of the partners will be limited. In LLP, each partner is the agent of the LLP but not of other partners.
The limited liability partnership structure has gained importance in the last one decade and is now available in United States of America, Channel Island of Jersey, United Kingdom, United Arab Emirates, Singapore and Australia.
The push for the creation of limited liability partnership grew from several factors, such as general increase in the incidence of litigation for professional’s negligence and the size of claims; the risk to a partner's personal assets, when the claim exceeds the sum of the assets and insurance cover of the partnership; the growth in the size of partnerships; increase in specialization among partners and the coming together of different professions within a partnership.
There are also concerns about the shifting of the business structure of a firm from a general partnership to an LLP, albeit there is no empirical data supporting them. One of the concerns is about the impact upon the culture of a law firm. For instance, the practice of law in high-risk areas often yields high rewards commensurate with the increased risk of liability. Partners in a general partnership usually share both the risk and risk-related gains with their fellow partners. If a shift to an LLP causes a member/partner to shoulder a higher risk of liability than others, he or she may demand a larger share of the rewards. Similarly, the risk of some members/partners may increase where the legislation provides that members/partners of LLPs have to be liable for the acts of those under their direct supervision; in particular, if some members/partners have to supervise less experienced lawyers or staff.[5]
 
Some consider that shifting from the general partnership status to the LLP status may result in less incentive for members/partners to monitor and control the quality of work by other members/partners of the firm, as they are no longer liable for the acts of their fellow members/partners. The breakdown of internal procedures at Arthur Andersen, the accounting firm operating as an LLP, in connection with the collapse of the Enron Corporation, is often quoted as an example of such disincentive.[6]
However, the level of protection that an LLP affords partners of a LLP is an important factor in why LLP is fast becoming the preferred structure for major professional services firms.