Bill Text: IN HB1351 | 2010 | Regular Session | Introduced
Bill Title: Limited partnerships and liability companies.
Spectrum: Bipartisan Bill
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2010-01-21 - Representative VanHaaften added as coauthor [HB1351 Detail]
Download: Indiana-2010-HB1351-Introduced.html
Citations Affected: IC 7.1-1-3; IC 23-15-1-5; IC 23-16; IC 23-16.1;
IC 23-18; IC 23-18.1; IC 28-11-5-10; IC 34-30-2.
Synopsis: Limited partnerships and liability companies. Enacts the
Uniform Limited Partnership Act (2001) governing limited
partnerships and limited liability limited partnerships. Enacts the
Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act (2006) governing
limited liability companies. Provides for biennial reports for both
limited partnerships and limited liability companies instead of annual
reports as required in both the Uniform Limited Partnership Act and
the Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act. Specifies
transitional provisions. Repeals the limited partnership statute in
current law on July 1, 2011. Repeals the limited liability company
statute in current law on July 1, 2011.
Effective: July 1, 2010; July 1, 2011.
January 13, 2010, read first time and referred to Committee on Judiciary.
PRINTING CODE. Amendments: Whenever an existing statute (or a section of the Indiana Constitution) is being amended, the text of the existing provision will appear in this style type, additions will appear in this style type, and deletions will appear in
Additions: Whenever a new statutory provision is being enacted (or a new constitutional provision adopted), the text of the new provision will appear in this style type. Also, the word NEW will appear in that style type in the introductory clause of each SECTION that adds a new provision to the Indiana Code or the Indiana Constitution.
Conflict reconciliation: Text in a statute in this style type or
A BILL FOR AN ACT to amend the Indiana Code concerning
business and other associations.
(1) IC 23-18-1-11 (before its repeal);
(2) IC 23-18.1-1-9; or
(3) IC 23-18.1-1-10;
as applicable.
(1) IC 23-16-1-9 (before its repeal);
(2) IC 23-16.1-1-9; or
(3) IC 23-16.1-1-13;
as applicable.
entity. The term does not include a:
(1) corporation (as defined in IC 23-1-20-5);
(2) foreign corporation (as defined in IC 23-1-20-11);
(3) foreign limited partnership (as defined in IC 23-16-1-6
(before its repeal) or IC 23-16.1-1-9, as applicable);
(4) limited partnership (as defined in IC 23-16-1-9 (before its
repeal) or IC 23-16.1-1-13, as applicable);
(5) limited liability company (as defined in IC 23-18-1-11 (before
its repeal) or IC 23-18.1-1-10, as applicable); or
(6) foreign limited liability company (as defined in IC 23-18-1-9
(before its repeal) or IC 23-18.1-1-9, as applicable).
ARTICLE 16.1. LIMITED PARTNERSHIPS
Chapter 1. Definitions
Sec. 1. The definitions in this chapter apply throughout this article.
Sec. 2. "Appropriate court" means the following:
(1) In the case of a limited partnership, the circuit or superior court, as applicable, of:
(A) the county in which the designated office of the limited partnership is located, if the limited partnership has a designated office;
(B) the county in which the designated office of the limited partnership will be located, if the designated office of the limited partnership has not yet been established initially; or
(C) the county in which the limited partnership last maintained a designated office, if the limited partnership does not have a designated office.
(2) In the case of a foreign limited partnership, the circuit or superior court, as applicable, of:
(A) the county in which the street address of the foreign limited partnership's agent for service of process is located, if the foreign limited partnership has appointed an agent for service of process; or
(B) Marion County, if the foreign limited partnership does not have an appointed agent for service of process.
Sec. 3. "Certificate of limited partnership" means a certificate required by IC 23-16.1-3-1. The term includes the certificate as amended or restated.
Sec. 4. "Contribution", except in the term "right of contribution", means any benefit provided by a person to a limited partnership in order to become a partner or in the person's capacity as a partner.
Sec. 5. "Debtor in bankruptcy" means a person that is the subject of:
(1) an order for relief under Title 11 of the United States Code or a comparable order under a successor statute of general application; or
(2) a comparable order under federal, state, or foreign law governing insolvency.
Sec. 6. "Designated office" means:
(1) with respect to a limited partnership, the office that the limited partnership is required to designate and maintain under IC 23-16.1-2-13; or
(2) with respect to a foreign limited partnership, its principal office.
Sec. 7. "Distribution" means a transfer of money or other property from a limited partnership to a partner in the partner's capacity as a partner or to a transferee on account of a transferable interest owned by the transferee.
Sec. 8. "Foreign limited liability limited partnership" means a foreign limited partnership whose general partners have limited liability for the obligations of the foreign limited partnership under a provision similar to IC 23-16.1-5-4(c).
Sec. 9. "Foreign limited partnership" means a partnership formed under the laws of a jurisdiction other than this state and required by those laws to have one (1) or more general partners and one (1) or more limited partners. The term includes a foreign limited liability limited partnership.
Sec. 10. "General partner" means:
(1) with respect to a limited partnership, a person that:
(A) becomes a general partner under IC 23-16.1-5-1; or
(B) was a general partner in a limited partnership when the limited partnership became subject to this article under IC 23-16.1-13-4(a) or IC 23-16.1-13-4(b); and
(2) with respect to a foreign limited partnership, a person that has rights, powers, and obligations similar to those of a general partner in a limited partnership.
Sec. 11. "Limited liability limited partnership", except in the term "foreign limited liability limited partnership", means a limited partnership whose certificate of limited partnership states
that the limited partnership is a limited liability limited
partnership.
Sec. 12. "Limited partner" means:
(1) with respect to a limited partnership, a person that:
(A) becomes a limited partner under IC 23-16.1-4-1; or
(B) was a limited partner in a limited partnership when the
limited partnership became subject to this article under
IC 23-16.1-13-4(a) or IC 23-16.1-13-4(b); and
(2) with respect to a foreign limited partnership, a person that
has rights, powers, and obligations similar to those of a
limited partner in a limited partnership.
Sec. 13. "Limited partnership", except in the terms "foreign
limited partnership" and "foreign limited liability limited
partnership", means an entity, having one (1) or more general
partners and one (1) or more limited partners, which is formed
under this article by two (2) or more persons or becomes subject to
this article under IC 23-16.1-12, IC 23-16.1-13-4(a), or
IC 23-16.1-13-4(b). The term includes a limited liability limited
partnership.
Sec. 14. "Partner" means a limited partner, a general partner,
or a person who is both a limited partner and a general partner.
Sec. 15. "Partnership agreement" means the partners'
agreement, whether oral, implied, in a record, or in any
combination, concerning the limited partnership. The term
includes the agreement as amended.
Sec. 16. "Person" means an individual, corporation, business
trust, estate, trust, partnership, limited liability company,
association, joint venture, government, governmental subdivision,
agency, or instrumentality, public corporation, or any other legal
or commercial entity.
Sec. 17. "Person dissociated as a general partner" means a
person dissociated as a general partner of a limited partnership.
Sec. 18. "Principal office" means the office where the principal
executive office of a limited partnership or foreign limited
partnership is located, whether or not the office is located in this
state.
Sec. 19. "Record" means information that is inscribed on a
tangible medium or that is stored in an electronic or other medium
and may be retrieved in perceivable form.
Sec. 20. "Required information" means the information that a
limited partnership is required to maintain under IC 23-16.1-2-10.
Sec. 21. "Sign" means:
(1) to execute or adopt a tangible symbol with the present intent to authenticate a record; or
(2) to attach or logically associate an electronic symbol, sound, or process to or with a record with the present intent to authenticate the record.
Sec. 22. "State" means a state of the United States, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the United States Virgin Islands, or any territory or insular possession subject to the jurisdiction of the United States.
Sec. 23. "Transfer" includes an assignment, conveyance, deed, bill of sale, lease, mortgage, security interest, encumbrance, gift, and transfer by operation of law.
Sec. 24. "Transferable interest" means a partner's right to receive distributions.
Sec. 25. "Transferee" means a person to which all or part of a transferable interest has been transferred, whether or not the transferor is a partner.
Chapter 2. General Provisions
Sec. 1. This article may be cited as the Uniform Limited Partnership Act.
Sec. 2. (a) A person knows a fact if the person has actual knowledge of it.
(b) A person has notice of a fact if the person:
(1) knows of it;
(2) has received a notification of it;
(3) has reason to know it exists from all of the facts known to the person at the time in question; or
(4) has notice of it under subsection (c) or (d).
(c) A certificate of limited partnership on file in the office of the secretary of state is notice that the partnership is a limited partnership and the persons designated in the certificate as general partners are general partners. Except as otherwise provided in subsection (d), the certificate is not notice of any other fact.
(d) A person has notice of:
(1) another person's dissociation as a general partner, on the earlier date occurring:
(A) ninety (90) days after the effective date of an amendment to the certificate of limited partnership stating that the other person has dissociated; or
(B) ninety (90) days after the effective date of a statement of dissociation pertaining to the other person;
(2) a limited partnership's dissolution, ninety (90) days after
the effective date of an amendment to the certificate of limited
partnership stating that the limited partnership is dissolved;
(3) a limited partnership's termination, ninety (90) days after
the effective date of a statement of termination;
(4) a limited partnership's conversion under IC 23-16.1-12,
ninety (90) days after the effective date of the articles of
conversion; or
(5) a merger under IC 23-16.1-12, ninety (90) days after the
effective date of the articles of merger.
(e) A person notifies or gives a notification to another person by
taking steps reasonably required to inform the other person in
ordinary course, whether or not the other person learns of it.
(f) A person receives a notification when the notification:
(1) comes to the person's attention; or
(2) is delivered at the person's place of business or at any
other place held out by the person as a place for receiving
communications.
(g) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (h), a person
other than an individual knows, has notice, or receives a
notification of a fact for purposes of a particular transaction when
the individual conducting the transaction for the person knows, has
notice, or receives a notification of the fact, or in any event when
the fact would have been brought to the individual's attention if the
person had exercised reasonable diligence. A person other than an
individual exercises reasonable diligence if it maintains reasonable
routines for communicating significant information to the
individual conducting the transaction for the person and there is
reasonable compliance with the routines. Reasonable diligence does
not require an individual acting for the person to communicate
information unless the communication is part of the individual's
regular duties or the individual has reason to know of the
transaction and that the transaction would be materially affected
by the information.
(h) A general partner's knowledge, notice, or receipt of a
notification of a fact relating to the limited partnership is effective
immediately as knowledge of, notice to, or receipt of a notification
by the limited partnership, except in the case of a fraud on the
limited partnership committed by or with the consent of the
general partner. A limited partner's knowledge, notice, or receipt
of a notification of a fact relating to the limited partnership is not
effective as knowledge of, notice to, or receipt of a notification by
the limited partnership.
Sec. 3. (a) A limited partnership is an entity distinct from its partners. A limited partnership is the same entity regardless of whether its certificate states that the limited partnership is a limited liability limited partnership.
(b) A limited partnership may be organized under this article for any lawful purpose.
(c) A limited partnership has a perpetual duration.
Sec. 4. A limited partnership has the powers to do all things necessary or convenient to carry on its activities, including the power to sue, be sued, and defend in its own name and to maintain an action against a partner for harm caused to the limited partnership by a breach of the partnership agreement or violation of a duty to the partnership.
Sec. 5. The law of this state governs relations among the partners of a limited partnership and between the partners and the limited partnership and the liability of partners as partners for an obligation of the limited partnership.
Sec. 6. (a) Unless displaced by particular provisions of this article, the principles of law and equity supplement this article.
(b) If an obligation to pay interest arises under this article and the rate is not specified, the rate is that specified in IC 24-4.6-1-101.
Sec. 7. (a) The name of a limited partnership may contain the name of any partner.
(b) The name of a limited partnership that is not a limited liability limited partnership must contain the phrase "limited partnership" or the abbreviation "L.P." or "LP" and may not contain the phrase "limited liability limited partnership" or the abbreviation "LLLP" or "L.L.L.P.".
(c) The name of a limited liability limited partnership must contain the phrase "limited liability limited partnership" or the abbreviation "LLLP" or "L.L.L.P." and must not contain the abbreviation "L.P." or "LP".
(d) Unless authorized by subsection (e), the name of a limited partnership must be distinguishable in the records of the secretary of state from:
(1) the name of each person, other than an individual, incorporated, organized, or authorized to transact business in this state;
(2) each name reserved under section 8 of this chapter; and
(3) each name reserved or registered under other state laws allowing the reservation or registration of business names, including assumed business names under IC 23-15-1.
(e) A limited partnership may apply to the secretary of state for authorization to use a name that does not comply with subsection (d). The secretary of state shall authorize use of the name applied for if, as to each conflicting name:
(1) the present user, registrant, or owner of the conflicting name:
(A) consents in a signed record to the use; and
(B) submits an undertaking in a form satisfactory to the secretary of state to change the conflicting name to a name that:
(i) complies with subsection (d); and
(ii) is distinguishable in the records of the secretary of state from the name applied for;
(2) the applicant delivers to the secretary of state a certified copy of the final judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction establishing the applicant's right to use in this state the name applied for; or
(3) the applicant delivers to the secretary of state proof satisfactory to the secretary of state that the present user, registrant, or owner of the conflicting name:
(A) has merged into the applicant;
(B) has been converted into the applicant; or
(C) has transferred substantially all of its assets, including the conflicting name, to the applicant.
(f) Subject to IC 23-16.1-10-5, this section applies to any foreign limited partnership transacting business in this state, having a certificate of authority to transact business in this state, or applying for a certificate of authority.
Sec. 8. (a) The exclusive right to the use of a name that complies with section 7 of this chapter may be reserved by:
(1) a person intending to organize a limited partnership under this article and to adopt the name;
(2) a limited partnership or a foreign limited partnership authorized to transact business in this state intending to adopt the name;
(3) a foreign limited partnership intending to obtain a certificate of authority to transact business in this state and adopt the name;
(4) a person intending to organize a foreign limited partnership and intending to have it obtain a certificate of authority to transact business in this state and adopt the name;
(5) a foreign limited partnership formed under the name; or
(6) a foreign limited partnership formed under a name that does not comply with section 7(b) or 7(c) of this chapter, but the name reserved under this subdivision may differ from the foreign limited partnership's name only to the extent necessary to comply with section 7(b) and 7(c) of this chapter.
(b) A person may apply to reserve a name under subsection (a) by delivering to the secretary of state for filing an application that states the name to be reserved and the subdivision of subsection (a) that applies. If the secretary of state finds that the name is available for use by the applicant, the secretary of state shall file a statement of name reservation and thereby reserve the name for the exclusive use of the applicant for one hundred twenty (120) days.
(c) An applicant that has reserved a name as provided under subsection (b) may reserve the same name for additional one hundred twenty (120) day periods. A person having a current reservation for a name may not apply for another one hundred twenty (120) day period for the same name until ninety (90) days have elapsed in the current reservation.
(d) A person that has reserved a name under this section may deliver to the secretary of state for filing a notice of transfer that states the reserved name, the name and street and mailing address of some other person to which the reservation is to be transferred, and the subdivision of subsection (a) that applies to the other person. Subject to IC 23-16.1-3-6(c), the transfer is effective when the secretary of state files the notice of transfer.
Sec. 9. (a) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (b), the partnership agreement governs relations among the partners and between the partners and the partnership. To the extent the partnership agreement does not otherwise provide, this article governs relations among the partners and between the partners and the partnership.
(b) A partnership agreement may not:
(1) vary a limited partnership's power under section 4 of this chapter to sue, be sued, and defend in its own name;
(2) vary the law applicable to a limited partnership under section 5 of this chapter;
(3) vary the requirements of IC 23-16.1-3-4;
(4) vary the information required under section 10 of this chapter or unreasonably restrict the right to information under IC 23-16.1-4-4 or IC 23-16.1-5-7, but the partnership
agreement may impose reasonable restrictions on the
availability and use of information obtained under those
sections and may define appropriate remedies, including
liquidated damages, for a breach of any reasonable restriction
on use;
(5) eliminate the duty of loyalty under IC 23-16.1-5-8, but the
partnership agreement may:
(A) identify specific types or categories of activities that do
not violate the duty of loyalty, if not manifestly
unreasonable; and
(B) specify the number or percentage of partners that may
authorize or ratify, after full disclosure to all partners of
all material facts, a specific act or transaction that
otherwise would violate the duty of loyalty;
(6) unreasonably reduce the duty of care under
IC 23-16.1-5-8(c);
(7) eliminate the obligation of good faith and fair dealing
under IC 23-16.1-4-5(b) and IC 23-16.1-5-8(d), but the
partnership agreement may prescribe the standards by which
the performance of the obligation is to be measured, if the
standards are not manifestly unreasonable;
(8) vary the power of a person to dissociate as a general
partner under IC 23-16.1-7-4(a) except to require that the
notice under IC 23-16.1-7-3(1) be in a record;
(9) vary the power of a court to decree dissolution in the
circumstances specified in IC 23-16.1-9-2;
(10) vary the requirement to wind up the partnership's
business as specified in IC 23-16.1-9-3;
(11) unreasonably restrict the right to maintain an action
under IC 23-16.1-11;
(12) restrict the right of a partner under IC 23-16.1-12-10(a)
to approve a conversion or merger or the right of a general
partner under IC 23-16.1-12-10(b) to consent to an
amendment to the certificate of limited partnership that
deletes a statement that the limited partnership is a limited
liability limited partnership; or
(13) restrict rights under this article of a person other than a
partner or a transferee.
Sec. 10. A limited partnership shall maintain at its designated
office:
(1) a current list showing the full name and last known street
and mailing address of each partner, separately identifying
the general partners, in alphabetical order, and the limited
partners, in alphabetical order;
(2) a copy of the initial certificate of limited partnership and
all amendments to and restatements of the certificate,
together with signed copies of any powers of attorney under
which any certificate, amendment, or restatement has been
signed;
(3) a copy of any filed articles of conversion or merger;
(4) a copy of the limited partnership's federal, state, and local
income tax returns and reports, if any, for the three (3) most
recent years;
(5) a copy of any partnership agreement made in a record and
any amendment made in a record to any partnership
agreement;
(6) a copy of any financial statement of the limited
partnership for the three (3) most recent years;
(7) a copy of the three (3) most recent biennial reports
delivered by the limited partnership to the secretary of state
under IC 23-16.1-3-10;
(8) a copy of any record made by the limited partnership
during the past three (3) years of any consent given by or vote
taken of any partner with respect to any action authorized by
this article or the partnership agreement; and
(9) unless contained in a partnership agreement made in a
record, a record stating:
(A) the amount of cash, and a description and statement of
the agreed value of the other benefits, contributed and
agreed to be contributed by each partner;
(B) the times at which, or events on the happening of
which, any additional contributions agreed to be made by
each partner are to be made;
(C) for any person that is both a general partner and a
limited partner, a specification of what transferable
interest the person owns in each capacity; and
(D) any events upon the happening of which the limited
partnership is to be dissolved and its activities wound up.
Sec. 11. A partner may lend money to and transact other
business with the limited partnership and has the same rights and
obligations with respect to the loan or other transaction as a person
that is not a partner.
Sec. 12. A person may be both a general partner and a limited
partner. A person that is both a general and limited partner has
the rights, powers, duties, and obligations provided by this article
and the partnership agreement in each of those capacities. When
the person acts as a general partner, the person is subject to the
obligations, duties, and restrictions under this article and the
partnership agreement for general partners. When the person acts
as a limited partner, the person is subject to the obligations, duties,
and restrictions under this article and the partnership agreement
for limited partners.
Sec. 13. (a) A limited partnership shall designate and
continuously maintain in this state:
(1) an office, which need not be a place of its activity in this
state; and
(2) an agent for service of process.
(b) A foreign limited partnership shall designate and
continuously maintain in this state an agent for service of process.
(c) An agent for service of process of a limited partnership or
foreign limited partnership must be an individual who is a resident
of this state or other person authorized to do business in this state.
Sec. 14. (a) In order to change its designated office, agent for
service of process, or the address of its agent for service of process,
a limited partnership or a foreign limited partnership may deliver
to the secretary of state for filing a statement of change containing:
(1) the name of the limited partnership or foreign limited
partnership;
(2) the street and mailing address of its current designated
office;
(3) if the current designated office is to be changed, the street
and mailing address of the new designated office;
(4) the name and street and mailing address of its current
agent for service of process; and
(5) if the current agent for service of process or an address of
the agent is to be changed, the new information.
(b) Subject to IC 23-16.1-3-6(c), a statement of change is
effective when filed by the secretary of state.
Sec. 15. (a) In order to resign as an agent for service of process
of a limited partnership or foreign limited partnership, the agent
must deliver to the secretary of state for filing a statement of
resignation containing the name of the limited partnership or
foreign limited partnership.
(b) After receiving a statement of resignation, the secretary of
state shall file it and mail a copy to the designated office of the
limited partnership or foreign limited partnership and another
copy to the principal office if the address of the office appears in
the records of the secretary of state and is different from the
address of the designated office.
(c) An agency for service of process is terminated on the
thirty-first day after the secretary of state files the statement of
resignation.
Sec. 16. (a) An agent for service of process appointed by a
limited partnership or foreign limited partnership is an agent of
the limited partnership or foreign limited partnership for service
of any process, notice, or demand required or permitted by law to
be served upon the limited partnership or foreign limited
partnership.
(b) If a limited partnership or foreign limited partnership does
not appoint or maintain an agent for service of process in this state
or the agent for service of process cannot with reasonable diligence
be found at the agent's address, the secretary of state is an agent of
the limited partnership or foreign limited partnership upon whom
process, notice, or demand may be served.
(c) Service of any process, notice, or demand on the secretary of
state may be made by delivering to and leaving with the secretary
of state duplicate copies of the process, notice, or demand. If a
process, notice, or demand is served on the secretary of state, the
secretary of state shall forward one (1) of the copies by registered
or certified mail, return receipt requested, to the limited
partnership or foreign limited partnership at its designated office.
(d) Service is effected under subsection (c) at the earliest of:
(1) the date the limited partnership or foreign limited
partnership receives the process, notice, or demand;
(2) the date shown on the return receipt, if signed on behalf of
the limited partnership or foreign limited partnership; or
(3) five (5) days after the process, notice, or demand is
deposited in the mail, if mailed postpaid and correctly
addressed.
(e) The secretary of state shall keep a record of each process,
notice, and demand served under this section and record the time
of, and the action taken regarding, the service.
(f) This section does not affect the right to serve process, notice,
or demand in any other manner provided by law.
Sec. 17. Action requiring the consent of partners under this
article may be taken without a meeting, and a partner may appoint
a proxy to consent or otherwise act for the partner by signing an
appointment record, either personally or by the partner's attorney
in fact.
Chapter 3. Formation; Certificate of Limited Partnership and
Other Filings
Sec. 1. (a) In order for a limited partnership to be formed, a
certificate of limited partnership must be delivered to the secretary
of state for filing. The certificate must state:
(1) the name of the limited partnership, which must comply
with IC 23-16.1-2-7;
(2) the street and mailing address of the initial designated
office and the name and street and mailing address of the
initial agent for service of process;
(3) the name and the street and mailing address of each
general partner;
(4) whether the limited partnership is a limited liability
limited partnership; and
(5) any additional information required by IC 23-16.1-12.
(b) A certificate of limited partnership may also contain any
other matters but may not vary or otherwise affect the provisions
specified in IC 23-16.1-2-9(b) in a manner inconsistent with that
section.
(c) If there has been substantial compliance with subsection (a),
subject to section 6(c) of this chapter, a limited partnership is
formed when the secretary of state files the certificate of limited
partnership.
(d) Subject to subsection (b), if any provision of a partnership
agreement is inconsistent with the filed certificate of limited
partnership or with a filed statement of dissociation, termination,
or change or filed articles of conversion or merger:
(1) the partnership agreement prevails as to partners and
transferees; and
(2) the filed certificate of limited partnership, statement of
dissociation, termination, or change, or articles of conversion
or merger prevail as to persons, other than partners and
transferees, that reasonably rely on the filed record to their
detriment.
Sec. 2. (a) In order to amend its certificate of limited
partnership, a limited partnership must deliver to the secretary of
state for filing an amendment or, as provided under IC 23-16.1-12,
articles of merger stating:
(1) the name of the limited partnership;
(2) the date of filing of its initial certificate; and
(3) the changes the amendment makes to the certificate as
most recently amended or restated.
(b) A limited partnership shall promptly deliver to the secretary
of state for filing an amendment to a certificate of limited
partnership to reflect:
(1) the admission of a new general partner;
(2) the dissociation of a person as a general partner; or
(3) the appointment of a person to wind up the limited
partnership's activities under IC 23-16.1-9-3(c) or
IC 23-16.1-9-3(d).
(c) A general partner that knows that any information in a filed
certificate of limited partnership was false when the certificate was
filed or has become false due to changed circumstances shall
promptly:
(1) cause the certificate to be amended; or
(2) if appropriate, deliver to the secretary of state for filing a
statement of change as provided under IC 23-16.1-2-14 or a
statement of correction as provided under section 7 of this
chapter.
(d) A certificate of limited partnership may be amended at any
time for any other proper purpose as determined by the limited
partnership.
(e) A restated certificate of limited partnership may be delivered
to the secretary of state for filing in the same manner as an
amendment.
(f) Subject to section 6(c) of this chapter, an amendment or
restated certificate is effective when filed by the secretary of state.
Sec. 3. A dissolved limited partnership that has completed
winding up may deliver to the secretary of state for filing a
statement of termination that states:
(1) the name of the limited partnership;
(2) the date of filing of its initial certificate of limited
partnership; and
(3) any other information as determined by the general
partners filing the statement or by a person appointed under
IC 23-16.1-9-3(c) or IC 23-16.1-9-3(d).
Sec. 4. (a) Each record delivered to the secretary of state for
filing under this article must be signed in the following manner:
(1) An initial certificate of limited partnership must be signed
by all general partners listed in the certificate.
(2) An amendment adding or deleting a statement that the
limited partnership is a limited liability limited partnership
must be signed by all general partners listed in the certificate.
(3) An amendment designating as general partner a person admitted under IC 23-16.1-9-1(3)(B) following the dissociation of a limited partnership's last general partner must be signed by that person.
(4) An amendment required by IC 23-16.1-9-3(c) following the appointment of a person to wind up the dissolved limited partnership's activities must be signed by that person.
(5) Any other amendment must be signed by:
(A) at least one (1) general partner listed in the certificate;
(B) each other person designated in the amendment as a new general partner; and
(C) each person that the amendment indicates has dissociated as a general partner, unless:
(i) the person is deceased or a guardian or general conservator has been appointed for the person and the amendment so states; or
(ii) the person has previously delivered to the secretary of state for filing a statement of dissociation.
(6) A restated certificate of limited partnership must be signed by at least one (1) general partner listed in the certificate, and, to the extent the restated certificate effects a change under any other subdivision of this subsection, the certificate must be signed in a manner that satisfies that subdivision.
(7) A statement of termination must be signed by all general partners listed in the certificate or, if the certificate of a dissolved limited partnership lists no general partners, by the person appointed under IC 23-16.1-9-3(c) or IC 23-16.1-9-3(d) to wind up the dissolved limited partnership's activities.
(8) Articles of conversion must be signed by each general partner listed in the certificate of limited partnership.
(9) Articles of merger must be signed as provided in IC 23-16.1-12-8(a).
(10) Any other record delivered on behalf of a limited partnership to the secretary of state for filing must be signed by at least one (1) general partner listed in the certificate.
(11) A statement by a person under IC 23-16.1-7-5(a)(4) stating that the person has dissociated as a general partner must be signed by that person.
(12) A statement of withdrawal by a person as provided under IC 23-16.1-4-6 must be signed by that person.
(13) A record delivered on behalf of a foreign limited partnership to the secretary of state for filing must be signed
by at least one (1) general partner of the foreign limited
partnership.
(14) Any other record delivered on behalf of any person to the
secretary of state for filing must be signed by that person.
(b) Any person may sign by an attorney in fact any record to be
filed under this article.
Sec. 5. (a) If a person required by this article to sign a record or
deliver a record to the secretary of state for filing does not do so,
any other person that is aggrieved may petition the appropriate
court to order:
(1) the person to sign the record;
(2) the person to deliver the record to the secretary of state
for filing; or
(3) the secretary of state to file the record unsigned.
(b) If the person aggrieved under subsection (a) is not the
limited partnership or foreign limited partnership to which the
record pertains, the aggrieved person shall make the limited
partnership or foreign limited partnership a party to the action. A
person aggrieved under subsection (a) may seek the remedies
provided in subsection (a) in the same action in combination or in
the alternative.
(c) A record filed unsigned under this section is effective without
being signed.
Sec. 6. (a) A record authorized or required to be delivered to the
secretary of state for filing under this article must be captioned to
describe the record's purpose, be in a medium permitted by the
secretary of state, and be delivered to the secretary of state. Unless
the secretary of state determines that a record does not comply
with the filing requirements of this article, and if all filing fees have
been paid, the secretary of state shall file the record and:
(1) for a statement of dissociation, send:
(A) a copy of the filed statement and a receipt for the fees
to the person that the statement indicates has dissociated
as a general partner; and
(B) a copy of the filed statement and receipt to the limited
partnership;
(2) for a statement of withdrawal, send:
(A) a copy of the filed statement and a receipt for the fees
to the person on whose behalf the record was filed; and
(B) if the statement refers to an existing limited
partnership, a copy of the filed statement and receipt to the
limited partnership; and
(3) for all other records, send a copy of the filed record and a receipt for the fees to the person on whose behalf the record was filed.
(b) Upon request and payment of a fee, the secretary of state shall send to the requester a certified copy of the requested record.
(c) Except as otherwise provided in IC 23-16.1-2-15 or section 7 of this chapter, a record delivered to the secretary of state for filing under this article may specify an effective time and a delayed effective date. Except as otherwise provided in this article, a record filed by the secretary of state is effective:
(1) if the record does not specify an effective time and does not specify a delayed effective date, on the date and at the time the record is filed as evidenced by the secretary of state's endorsement of the date and time on the record;
(2) if the record specifies an effective time but not a delayed effective date, on the date the record is filed at the time specified in the record;
(3) if the record specifies a delayed effective date but not an effective time, at 12:01 a.m. on the earlier of:
(A) the specified date; or
(B) the ninetieth day after the record is filed; or
(4) if the record specifies an effective time and a delayed effective date, at the specified time on the earlier of:
(A) the specified date; or
(B) the ninetieth day after the record is filed.
Sec. 7. (a) A limited partnership or foreign limited partnership may deliver to the secretary of state for filing a statement of correction to correct a record previously delivered by the limited partnership or foreign limited partnership to the secretary of state and filed by the secretary of state, if at the time of filing the record contained false or erroneous information or was defectively signed.
(b) A statement of correction may not state a delayed effective date and must:
(1) describe the record to be corrected, including its filing date, or attach a copy of the record as filed;
(2) specify the incorrect information and the reason it is incorrect or the manner in which the signing was defective; and
(3) correct the incorrect information or defective signature.
(c) When filed by the secretary of state, a statement of correction is effective retroactively as of the effective date of the record the statement corrects, but the statement is effective when
filed:
(1) for the purposes of IC 23-16.1-2-2(c) and
IC 23-16.1-2-2(d); and
(2) as to persons relying on the uncorrected record and
adversely affected by the correction.
Sec. 8. (a) If a record delivered to the secretary of state for filing
under this article and filed by the secretary of state contains false
information, a person that suffers loss by reliance on the
information may recover damages for the loss from:
(1) a person that signed the record, or caused another to sign
it on the person's behalf, and knew the information to be false
at the time the record was signed; and
(2) a general partner that has notice that the information was
false when the record was filed or has become false because of
changed circumstances, if the general partner has notice for
a reasonably sufficient time before the information is relied
upon to enable the general partner to:
(A) effect an amendment under section 2 of this chapter;
(B) file a petition under section 5 of this chapter; or
(C) deliver to the secretary of state for filing:
(i) a statement of change as provided under
IC 23-16.1-2-14; or
(ii) a statement of correction as provided under section
7 of this chapter.
(b) Signing a record authorized or required to be filed under
this article constitutes an affirmation under the penalties of
perjury that the facts stated in the record are true.
Sec. 9. (a) The secretary of state, upon request and payment of
the requisite fee, shall furnish a certificate of existence for a limited
partnership if the records filed in the office of the secretary of state
show that the secretary of state has filed a certificate of limited
partnership and has not filed a statement of termination. A
certificate of existence must state:
(1) the limited partnership's name;
(2) that it was duly formed under the laws of this state and the
date of formation;
(3) whether all fees, taxes, and penalties due to the secretary
of state under this article or other law have been paid;
(4) whether the limited partnership's most recent biennial
report required by section 10 of this chapter has been filed by
the secretary of state;
(5) whether the secretary of state has administratively
dissolved the limited partnership;
(6) whether the limited partnership's certificate of limited
partnership has been amended to state that the limited
partnership is dissolved;
(7) that a statement of termination has not been filed by the
secretary of state; and
(8) other facts of record in the office of the secretary of state
that may be requested by the applicant.
(b) The secretary of state, upon request and payment of the
requisite fee, shall furnish a certificate of authorization for a
foreign limited partnership if the records filed in the office of the
secretary of state show that the secretary of state has filed a
certificate of authority, has not revoked the certificate of authority,
and has not filed a notice of cancellation. A certificate of
authorization must state:
(1) the foreign limited partnership's name and any alternate
name adopted under IC 23-16.1-10-5(a) for use in this state;
(2) that it is authorized to transact business in this state;
(3) whether all fees, taxes, and penalties due to the secretary
of state under this article or other law have been paid;
(4) whether the foreign limited partnership's most recent
biennial report required by section 10 of this chapter has been
filed by the secretary of state;
(5) that the secretary of state has not revoked its certificate of
authority and has not filed a notice of cancellation; and
(6) other facts of record in the office of the secretary of state
that may be requested by the applicant.
(c) Subject to any qualification stated in the certificate, a
certificate of existence or authorization issued by the secretary of
state may be relied upon as conclusive evidence that the limited
partnership or foreign limited partnership is in existence or is
authorized to transact business in this state.
Sec. 10. (a) Every two (2) years, a limited partnership or a
foreign limited partnership authorized to transact business in this
state shall deliver to the secretary of state for filing a biennial
report that states:
(1) the name of the limited partnership or foreign limited
partnership;
(2) the street and mailing address of its designated office and
the name and street and mailing address of its agent for
service of process in this state;
(3) in the case of a limited partnership, the street and mailing
address of its principal office; and
(4) in the case of a foreign limited partnership, the state or
other jurisdiction under whose law the foreign limited
partnership is formed and any alternate name adopted under
IC 23-16.1-10-5(a).
(b) Information in a biennial report must be current as of the
date the biennial report is delivered to the secretary of state for
filing.
(c) The first biennial report must be delivered to the secretary
of state in the second year following the calendar year in which a
limited partnership was formed or a foreign limited partnership
was authorized to transact business. The report is due during the
same month as the month in which the limited partnership was
organized or the foreign limited partnership was authorized to
transact business. Subsequent biennial reports must be delivered
to the secretary of state during the same month every two (2)
calendar years thereafter. The secretary of state may accept
biennial reports during the two (2) months before the month the
limited liability company's report is due.
(d) If a biennial report does not contain the information
required in subsection (a), the secretary of state shall promptly
notify the reporting limited partnership or foreign limited
partnership and return the report to it for correction. If the report
is corrected to contain the information required in subsection (a)
and delivered to the secretary of state within thirty (30) days after
the effective date of the notice, it is timely delivered.
(e) If a filed biennial report contains an address of a designated
office or the name or address of an agent for service of process that
differs from the information shown in the records of the secretary
of state immediately before the filing, the differing information in
the biennial report is considered a statement of change under
IC 23-16.1-2-14.
Chapter 4. Limited Partners
Sec. 1. A person becomes a limited partner:
(1) as provided in the partnership agreement;
(2) as the result of a conversion or merger under
IC 23-16.1-12; or
(3) with the consent of all the partners.
Sec. 2. A limited partner does not have the right or the power as
a limited partner to act for or bind the limited partnership.
Sec. 3. An obligation of a limited partnership, whether arising
in contract, tort, or otherwise, is not the obligation of a limited
partner. A limited partner is not personally liable, directly or
indirectly, by way of contribution or otherwise, for an obligation
of the limited partnership solely by reason of being a limited
partner, even if the limited partner participates in the management
and control of the limited partnership.
Sec. 4. (a) On ten (10) days demand, made in a record received
by the limited partnership, a limited partner may inspect and copy
required information during regular business hours in the limited
partnership's designated office. The limited partner need not have
any particular purpose for seeking the information.
(b) During regular business hours and at a reasonable location
specified by the limited partnership, a limited partner may obtain
from the limited partnership and inspect and copy true and full
information regarding the state of the activities and financial
condition of the limited partnership and other information
regarding the activities of the limited partnership as is just and
reasonable if:
(1) the limited partner seeks the information for a purpose
reasonably related to the partner's interest as a limited
partner;
(2) the limited partner makes a demand in a record received
by the limited partnership, describing with reasonable
particularity the information sought and the purpose for
seeking the information; and
(3) the information sought is directly connected to the limited
partner's purpose.
(c) Within ten (10) days after receiving a demand under
subsection (b), the limited partnership in a record shall inform the
limited partner that made the demand:
(1) what information the limited partnership will provide in
response to the demand;
(2) when and where the limited partnership will provide the
information; and
(3) if the limited partnership declines to provide any
demanded information, the limited partnership's reasons for
declining.
(d) Subject to subsection (f), a person dissociated as a limited
partner may inspect and copy required information during regular
business hours in the limited partnership's designated office if:
(1) the information pertains to the period during which the
person was a limited partner;
(2) the person seeks the information in good faith; and
(3) the person meets the requirements of subsection (b).
(e) The limited partnership shall respond to a demand made under subsection (d) in the same manner as provided in subsection (c).
(f) If a limited partner dies, IC 23-16.1-8-4 applies.
(g) The limited partnership may impose reasonable restrictions on the use of information obtained under this section. In a dispute concerning the reasonableness of a restriction under this subsection, the limited partnership has the burden of proving reasonableness.
(h) A limited partnership may charge a person that makes a demand under this section reasonable costs of copying, limited to the costs of labor and material.
(i) Whenever this article or a partnership agreement provides for a limited partner to give or withhold consent to a matter, before the consent is given or withheld, the limited partnership shall, without demand, provide the limited partner with all information material to the limited partner's decision that the limited partnership knows.
(j) A limited partner or person dissociated as a limited partner may exercise the rights under this section through an attorney or other agent. Any restriction imposed under subsection (g) or by the partnership agreement applies both to the attorney or other agent and to the limited partner or person dissociated as a limited partner.
(k) The rights stated in this section do not extend to a person as transferee, but may be exercised by the legal representative of an individual under legal disability who is a limited partner or person dissociated as a limited partner.
Sec. 5. (a) A limited partner does not have any fiduciary duty to the limited partnership or to any other partner solely by reason of being a limited partner.
(b) A limited partner shall discharge the duties to the partnership and the other partners under this article or under the partnership agreement and exercise any rights consistently with the obligation of good faith and fair dealing.
(c) A limited partner does not violate a duty or obligation under this article or under the partnership agreement merely because the limited partner's conduct furthers the limited partner's own interest.
Sec. 6. (a) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (b), a person that makes an investment in a business enterprise and
erroneously but in good faith believes that the person has become
a limited partner in the enterprise is not liable for the enterprise's
obligations by reason of making the investment, receiving
distributions from the enterprise, or exercising any rights of or
appropriate to a limited partner, if, on ascertaining the mistake,
the person:
(1) causes an appropriate certificate of limited partnership,
amendment, or statement of correction to be signed and
delivered to the secretary of state for filing; or
(2) withdraws from future participation as an owner in the
enterprise by signing and delivering to the secretary of state
for filing a statement of withdrawal under this section.
(b) A person that makes an investment described in subsection
(a) is liable to the same extent as a general partner to any third
party that enters into a transaction with the enterprise, believing
in good faith that the person is a general partner, before the
secretary of state files a statement of withdrawal, certificate of
limited partnership, amendment, or statement of correction to
show that the person is not a general partner.
(c) If a person makes a diligent effort in good faith to comply
with subsection (a)(1) and is unable to cause the appropriate
certificate of limited partnership, amendment, or statement of
correction to be signed and delivered to the secretary of state for
filing, the person has the right to withdraw from the enterprise as
provided under subsection (a)(2) even if the withdrawal would
otherwise breach an agreement with others that are or have agreed
to become co-owners of the enterprise.
Chapter 5. General Partners
Sec. 1. A person becomes a general partner:
(1) as provided in the partnership agreement;
(2) under IC 23-16.1-9-1(3)(B) following the dissociation of a
limited partnership's last general partner;
(3) as the result of a conversion or merger under
IC 23-16.1-12; or
(4) with the consent of all the partners.
Sec. 2. (a) Each general partner is an agent of the limited
partnership for purposes of its activities. An act of a general
partner, including the signing of a record in the partnership's
name, for apparently carrying on in the ordinary course the
limited partnership's activities or activities of the kind carried on
by the limited partnership binds the limited partnership, unless the
general partner did not have authority to act for the limited
partnership in the particular matter and the person with which the
general partner was dealing knew, had received a notification, or
had notice under IC 23-16.1-2-2(d) that the general partner lacked
authority.
(b) An act of a general partner that is not apparently for
carrying on in the ordinary course the limited partnership's
activities or activities of the kind carried on by the limited
partnership binds the limited partnership only if the act were
actually authorized by all the other partners.
Sec. 3. (a) A limited partnership is liable for loss or injury
caused to a person, or for a penalty incurred, as a result of a
wrongful act or omission, or other actionable conduct, of a general
partner acting in the ordinary course of activities of the limited
partnership or with authority of the limited partnership.
(b) If, in the course of the limited partnership's activities or
while acting with authority of the limited partnership, a general
partner receives or causes the limited partnership to receive money
or property of a person not a partner, and the money or property
is misapplied by a general partner, the limited partnership is liable
for the loss.
Sec. 4. (a) Except as otherwise provided in subsections (b) and
(c), all general partners are liable jointly and severally for all
obligations of the limited partnership unless otherwise agreed by
the claimant or provided by law.
(b) A person that becomes a general partner of an existing
limited partnership is not personally liable for an obligation of a
limited partnership incurred before the person became a general
partner.
(c) An obligation of a limited partnership incurred while the
limited partnership is a limited liability limited partnership,
whether arising in contract, tort, or otherwise, is solely the
obligation of the limited partnership. A general partner is not
personally liable, directly or indirectly, by way of contribution or
otherwise, for such an obligation solely by reason of being or acting
as a general partner. This subsection applies despite anything
inconsistent in the partnership agreement that existed immediately
before the consent required to become a limited liability limited
partnership under section 6(b)(2) of this chapter.
Sec. 5. (a) Subject to section 4 of this chapter, a general partner
may be joined in an action against the limited partnership or
named in a separate action.
(b) A judgment against a limited partnership is not by itself a
judgment against a general partner. A judgment against a limited
partnership may not be satisfied from a general partner's assets
unless there is also a judgment against the general partner.
(c) A judgment creditor of a general partner may not levy
execution against the assets of the general partner to satisfy a
judgment based on a claim against the limited partnership, unless
the partner is personally liable for the claim under section 4 of this
chapter and:
(1) a judgment based on the same claim has been obtained
against the limited partnership and a writ of execution on the
judgment has been returned unsatisfied in whole or in part;
(2) the limited partnership is a debtor in bankruptcy;
(3) the general partner has agreed that the creditor need not
exhaust limited partnership assets;
(4) a court grants permission to the judgment creditor to levy
execution against the assets of a general partner based on a
finding that limited partnership assets subject to execution
are clearly insufficient to satisfy the judgment, that
exhaustion of limited partnership assets is excessively
burdensome, or that the grant of permission is an appropriate
exercise of the court's equitable powers; or
(5) liability is imposed on the general partner by law or
contract independent of the existence of the limited
partnership.
Sec. 6. (a) Each general partner has equal rights in the
management and conduct of the limited partnership's activities.
Except as expressly provided in this article, any matter relating to
the activities of the limited partnership may be exclusively decided
by the general partner or, if there is more than one (1) general
partner, by a majority of the general partners.
(b) The consent of each partner is necessary to:
(1) amend the partnership agreement;
(2) amend the certificate of limited partnership to add or,
subject to IC 23-16.1-12-10, delete a statement that the limited
partnership is a limited liability limited partnership; and
(3) sell, lease, exchange, or otherwise dispose of all, or
substantially all, of the limited partnership's property, with or
without the good will, other than in the usual and regular
course of the limited partnership's activities.
(c) A limited partnership shall reimburse a general partner for
payments made and indemnify a general partner for liabilities
incurred by the general partner in the ordinary course of the
activities of the partnership or for the preservation of its activities
or property.
(d) A limited partnership shall reimburse a general partner for
an advance to the limited partnership beyond the amount of capital
the general partner agreed to contribute.
(e) A payment or advance made by a general partner that gives
rise to an obligation of the limited partnership under subsection (c)
or (d) constitutes a loan to the limited partnership that accrues
interest from the date of the payment or advance.
(f) A general partner is not entitled to remuneration for services
performed for the partnership.
Sec. 7. (a) A general partner, without having any particular
purpose for seeking the information, may inspect and copy during
regular business hours:
(1) in the limited partnership's designated office, required
information; and
(2) at a reasonable location specified by the limited
partnership, any other records maintained by the limited
partnership regarding the limited partnership's activities and
financial condition.
(b) Each general partner and the limited partnership shall
furnish to a general partner:
(1) without demand, any information concerning the limited
partnership's activities and activities reasonably required for
the proper exercise of the general partner's rights and duties
under the partnership agreement or this article; and
(2) on demand, any other information concerning the limited
partnership's activities, except to the extent the demand or the
information demanded is unreasonable or otherwise improper
under the circumstances.
(c) Subject to subsection (e), on ten (10) days demand made in
a record received by the limited partnership, a person dissociated
as a general partner may have access to the information and
records described in subsection (a) at the location specified in
subsection (a) if:
(1) the information or record pertains to the period during
which the person was a general partner;
(2) the person seeks the information or record in good faith;
and
(3) the person satisfies the requirements imposed on a limited
partner by IC 23-16.1-4-4(b).
(d) The limited partnership shall respond to a demand made
under subsection (c) in the same manner as provided in
IC 23-16.1-4-4(c).
(e) If a general partner dies, IC 23-16.1-8-4 applies.
(f) The limited partnership may impose reasonable restrictions
on the use of information under this section. In any dispute
concerning the reasonableness of a restriction under this
subsection, the limited partnership has the burden of proving
reasonableness.
(g) A limited partnership may charge a person dissociated as a
general partner that makes a demand under this section reasonable
costs of copying, limited to the costs of labor and material.
(h) A general partner or person dissociated as a general partner
may exercise the rights under this section through an attorney or
other agent. Any restriction imposed under subsection (f) or by the
partnership agreement applies both to the attorney or other agent
and to the general partner or person dissociated as a general
partner.
(i) The rights under this section do not extend to a person as
transferee, but the rights under subsection (c) of a person
dissociated as a general partner may be exercised by the legal
representative of an individual who dissociated as a general
partner under IC 23-16.1-7-3(7)(B) or IC 23-16.1-7-3(7)(C).
Sec. 8. (a) The only fiduciary duties that a general partner has
to the limited partnership and the other partners are the duties of
loyalty and care under subsections (b) and (c).
(b) A general partner's duty of loyalty to the limited partnership
and the other partners is limited to the following:
(1) To account to the limited partnership and hold as trustee
for it any property, profit, or benefit derived by the general
partner in the conduct and winding up of the limited
partnership's activities or derived from a use by the general
partner of limited partnership property, including the
appropriation of a limited partnership opportunity.
(2) To refrain from dealing with the limited partnership in the
conduct or winding up of the limited partnership's activities
as or on behalf of a party having an interest adverse to the
limited partnership.
(3) To refrain from competing with the limited partnership in
the conduct or winding up of the limited partnership's
activities.
(c) A general partner's duty of care to the limited partnership
and the other partners in the conduct and winding up of the limited
partnership's activities is limited to refraining from engaging in
grossly negligent or reckless conduct, intentional misconduct, or a
knowing violation of law.
(d) A general partner shall discharge the duties to the
partnership and the other partners under this article or under the
partnership agreement and exercise any rights consistently with
the obligation of good faith and fair dealing.
(e) A general partner does not violate a duty or obligation under
this article or under the partnership agreement merely because the
general partner's conduct furthers the general partner's own
interest.
Chapter 6. Contributions and Distributions
Sec. 1. A contribution of a partner may consist of tangible or
intangible property or other benefit to the limited partnership,
including money, services performed, promissory notes, other
agreements to contribute cash or property, and contracts for
services to be performed.
Sec. 2. (a) A partner's obligation to contribute money or other
property or other benefit to, or to perform services for, a limited
partnership is not excused by the partner's death, disability, or
other inability to perform personally.
(b) If a partner does not make a promised nonmonetary
contribution, the partner is obligated at the option of the limited
partnership to contribute money equal to that part of the value, as
stated in the required information, of the stated contribution that
has not been made.
(c) The obligation of a partner to make a contribution or return
money or other property paid or distributed in violation of this
article may be compromised only by consent of all partners. A
creditor of a limited partnership that extends credit or otherwise
acts in reliance on an obligation described in subsection (a),
without notice of any compromise under this subsection, may
enforce the original obligation.
Sec. 3. A distribution by a limited partnership must be shared
among the partners on the basis of the value, as stated in the
required records when the limited partnership decides to make the
distribution, of the contributions the limited partnership has
received from each partner.
Sec. 4. A partner does not have a right to any distribution before
the dissolution and winding up of the limited partnership unless the
limited partnership decides to make an interim distribution.
Sec. 5. A person does not have a right to receive a distribution
on account of dissociation.
Sec. 6. A partner does not have a right to demand or receive any
distribution from a limited partnership in any form other than
cash. Subject to IC 23-16.1-9-12(b), a limited partnership may
distribute an asset in kind to the extent each partner receives a
percentage of the asset equal to the partner's share of distributions.
Sec. 7. When a partner or transferee becomes entitled to receive
a distribution, the partner or transferee has the status of, and is
entitled to all remedies available to, a creditor of the limited
partnership with respect to the distribution. However, the limited
partnership's obligation to make a distribution is subject to offset
for any amount owed to the limited partnership by the partner or
dissociated partner on whose account the distribution is made.
Sec. 8. (a) A limited partnership may not make a distribution in
violation of the partnership agreement.
(b) A limited partnership may not make a distribution if after
the distribution:
(1) the limited partnership would not be able to pay its debts
as they become due in the ordinary course of the limited
partnership's activities; or
(2) the limited partnership's total assets would be less than the
sum of its total liabilities plus the amount that would be
needed, if the limited partnership were to be dissolved, wound
up, and terminated at the time of the distribution, to satisfy
the preferential rights upon dissolution, winding up, and
termination of partners whose preferential rights are superior
to those of persons receiving the distribution.
(c) A limited partnership may base a determination that a
distribution is not prohibited under subsection (b) on financial
statements prepared on the basis of accounting practices and
principles that are reasonable in the circumstances or on a fair
valuation or other method that is reasonable in the circumstances.
(d) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (g), the effect of
a distribution under subsection (b) is measured:
(1) in the case of distribution by purchase, redemption, or
other acquisition of a transferable interest in the limited
partnership, as of the date money or other property is
transferred or debt incurred by the limited partnership; and
(2) in all other cases, as of the date:
(A) the distribution is authorized, if the payment occurs
within one hundred twenty (120) days after that date; or
(B) the payment is made, if payment occurs more than one
hundred twenty (120) days after the distribution is
authorized.
(e) A limited partnership's indebtedness to a partner incurred
by reason of a distribution made in accordance with this section is
at parity with the limited partnership's indebtedness to its general,
unsecured creditors.
(f) A limited partnership's indebtedness, including indebtedness
issued in connection with or as part of a distribution, is not
considered a liability for purposes of subsection (b) if the terms of
the indebtedness provide that the payment of principal and interest
is made only to the extent that a distribution could then be made to
partners under this section.
(g) If indebtedness is issued as a distribution, each payment of
principal or interest on the indebtedness is treated as a
distribution, the effect of which is measured on the date the
payment is made.
Sec. 9. (a) A general partner that consents to a distribution
made in violation of section 8 of this chapter is personally liable to
the limited partnership for the amount of the distribution that
exceeds the amount that could have been distributed without the
violation if it is established that in consenting to the distribution the
general partner failed to comply with IC 23-16.1-5-8.
(b) A partner or transferee that received a distribution knowing
that the distribution to that partner or transferee was made in
violation of section 8 of this chapter is personally liable to the
limited partnership but only to the extent that the distribution
received by the partner or transferee exceeded the amount that
could have been properly paid under section 8 of this chapter.
(c) A general partner against which an action is commenced
under subsection (a) may:
(1) implead in the action any other person that is liable under
subsection (a) and compel contribution from the person; and
(2) implead in the action any person that received a
distribution in violation of subsection (b) and compel
contribution from the person in the amount the person
received in violation of subsection (b).
(d) An action under this section is barred if it is not commenced
within two (2) years after the distribution.
Chapter 7. Dissociation
Sec. 1. (a) A person does not have a right to dissociate as a
limited partner before the termination of the limited partnership.
(b) A person is dissociated from a limited partnership as a
limited partner upon the occurrence of:
(1) the limited partnership's having notice of the person's
express will to withdraw as a limited partner or on a later
date specified by the person;
(2) an event agreed to in the partnership agreement as causing
the person's dissociation as a limited partner;
(3) the person's expulsion as a limited partner in accordance
with the terms of the partnership agreement;
(4) the person's expulsion as a limited partner by the
unanimous consent of the other partners if:
(A) it is unlawful to carry on the limited partnership's
activities with the person as a limited partner;
(B) there has been a transfer of all of the person's
transferable interest in the limited partnership, other than
a transfer for security purposes, or a court order charging
the person's interest, which has not been foreclosed;
(C) the person is a corporation and, within ninety (90) days
after the limited partnership notifies the person that it will
be expelled as a limited partner because it has filed a
certificate of dissolution or the equivalent, its charter has
been revoked, or its right to conduct business has been
suspended by the jurisdiction of its incorporation, there is
no revocation of the certificate of dissolution or no
reinstatement of its charter or its right to conduct
business; or
(D) the person is a limited liability company or partnership
that has been dissolved and whose business is being wound
up;
(5) on application by the limited partnership, the person's
expulsion as a limited partner by judicial order because:
(A) the person engaged in wrongful conduct that adversely
and materially affected the limited partnership's activities;
(B) the person willfully or persistently committed a
material breach of the partnership agreement or of the
obligation of good faith and fair dealing under
IC 23-16.1-4-5(b); or
(C) the person engaged in conduct relating to the limited
partnership's activities that makes it not reasonably
practicable to carry on the activities with the person as
limited partner;
(6) in the case of a person who is an individual, the person's
death;
(7) in the case of a person that is a trust or is acting as a limited partner by virtue of being a trustee of a trust, distribution of the trust's entire transferable interest in the limited partnership, but not merely by reason of the substitution of a successor trustee;
(8) in the case of a person that is an estate or is acting as a limited partner by virtue of being a personal representative of an estate, distribution of the estate's entire transferable interest in the limited partnership, but not merely by reason of the substitution of a successor personal representative;
(9) termination of a limited partner that is not an individual, partnership, limited liability company, corporation, trust, or estate; or
(10) the limited partnership's participation in a conversion or merger under IC 23-16.1-12, if the limited partnership:
(A) is not the converted or surviving entity; or
(B) is the converted or surviving entity but, as a result of the conversion or merger, the person ceases to be a limited partner.
Sec. 2. (a) Upon a person's dissociation as a limited partner:
(1) subject to IC 23-16.1-8-4, the person does not have further rights as a limited partner;
(2) the person's obligation of good faith and fair dealing as a limited partner under IC 23-16.1-4-5(b) continues only as to matters arising and events occurring before the dissociation; and
(3) subject to IC 23-16.1-8-4 and IC 23-16.1-12, any transferable interest owned by the person in the person's capacity as a limited partner immediately before dissociation is owned by the person as a mere transferee.
(b) A person's dissociation as a limited partner does not of itself discharge the person from any obligation to the limited partnership or the other partners that the person incurred while a limited partner.
Sec. 3. A person is dissociated from a limited partnership as a general partner upon the occurrence of:
(1) the limited partnership's having notice of the person's express will to withdraw as a general partner or on a later date specified by the person;
(2) an event agreed to in the partnership agreement as causing the person's dissociation as a general partner;
(3) the person's expulsion as a general partner in accordance
with the terms of the partnership agreement;
(4) the person's expulsion as a general partner by the
unanimous consent of the other partners if:
(A) it is unlawful to carry on the limited partnership's
activities with the person as a general partner;
(B) there has been a transfer of all or substantially all of
the person's transferable interest in the limited
partnership, other than a transfer for security purposes, or
a court order charging the person's interest, which has not
been foreclosed;
(C) the person is a corporation and, within ninety (90) days
after the limited partnership notifies the person that it will
be expelled as a general partner because it has filed a
certificate of dissolution or the equivalent, its charter has
been revoked, or its right to conduct business has been
suspended by the jurisdiction of its incorporation, there is
no revocation of the certificate of dissolution or no
reinstatement of its charter or its right to conduct
business; or
(D) the person is a limited liability company or partnership
that has been dissolved and whose business is being wound
up;
(5) on application by the limited partnership, the person's
expulsion as a general partner by judicial determination
because:
(A) the person engaged in wrongful conduct that adversely
and materially affected the limited partnership activities;
(B) the person willfully or persistently committed a
material breach of the partnership agreement or of a duty
owed to the partnership or the other partners under
IC 23-16.1-5-8; or
(C) the person engaged in conduct relating to the limited
partnership's activities which makes it not reasonably
practicable to carry on the activities of the limited
partnership with the person as a general partner;
(6) the person's:
(A) becoming a debtor in bankruptcy;
(B) execution of an assignment for the benefit of creditors;
(C) seeking, consenting to, or acquiescing in the
appointment of a trustee, receiver, or liquidator of the
person or of all or substantially all of the person's
property; or
(D) failure, within ninety (90) days after the appointment, to have vacated or stayed the appointment of a trustee, receiver, or liquidator of the general partner or of all or substantially all of the person's property obtained without the person's consent or acquiescence, or failing within ninety (90) days after the expiration of a stay to have the appointment vacated;
(7) in the case of a person who is an individual:
(A) the person's death;
(B) the appointment of a guardian or general conservator for the person; or
(C) a judicial determination that the person has otherwise become incapable of performing the person's duties as a general partner under the partnership agreement;
(8) in the case of a person that is a trust or is acting as a general partner by virtue of being a trustee of a trust, distribution of the trust's entire transferable interest in the limited partnership, but not merely by reason of the substitution of a successor trustee;
(9) in the case of a person that is an estate or is acting as a general partner by virtue of being a personal representative of an estate, distribution of the estate's entire transferable interest in the limited partnership, but not merely by reason of the substitution of a successor personal representative;
(10) termination of a general partner that is not an individual, partnership, limited liability company, corporation, trust, or estate; or
(11) the limited partnership's participation in a conversion or merger under IC 23-16.1-12, if the limited partnership:
(A) is not the converted or surviving entity; or
(B) is the converted or surviving entity but, as a result of the conversion or merger, the person ceases to be a general partner.
Sec. 4. (a) A person has the power to dissociate as a general partner at any time, rightfully or wrongfully, by express will as provided in section 3(1) of this chapter.
(b) A person's dissociation as a general partner is wrongful only if:
(1) it is in breach of an express provision of the partnership agreement; or
(2) it occurs before the termination of the limited partnership, and:
(A) the person withdraws as a general partner by express will;
(B) the person is expelled as a general partner by judicial determination under section 3(5) of this chapter;
(C) the person is dissociated as a general partner by becoming a debtor in bankruptcy; or
(D) in the case of a person that is not an individual, a trust other than a business trust, or an estate, the person is expelled or otherwise dissociated as a general partner because it willfully dissolved or terminated.
(c) A person that wrongfully dissociates as a general partner is liable to the limited partnership and, subject to IC 23-16.1-11-1, to the other partners for damages caused by the dissociation. The liability is in addition to any other obligation of the general partner to the limited partnership or to the other partners.
Sec. 5. (a) Upon a person's dissociation as a general partner:
(1) the person's right to participate as a general partner in the management and conduct of the partnership's activities terminates;
(2) the person's duty of loyalty as a general partner under IC 23-16.1-5-8(b)(3) terminates;
(3) the person's duty of loyalty as a general partner under IC 23-16.1-5-8(b)(1) and IC 23-16.1-5-8(b)(2) and duty of care under IC 23-16.1-5-8(c) continue only with regard to matters arising and events occurring before the person's dissociation as a general partner;
(4) the person may sign and deliver to the secretary of state for filing a statement of dissociation pertaining to the person and, at the request of the limited partnership, shall sign an amendment to the certificate of limited partnership that states that the person has dissociated; and
(5) subject to IC 23-16.1-8-4 and IC 23-16.1-12, any transferable interest owned by the person immediately before dissociation in the person's capacity as a general partner is owned by the person as a mere transferee.
(b) A person's dissociation as a general partner does not of itself discharge the person from any obligation to the limited partnership or the other partners that the person incurred while a general partner.
Sec. 6. (a) After a person is dissociated as a general partner and before the limited partnership is dissolved, converted under IC 23-16.1-12, or merged out of existence under IC 23-16.1-12, the
limited partnership is bound by an act of the person only if:
(1) the act would have bound the limited partnership under
IC 23-16.1-5-2 before the dissociation; and
(2) at the time the other party enters into the transaction:
(A) less than two (2) years have passed since the
dissociation; and
(B) the other party does not have notice of the dissociation
and reasonably believes that the person is a general
partner.
(b) If a limited partnership is bound under subsection (a), the
person dissociated as a general partner that caused the limited
partnership to be bound is liable:
(1) to the limited partnership for any damage caused to the
limited partnership arising from the obligation incurred
under subsection (a); and
(2) if a general partner or another person dissociated as a
general partner is liable for the obligation, to the general
partner or other person for any damage caused to the general
partner or other person arising from the liability.
Sec. 7. (a) A person's dissociation as a general partner does not
of itself discharge the person's liability as a general partner for an
obligation of the limited partnership incurred before dissociation.
Except as otherwise provided in subsections (b) and (c), the person
is not liable for a limited partnership's obligation incurred after
dissociation.
(b) A person whose dissociation as a general partner resulted in
a dissolution and winding up of the limited partnership's activities
is liable to the same extent as a general partner under
IC 23-16.1-5-4 on an obligation incurred by the limited partnership
under IC 23-16.1-9-4.
(c) A person that has dissociated as a general partner but whose
dissociation did not result in a dissolution and winding up of the
limited partnership's activities is liable on a transaction entered
into by the limited partnership after the dissociation only if:
(1) a general partner would be liable on the transaction; and
(2) at the time the other party enters into the transaction:
(A) less than two (2) years have passed since the
dissociation; and
(B) the other party does not have notice of the dissociation
and reasonably believes that the person is a general
partner.
(d) By agreement with a creditor of a limited partnership and
the limited partnership, a person dissociated as a general partner
may be released from liability for an obligation of the limited
partnership.
(e) A person dissociated as a general partner is released from
liability for an obligation of the limited partnership if the limited
partnership's creditor, with notice of the person's dissociation as
a general partner but without the person's consent, agrees to a
material alteration in the nature or time of payment of the
obligation.
Chapter 8. Transferable Interests and Rights of Transferees and
Creditors
Sec. 1. The only interest of a partner that is transferable is the
partner's transferable interest. A transferable interest is personal
property.
Sec. 2. (a) A transfer, in whole or in part, of a partner's
transferable interest:
(1) is permissible;
(2) does not by itself cause the partner's dissociation or a
dissolution and winding up of the limited partnership's
activities; and
(3) does not, as against the other partners or the limited
partnership, entitle the transferee to participate in the
management or conduct of the limited partnership's activities,
to require access to information concerning the limited
partnership's transactions except as otherwise provided in
subsection (c), or to inspect or copy the required information
or the limited partnership's other records.
(b) A transferee has a right to receive, in accordance with the
transfer:
(1) distributions to which the transferor would otherwise be
entitled; and
(2) upon the dissolution and winding up of the limited
partnership's activities, the net amount otherwise
distributable to the transferor.
(c) In a dissolution and winding up, a transferee is entitled to an
account of the limited partnership's transactions only from the
date of dissolution.
(d) Upon transfer, the transferor retains the rights of a partner
other than the interest in distributions transferred and retains all
duties and obligations of a partner.
(e) A limited partnership need not give effect to a transferee's
rights under this section until the limited partnership has notice of
the transfer.
(f) A transfer of a partner's transferable interest in the limited
partnership in violation of a restriction on transfer contained in the
partnership agreement is ineffective as to a person having notice
of the restriction at the time of transfer.
(g) A transferee that becomes a partner with respect to a
transferable interest is liable for the transferor's obligations under
IC 23-16.1-6-2 and IC 23-16.1-6-9. However, the transferee is not
obligated for liabilities unknown to the transferee at the time the
transferee became a partner.
Sec. 3. (a) On application to a court with jurisdiction by any
judgment creditor of a partner or transferee, the court may charge
the transferable interest of the judgment debtor with payment of
the unsatisfied amount of the judgment with interest. To the extent
so charged, the judgment creditor has only the rights of a
transferee. The court may appoint a receiver of the share of the
distributions due or to become due to the judgment debtor in
respect of the partnership and make all other orders, directions,
accounts, and inquiries the judgment debtor might have made or
which the circumstances of the case may require to give effect to
the charging order.
(b) A charging order constitutes a lien on the judgment debtor's
transferable interest. The court may order a foreclosure upon the
interest subject to the charging order at any time. The purchaser
at the foreclosure sale has the rights of a transferee.
(c) At any time before foreclosure, an interest charged may be
redeemed:
(1) by the judgment debtor;
(2) with property other than limited partnership property, by
one (1) or more of the other partners; or
(3) with limited partnership property, by the limited
partnership with the consent of all partners whose interests
are not so charged.
(d) This article does not deprive any partner or transferee of the
benefit of any exemption laws applicable to the partner's or
transferee's transferable interest.
(e) This section provides the exclusive remedy by which a
judgment creditor of a partner or transferee may satisfy a
judgment out of the judgment debtor's transferable interest.
Sec. 4. If a partner dies, the deceased partner's personal
representative or other legal representative may exercise the rights
of a transferee as provided in section 2 of this chapter and, for the
purposes of settling the estate, may exercise the rights of a current
limited partner under IC 23-16.1-4-4.
Chapter 9. Dissolution
Sec. 1. Except as otherwise provided in section 2 of this chapter,
a limited partnership is dissolved, and its activities must be wound
up, only upon the occurrence of:
(1) the happening of an event specified in the partnership
agreement;
(2) the consent of all general partners and of limited partners
owning a majority of the rights to receive distributions as
limited partners at the time the consent is to be effective;
(3) after the dissociation of a person as a general partner:
(A) if the limited partnership has at least one (1) remaining
general partner, the consent to dissolve the limited
partnership given within ninety (90) days after the
dissociation by partners owning a majority of the rights to
receive distributions as partners at the time the consent is
to be effective; or
(B) if the limited partnership does not have a remaining
general partner, the passage of ninety (90) days after the
dissociation, unless before the end of the period:
(i) consent to continue the activities of the limited
partnership and admit at least one (1) general partner is
given by limited partners owning a majority of the rights
to receive distributions as limited partners at the time
the consent is to be effective; and
(ii) at least one (1) person is admitted as a general
partner in accordance with the consent;
(4) the passage of ninety (90) days after the dissociation of the
limited partnership's last limited partner, unless before the
end of the period the limited partnership admits at least one
(1) limited partner; or
(5) the signing and filing of a declaration of dissolution by the
secretary of state under section 9(c) of this chapter.
Sec. 2. On application by a partner, the appropriate court may
order dissolution of a limited partnership if it is not reasonably
practicable to carry on the activities of the limited partnership in
conformity with the partnership agreement.
Sec. 3. (a) A limited partnership continues after dissolution only
for the purpose of winding up its activities.
(b) In winding up its activities, the limited partnership:
(1) may amend its certificate of limited partnership to state
that the limited partnership is dissolved, preserve the limited
partnership business or property as a going concern for a
reasonable time, prosecute and defend actions and
proceedings, whether civil, criminal, or administrative,
transfer the limited partnership's property, settle disputes by
mediation or arbitration, file a statement of termination as
provided in IC 23-16.1-3-3, and perform other necessary acts;
and
(2) shall discharge the limited partnership's liabilities, settle
and close the limited partnership's activities, and marshal and
distribute the assets of the partnership.
(c) If a dissolved limited partnership does not have a general
partner, a person to wind up the dissolved limited partnership's
activities may be appointed by the consent of limited partners
owning a majority of the rights to receive distributions as limited
partners at the time the consent is to be effective. A person
appointed under this subsection:
(1) has the powers of a general partner under section 4 of this
chapter; and
(2) shall promptly amend the certificate of limited partnership
to state:
(A) that the limited partnership does not have a general
partner;
(B) the name of the person that has been appointed to wind
up the limited partnership; and
(C) the street and mailing address of the person.
(d) On the application of any partner, the appropriate court
may order judicial supervision of the winding up, including the
appointment of a person to wind up the dissolved limited
partnership's activities, if:
(1) a limited partnership does not have a general partner and
within a reasonable time following the dissolution no person
has been appointed as provided in subsection (c); or
(2) the applicant establishes other good cause.
Sec. 4. (a) A limited partnership is bound by a general partner's
act after dissolution that:
(1) is appropriate for winding up the limited partnership's
activities; or
(2) would have bound the limited partnership under
IC 23-16.1-5-2 before dissolution, if, at the time the other
party enters into the transaction, the other party does not
have notice of the dissolution.
(b) A person dissociated as a general partner binds a limited partnership through an act occurring after dissolution if:
(1) at the time the other party enters into the transaction:
(A) less than two (2) years have passed since the dissociation; and
(B) the other party does not have notice of the dissociation and reasonably believes that the person is a general partner; and
(2) the act:
(A) is appropriate for winding up the limited partnership's activities; or
(B) would have bound the limited partnership under IC 23-16.1-5-2 before dissolution and at the time the other party enters into the transaction the other party does not have notice of the dissolution.
Sec. 5. (a) If a general partner having knowledge of the dissolution causes a limited partnership to incur an obligation under section 4(a) of this chapter by an act that is not appropriate for winding up the partnership's activities, the general partner is liable:
(1) to the limited partnership for any damage caused to the limited partnership arising from the obligation; and
(2) if another general partner or a person dissociated as a general partner is liable for the obligation, to that other general partner or person for any damage caused to that other general partner or person arising from the liability.
(b) If a person dissociated as a general partner causes a limited partnership to incur an obligation under section 4(b) of this chapter, the person is liable:
(1) to the limited partnership for any damage caused to the limited partnership arising from the obligation; and
(2) if a general partner or another person dissociated as a general partner is liable for the obligation, to the general partner or other person for any damage caused to the general partner or other person arising from the liability.
Sec. 6. (a) A dissolved limited partnership may dispose of the known claims against it by following the procedure described in subsection (b).
(b) A dissolved limited partnership may notify its known claimants of the dissolution in a record. The notice must:
(1) specify the information required to be included in a claim;
(2) provide a mailing address to which the claim is to be sent;
(3) state the deadline for receipt of the claim, which may not be less than one hundred twenty (120) days after the date the notice is received by the claimant;
(4) state that the claim will be barred if not received by the deadline; and
(5) unless the limited partnership has been throughout its existence a limited liability limited partnership, state that the barring of a claim against the limited partnership will also bar any corresponding claim against any general partner or person dissociated as a general partner that is based on IC 23-16.1-5-4.
(c) A claim against a dissolved limited partnership is barred if the requirements of subsection (b) are met and:
(1) the claim is not received by the specified deadline; or
(2) in the case of a claim that is timely received but rejected by the dissolved limited partnership, the claimant does not commence an action to enforce the claim against the limited partnership within ninety (90) days after the receipt of the notice of the rejection.
(d) This section does not apply to a claim based on an event occurring after the effective date of dissolution or a liability that is contingent on that date.
Sec. 7. (a) A dissolved limited partnership may publish notice of its dissolution and request persons having claims against the limited partnership to present them in accordance with the notice.
(b) The notice must:
(1) be published at least once in a newspaper of general circulation in the county in which the dissolved limited partnership's principal office is located or, if it has none in this state, in the county in which the limited partnership's designated office is or was last located;
(2) describe the information required to be contained in a claim and provide a mailing address to which the claim is to be sent;
(3) state that a claim against the limited partnership is barred unless an action to enforce the claim is commenced within five (5) years after publication of the notice; and
(4) unless the limited partnership has been throughout its existence a limited liability limited partnership, state that the barring of a claim against the limited partnership will also bar any corresponding claim against any general partner or person dissociated as a general partner that is based on
IC 23-16.1-5-4.
(c) If a dissolved limited partnership publishes a notice in
accordance with subsection (b), the claim of each of the following
claimants is barred unless the claimant commences an action to
enforce the claim against the dissolved limited partnership within
five (5) years after the publication date of the notice:
(1) A claimant that did not receive notice in a record under
section 6 of this chapter.
(2) A claimant whose claim was timely sent to the dissolved
limited partnership but not acted on.
(3) A claimant whose claim is contingent or based on an event
occurring after the effective date of dissolution.
(d) A claim not barred under this section may be enforced:
(1) against the dissolved limited partnership, to the extent of
its undistributed assets;
(2) if the assets have been distributed in liquidation, against a
partner or transferee to the extent of that person's
proportionate share of the claim or the limited partnership's
assets distributed to the partner or transferee in liquidation,
whichever is less, but a person's total liability for all claims
under this subdivision does not exceed the total amount of
assets distributed to the person as part of the winding up of
the dissolved limited partnership; or
(3) against any person liable on the claim under
IC 23-16.1-5-4.
Sec. 8. If a claim against a dissolved limited partnership is
barred under section 6 or 7 of this chapter, any corresponding
claim under IC 23-16.1-5-4 is also barred.
Sec. 9. (a) The secretary of state may dissolve a limited
partnership administratively if the limited partnership does not,
within sixty (60) days after the due date:
(1) pay any fee, tax, or penalty due to the secretary of state
under this article or other law; or
(2) deliver its biennial report to the secretary of state.
(b) If the secretary of state determines that a ground exists for
administratively dissolving a limited partnership, the secretary of
state shall file a record of the determination and serve the limited
partnership with a copy of the filed record.
(c) If within sixty (60) days after service of the copy the limited
partnership does not correct each ground for dissolution or
demonstrate to the reasonable satisfaction of the secretary of state
that each ground determined by the secretary of state does not
exist, the secretary of state shall administratively dissolve the
limited partnership by preparing, signing, and filing a declaration
of dissolution that states the grounds for dissolution. The secretary
of state shall serve the limited partnership with a copy of the filed
declaration.
(d) A limited partnership administratively dissolved continues
its existence but may carry on only activities necessary to wind up
its activities and liquidate its assets under sections 3 and 12 of this
chapter and to notify claimants under sections 6 and 7 of this
chapter.
(e) The administrative dissolution of a limited partnership does
not terminate the authority of its agent for service of process.
Sec. 10. (a) A limited partnership that has been administratively
dissolved may apply to the secretary of state for reinstatement
within two (2) years after the effective date of dissolution. The
application must be delivered to the secretary of state for filing and
state:
(1) the name of the limited partnership and the effective date
of its administrative dissolution;
(2) that the grounds for dissolution either did not exist or have
been eliminated; and
(3) that the limited partnership's name satisfies the
requirements of IC 23-16.1-2-7.
(b) If the secretary of state determines that an application
contains the information required by subsection (a) and that the
information is correct, the secretary of state shall prepare a
declaration of reinstatement that states this determination, sign,
and file the original of the declaration of reinstatement, and serve
the limited partnership with a copy.
(c) When reinstatement becomes effective, it relates back to and
takes effect as of the effective date of the administrative
dissolution, and the limited partnership may resume its activities
as if the administrative dissolution had never occurred.
Sec. 11. (a) If the secretary of state denies a limited
partnership's application for reinstatement following
administrative dissolution, the secretary of state shall prepare,
sign, and file a notice that explains the reason or reasons for denial
and serve the limited partnership with a copy of the notice.
(b) Within thirty (30) days after service of the notice of denial,
the limited partnership may appeal from the denial of
reinstatement by petitioning the appropriate court to set aside the
dissolution. The petition must be served on the secretary of state
and contain a copy of the secretary of state's declaration of
dissolution, the limited partnership's application for reinstatement,
and the secretary of state's notice of denial.
(c) The court may summarily order the secretary of state to
reinstate the dissolved limited partnership or may take other action
the court considers appropriate.
Sec. 12. (a) In winding up a limited partnership's activities, the
assets of the limited partnership, including the contributions
required by this section, must be applied to satisfy the limited
partnership's obligations to creditors, including, to the extent
permitted by law, partners that are creditors.
(b) Any surplus remaining after the limited partnership
complies with subsection (a) must be paid in cash as a distribution.
(c) If a limited partnership's assets are insufficient to satisfy all
of its obligations under subsection (a), with respect to each
unsatisfied obligation incurred when the limited partnership was
not a limited liability limited partnership, the following rules
apply:
(1) Each person that was a general partner when the
obligation was incurred and that has not been released from
the obligation under IC 23-16.1-7-7 shall contribute to the
limited partnership for the purpose of enabling the limited
partnership to satisfy the obligation. The contribution due
from each of those persons is in proportion to the right to
receive distributions in the capacity of general partner in
effect for each of those persons when the obligation was
incurred.
(2) If a person does not contribute the full amount required
under subdivision (1) with respect to an unsatisfied obligation
of the limited partnership, the other persons required to
contribute by subdivision (1) on account of the obligation shall
contribute the additional amount necessary to discharge the
obligation. The additional contribution due from each of those
other persons is in proportion to the right to receive
distributions in the capacity of general partner in effect for
each of those other persons when the obligation was incurred.
(3) If a person does not make the additional contribution
required by subdivision (2), further additional contributions
are determined and due in the same manner as provided in
that subdivision.
(d) A person that makes an additional contribution under
subsection (c)(2) or (c)(3) may recover from any person whose
failure to contribute under subsection (c)(1) or (c)(2) necessitated
the additional contribution. A person may not recover under this
subsection more than the amount additionally contributed. A
person's liability under this subsection may not exceed the amount
the person failed to contribute.
(e) The estate of a deceased individual is liable for the person's
obligations under this section.
(f) An assignee for the benefit of creditors of a limited
partnership or a partner, or a person appointed by a court to
represent creditors of a limited partnership or a partner, may
enforce a person's obligation to contribute under subsection (c).
Chapter 10. Foreign Limited Partnerships
Sec. 1. (a) The laws of the state or other jurisdiction under
which a foreign limited partnership is organized govern relations
among the partners of the foreign limited partnership and between
the partners and the foreign limited partnership and the liability
of partners as partners for an obligation of the foreign limited
partnership.
(b) A foreign limited partnership may not be denied a certificate
of authority by reason of any difference between the laws of the
jurisdiction under which the foreign limited partnership is
organized and the laws of this state.
(c) A certificate of authority does not authorize a foreign limited
partnership to engage in any business or exercise any power that
a limited partnership may not engage in or exercise in this state.
Sec. 2. (a) A foreign limited partnership may apply for a
certificate of authority to transact business in this state by
delivering an application to the secretary of state for filing. The
application must state:
(1) the name of the foreign limited partnership and, if the
name does not comply with IC 23-16.1-2-7, an alternate name
adopted as provided under section 5(a) of this chapter;
(2) the name of the state or other jurisdiction under whose law
the foreign limited partnership is organized;
(3) the street and mailing address of the foreign limited
partnership's principal office and, if the laws of the
jurisdiction under which the foreign limited partnership is
organized require the foreign limited partnership to maintain
an office in that jurisdiction, the street and mailing address of
the required office;
(4) the name and street and mailing address of the foreign
limited partnership's initial agent for service of process in this
state;
(5) the name and street and mailing address of each of the
foreign limited partnership's general partners; and
(6) whether the foreign limited partnership is a foreign limited
liability limited partnership.
(b) A foreign limited partnership shall deliver with the
completed application a certificate of existence or a record of
similar import signed by the secretary of state or other official
having custody of the foreign limited partnership's publicly filed
records in the state or other jurisdiction under whose law the
foreign limited partnership is organized.
Sec. 3. (a) Activities of a foreign limited partnership that do not
constitute transacting business in this state within the meaning of
this article include:
(1) maintaining, defending, and settling an action or
proceeding;
(2) holding meetings of its partners or carrying on any other
activity concerning its internal affairs;
(3) maintaining accounts in financial institutions;
(4) maintaining offices or agencies for the transfer, exchange,
and registration of the foreign limited partnership's own
securities or maintaining trustees or depositories with respect
to those securities;
(5) selling through independent contractors;
(6) soliciting or obtaining orders, whether by mail or
electronic means or through employees or agents or
otherwise, if the orders require acceptance outside this state
before they become contracts;
(7) creating or acquiring indebtedness, mortgages, or security
interests in real or personal property;
(8) securing or collecting debts or enforcing mortgages or
other security interests in property securing the debts, and
holding, protecting, and maintaining property so acquired;
(9) conducting an isolated transaction that is completed within
thirty (30) days and is not a transaction in the course of
similar transactions of a like manner; and
(10) transacting business in interstate commerce.
(b) For purposes of this article, the ownership in this state of
income producing real property or tangible personal property,
other than property excluded under subsection (a), constitutes
transacting business in this state.
(c) This section does not apply in determining the contacts or
activities that may subject a foreign limited partnership to service
of process, taxation, or regulation under any other law of this state.
Sec. 4. Unless the secretary of state determines that an
application for a certificate of authority does not comply with the
filing requirements of this article, the secretary of state, upon
payment of all filing fees, shall file the application, prepare, sign
and file a certificate of authority to transact business in this state,
and send a copy of the filed certificate, together with a receipt for
the fees, to the foreign limited partnership or its representative.
Sec. 5. (a) A foreign limited partnership whose name does not
comply with IC 23-16.1-2-7 may not obtain a certificate of
authority until it adopts, for the purpose of transacting business in
this state, an alternate name that complies with IC 23-16.1-2-7. A
foreign limited partnership that adopts an alternate name under
this subsection and then obtains a certificate of authority with the
name need not comply with IC 23-15-1. After obtaining a
certificate of authority with an alternate name, a foreign limited
partnership shall transact business in this state under the alternate
name unless the foreign limited partnership is authorized under
IC 23-15-1 to transact business in this state under another name.
(b) If a foreign limited partnership authorized to transact
business in this state changes its name to a foreign limited
partnership that does not comply with IC 23-16.1-2-7, the foreign
limited partnership may not thereafter transact business in this
state until it complies with subsection (a) and obtains an amended
certificate of authority.
Sec. 6. (a) A certificate of authority of a foreign limited
partnership to transact business in this state may be revoked by the
secretary of state in the manner provided in subsections (b) and (c)
if the foreign limited partnership does not:
(1) pay, within sixty (60) days after the due date, any fee, tax,
or penalty due to the secretary of state under this article or
other law;
(2) deliver, within sixty (60) days after the due date, its
biennial report required under IC 23-16.1-3-10;
(3) appoint and maintain an agent for service of process as
required by IC 23-16.1-2-13(b); or
(4) deliver for filing a statement of a change under
IC 23-16.1-2-14 within thirty (30) days after a change has
occurred in the name or address of the agent.
(b) In order to revoke a certificate of authority, the secretary of
state must prepare, sign, and file a notice of revocation and send a
copy to the foreign limited partnership's agent for service of
process in this state, or if the foreign limited partnership does not
appoint and maintain a proper agent in this state, to the foreign
limited partnership's designated office. The notice must state:
(1) the revocation's effective date, which must be at least sixty
(60) days after the date the secretary of state sends the copy;
and
(2) the foreign limited partnership's failures to comply with
subsection (a), which are the reason for the revocation.
(c) The authority of the foreign limited partnership to transact
business in this state ceases on the effective date of the notice of
revocation unless before that date the foreign limited partnership
cures each failure to comply with subsection (a) stated in the
notice. If the foreign limited partnership cures the failures, the
secretary of state shall so indicate on the filed notice.
Sec. 7. (a) In order to cancel its certificate of authority to
transact business in this state, a foreign limited partnership must
deliver to the secretary of state for filing a notice of cancellation.
The certificate is canceled when the notice becomes effective under
IC 23-16.1-3-6.
(b) A foreign limited partnership transacting business in this
state may not maintain an action or proceeding in this state unless
it has a certificate of authority to transact business in this state.
(c) The failure of a foreign limited partnership to have a
certificate of authority to transact business in this state does not
impair the validity of a contract or act of the foreign limited
partnership or prevent the foreign limited partnership from
defending an action or proceeding in this state.
(d) A partner of a foreign limited partnership is not liable for
the obligations of the foreign limited partnership solely by reason
of the foreign limited partnership's having transacted business in
this state without a certificate of authority.
(e) If a foreign limited partnership transacts business in this
state without a certificate of authority or cancels its certificate of
authority, the foreign limited partnership appoints the secretary of
state as its agent for service of process for rights of action arising
out of the transaction of business in this state.
Sec. 8. The attorney general may maintain an action to restrain
a foreign limited partnership from transacting business in this state
in violation of this article.
Chapter 11. Actions by Partners
Sec. 1. (a) Subject to subsection (b), a partner may maintain a
direct action against the limited partnership or another partner for
legal or equitable relief, with or without an accounting as to the
partnership's activities, to enforce the rights and otherwise protect
the interests of the partner, including rights and interests under the
partnership agreement or this article or arising independently of
the partnership relationship.
(b) A partner commencing a direct action under this section is
required to plead and prove an actual or threatened injury that is
not solely the result of an injury suffered or threatened to be
suffered by the limited partnership.
(c) The accrual of, and any time limitation on, a right of action
for a remedy under this section is governed by other law. A right
to an accounting upon a dissolution and winding up does not revive
a claim barred by law.
Sec. 2. A partner may maintain a derivative action to enforce a
right of a limited partnership if:
(1) the partner first makes a demand on the general partners,
requesting that they cause the limited partnership to bring an
action to enforce the right, and the general partners do not
bring the action within a reasonable time; or
(2) a demand would be futile.
Sec. 3. A derivative action may be maintained only by a person
that is a partner at the time the action is commenced and:
(1) was a partner when the conduct giving rise to the action
occurred; or
(2) whose status as a partner devolved upon the person by
operation of law or according to the terms of the partnership
agreement from a person that was a partner at the time of the
conduct.
Sec. 4. In a derivative action, the complaint must state with
particularity:
(1) the date and content of plaintiff's demand and the general
partners' response to the demand; or
(2) why demand should be excused as futile.
Sec. 5. (a) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (b):
(1) any proceeds or other benefits of a derivative action,
whether by judgment, compromise, or settlement, belong to
the limited partnership and not to the derivative plaintiff; and
(2) if the derivative plaintiff receives any proceeds, the
derivative plaintiff shall immediately remit them to the
limited partnership.
(b) If a derivative action is successful in whole or in part, the
court may award the plaintiff reasonable expenses, including
reasonable attorney's fees, from the recovery of the limited
partnership.
Chapter 12. Conversion and Merger
Sec. 1. The following definitions apply throughout this chapter:
(1) "Constituent limited partnership" means a constituent
organization that is a limited partnership.
(2) "Constituent organization" means an organization that is
party to a merger.
(3) "Converted organization" means the organization into
which a converting organization converts as provided under
sections 2 through 5 of this chapter.
(4) "Converting limited partnership" means a converting
organization that is a limited partnership.
(5) "Converting organization" means an organization that
converts into another organization as provided under section
2 of this chapter.
(6) "General partner" means a general partner of a limited
partnership.
(7) "Governing statute" of an organization means the statute
that governs the organization's internal affairs.
(8) "Organization" means a general partnership, including a
limited liability partnership; limited partnership, including a
limited liability limited partnership; limited liability
company; business trust; corporation; or any other person
having a governing statute. The term includes domestic and
foreign organizations whether or not organized for profit.
(9) "Organizational documents" means:
(A) for a domestic or foreign general partnership, its
partnership agreement;
(B) for a limited partnership or foreign limited
partnership, its certificate of limited partnership and
partnership agreement;
(C) for a domestic or foreign limited liability company, its
articles of organization and operating agreement, or
comparable records as provided in its governing statute;
(D) for a business trust, its agreement of trust and
declaration of trust;
(E) for a domestic or foreign corporation for profit, its
articles of incorporation, bylaws, and other agreements
among its shareholders that are authorized by its
governing statute, or comparable records as provided in its
governing statute; and
(F) for any other organization, the basic records that
create the organization and determine its internal
governance and the relations among the persons that own
it, have an interest in it, or are members of it.
(10) "Personal liability" means personal liability for a debt,
liability, or other obligation of an organization which is
imposed on a person that co-owns, has an interest in, or is a
member of the organization:
(A) by the organization's governing statute solely by
reason of the person co-owning, having an interest in, or
being a member of the organization; or
(B) by the organization's organizational documents under
a provision of the organization's governing statute
authorizing those documents to make one (1) or more
specified persons liable for all or specified debts, liabilities,
and other obligations of the organization solely by reason
of the person or persons co-owning, having an interest in,
or being a member of the organization.
(11) "Surviving organization" means an organization into
which one (1) or more other organizations are merged. A
surviving organization may preexist the merger or be created
by the merger.
Sec. 2. (a) An organization other than a limited partnership may
convert to a limited partnership, and a limited partnership may
convert to another organization in accordance with this section,
sections 3 through 5 of this chapter, and a plan of conversion, if:
(1) the other organization's governing statute authorizes the
conversion;
(2) the conversion is not prohibited by the law of the
jurisdiction that enacted the governing statute; and
(3) the other organization complies with its governing statute
in effecting the conversion.
(b) A plan of conversion must be in a record and must include:
(1) the name and form of the organization before conversion;
(2) the name and form of the organization after conversion;
(3) the terms and conditions of the conversion, including the
manner and basis for converting interests in the converting
organization into any combination of money, interests in the
converted organization, and other consideration; and
(4) the organizational documents of the converted
organization.
Sec. 3. (a) Subject to section 10 of this chapter, a plan of conversion must be consented to by all the partners of a converting limited partnership.
(b) Subject to section 10 of this chapter and any contractual rights, after a conversion is approved, and at any time before a filing is made under section 4 of this chapter, a converting limited partnership may amend the plan or abandon the planned conversion:
(1) as provided in the plan; and
(2) except as prohibited by the plan, by the same consent as was required to approve the plan.
Sec. 4. (a) After a plan of conversion is approved:
(1) a converting limited partnership shall deliver to the secretary of state for filing articles of conversion that must include:
(A) a statement that the limited partnership has been converted into another organization;
(B) the name and form of the organization and the jurisdiction of its governing statute;
(C) the date the conversion is effective under the governing statute of the converted organization;
(D) a statement that the conversion was approved as required by this article;
(E) a statement that the conversion was approved as required by the governing statute of the converted organization; and
(F) if the converted organization is a foreign organization not authorized to transact business in this state, the street and mailing address of an office that the secretary of state may use for purposes of section 5(c) of this chapter; and
(2) if the converting organization is not a converting limited partnership, the converting organization shall deliver to the secretary of state for filing a certificate of limited partnership that must include, in addition to the information required by IC 23-16.1-3-1:
(A) a statement that the limited partnership was converted from another organization;
(B) the name and form of the organization and the jurisdiction of its governing statute; and
(C) a statement that the conversion was approved in a manner that complied with the organization's governing statute.
(b) A conversion becomes effective:
(1) if the converted organization is a limited partnership, when the certificate of limited partnership takes effect; and
(2) if the converted organization is not a limited partnership, as provided by the governing statute of the converted organization.
Sec. 5. (a) An organization that has been converted under this article is for all purposes the same entity that existed before the conversion.
(b) When a conversion takes effect:
(1) all property owned by the converting organization remains vested in the converted organization;
(2) all debts, liabilities, and other obligations of the converting organization continue as obligations of the converted organization;
(3) an action or proceeding pending by or against the converting organization may be continued as if the conversion had not occurred;
(4) except as prohibited by other law, all of the rights, privileges, immunities, powers, and purposes of the converting organization remain vested in the converted organization;
(5) except as otherwise provided in the plan of conversion, the terms and conditions of the plan of conversion take effect; and
(6) except as otherwise agreed, the conversion does not dissolve a converting limited partnership for the purposes of IC 23-16.1-9.
(c) A converted organization that is a foreign organization consents to the jurisdiction of the courts of this state to enforce any obligation owed by the converting limited partnership if before the conversion the converting limited partnership was subject to suit in this state on the obligation. A converted organization that is a foreign organization and not authorized to transact business in this state appoints the secretary of state as its agent for service of process for purposes of enforcing an obligation under this subsection. Service on the secretary of state under this subsection is made in the same manner and with the same consequences as in IC 23-16.1-2-16(c) and IC 23-16.1-2-16(d).
Sec. 6. (a) A limited partnership may merge with one (1) or more other constituent organizations in accordance with this section, sections 7 through 9 of this chapter, and a plan of merger, if:
(1) the governing statute of each of the other organizations authorizes the merger;
(2) the merger is not prohibited by the law of a jurisdiction that enacted any of those governing statutes; and
(3) each of the other organizations complies with its governing statute in effecting the merger.
(b) A plan of merger must be in a record and must include:
(1) the name and form of each constituent organization;
(2) the name and form of the surviving organization and, if the surviving organization is to be created by the merger, a statement to that effect;
(3) the terms and conditions of the merger, including the manner and basis for converting the interests in each constituent organization into any combination of money, interests in the surviving organization, and other consideration;
(4) if the surviving organization is to be created by the merger, the surviving organization's organizational documents; and
(5) if the surviving organization is not to be created by the merger, any amendments to be made by the merger to the surviving organization's organizational documents.
Sec. 7. (a) Subject to section 10 of this chapter, a plan of merger must be consented to by all the partners of a constituent limited partnership.
(b) Subject to section 10 of this chapter and any contractual rights, after a merger is approved, and at any time before a filing is made under section 8 of this chapter, a constituent limited partnership may amend the plan or abandon the planned merger:
(1) as provided in the plan; and
(2) except as prohibited by the plan, with the same consent as was required to approve the plan.
Sec. 8. (a) After each constituent organization has approved a merger, articles of merger must be signed on behalf of:
(1) each preexisting constituent limited partnership, by each general partner listed in the certificate of limited partnership; and
(2) each other preexisting constituent organization, by an authorized representative.
(b) The articles of merger must include:
(1) the name and form of each constituent organization and the jurisdiction of its governing statute;
(2) the name and form of the surviving organization, the jurisdiction of its governing statute, and, if the surviving organization is created by the merger, a statement to that effect;
(3) the date the merger is effective under the governing statute of the surviving organization;
(4) if the surviving organization is to be created by the merger:
(A) if it will be a limited partnership, the limited partnership's certificate of limited partnership; or
(B) if it will be an organization other than a limited partnership, the organizational document that creates the organization;
(5) if the surviving organization preexists the merger, any amendments provided for in the plan of merger for the organizational document that created the organization;
(6) a statement as to each constituent organization that the merger was approved as required by the organization's governing statute;
(7) if the surviving organization is a foreign organization not authorized to transact business in this state, the street and mailing address of an office that the secretary of state may use for purposes of section 9(b) of this chapter; and
(8) any additional information required by the governing statute of any constituent organization.
(c) Each constituent limited partnership shall deliver the articles of merger for filing in the office of the secretary of state.
(d) A merger becomes effective under this article:
(1) if the surviving organization is a limited partnership, upon the later of:
(A) compliance with subsection (c); or
(B) subject to IC 23-16.1-3-6(c), as specified in the articles of merger; or
(2) if the surviving organization is not a limited partnership, as provided by the governing statute of the surviving organization.
Sec. 9. (a) When a merger becomes effective:
(1) the surviving organization continues or comes into existence;
(2) each constituent organization that merges into the surviving organization ceases to exist as a separate entity;
(3) all property owned by each constituent organization that
ceases to exist vests in the surviving organization;
(4) all debts, liabilities, and other obligations of each
constituent organization that ceases to exist continue as
obligations of the surviving organization;
(5) an action or proceeding pending by or against any
constituent organization that ceases to exist may be continued
as if the merger had not occurred;
(6) except as prohibited by other law, all of the rights,
privileges, immunities, powers, and purposes of each
constituent organization that ceases to exist vest in the
surviving organization;
(7) except as otherwise provided in the plan of merger, the
terms and conditions of the plan of merger take effect;
(8) except as otherwise agreed, if a constituent limited
partnership ceases to exist, the merger does not dissolve the
limited partnership for the purposes of IC 23-16.1-9;
(9) if the surviving organization is created by the merger:
(A) if it is a limited partnership, the certificate of limited
partnership becomes effective; or
(B) if it is an organization other than a limited partnership,
the organizational document that creates the organization
becomes effective; and
(10) if the surviving organization preexists the merger, any
amendments provided for in the articles of merger for the
organizational document that created the organization
become effective.
(b) A surviving organization that is a foreign organization
consents to the jurisdiction of the courts of this state to enforce any
obligation owed by a constituent organization, if before the merger
the constituent organization was subject to suit in this state on the
obligation. A surviving organization that is a foreign organization
and not authorized to transact business in this state appoints the
secretary of state as its agent for service of process for purposes of
enforcing an obligation under this subsection. Service on the
secretary of state under this subsection is made in the same manner
and with the same consequences as in IC 23-16.1-2-16(c) and
IC 23-16.1-2-16(d).
Sec. 10. (a) If a partner of a converting or constituent limited
partnership will have personal liability with respect to a converted
or surviving organization, approval and amendment of a plan of
conversion or merger are ineffective without the consent of the
partner, unless:
(1) the limited partnership's partnership agreement provides for the approval of the conversion or merger with the consent of fewer than all the partners; and
(2) the partner has consented to the provision of the partnership agreement.
(b) An amendment to a certificate of limited partnership that deletes a statement that the limited partnership is a limited liability limited partnership is ineffective without the consent of each general partner unless:
(1) the limited partnership's partnership agreement provides for the amendment with the consent of less than all the general partners; and
(2) each general partner that does not consent to the amendment has consented to the provision of the partnership agreement.
(c) A partner does not give the consent required by subsection (a) or (b) merely by consenting to a provision of the partnership agreement that permits the partnership agreement to be amended with the consent of fewer than all the partners.
Sec. 11. (a) A conversion or merger under this article does not discharge any liability under IC 23-16.1-5-4 and IC 23-16.1-7-7 of a person that was a general partner in or dissociated as a general partner from a converting or constituent limited partnership, but:
(1) the provisions of this article pertaining to the collection or discharge of the liability continue to apply to the liability;
(2) for purposes of applying those provisions, the converted or surviving organization is considered to be the converting or constituent limited partnership; and
(3) if a person is required to pay any amount under this subsection:
(A) the person has a right of contribution from each other person that was liable as a general partner under IC 23-16.1-5-4 when the obligation was incurred and has not been released from the obligation under IC 23-16.1-7-7; and
(B) the contribution due from each of those persons is in proportion to the right to receive distributions in the capacity of general partner in effect for each of those persons when the obligation was incurred.
(b) In addition to any other liability provided by law:
(1) a person that immediately before a conversion or merger became effective was a general partner in a converting or
constituent limited partnership that was not a limited liability
limited partnership is personally liable for each obligation of
the converted or surviving organization arising from a
transaction with a third party after the conversion or merger
becomes effective, if, at the time the third party enters into the
transaction, the third party:
(A) does not have notice of the conversion or merger; and
(B) reasonably believes that:
(i) the converted or surviving business is the converting
or constituent limited partnership;
(ii) the converting or constituent limited partnership is
not a limited liability limited partnership; and
(iii) the person is a general partner in the converting or
constituent limited partnership; and
(2) a person that was dissociated as a general partner from a
converting or constituent limited partnership before the
conversion or merger became effective is personally liable for
each obligation of the converted or surviving organization
arising from a transaction with a third party after the
conversion or merger becomes effective, if:
(A) immediately before the conversion or merger became
effective the converting or surviving limited partnership
was a not a limited liability limited partnership; and
(B) at the time the third party enters into the transaction
less than two (2) years have passed since the person
dissociated as a general partner and the third party:
(i) does not have notice of the dissociation;
(ii) does not have notice of the conversion or merger; and
(iii) reasonably believes that the converted or surviving
organization is the converting or constituent limited
partnership, the converting or constituent limited
partnership is not a limited liability limited partnership,
and the person is a general partner in the converting or
constituent limited partnership.
Sec. 12. (a) An act of a person that immediately before a
conversion or merger became effective was a general partner in a
converting or constituent limited partnership binds the converted
or surviving organization after the conversion or merger becomes
effective, if:
(1) before the conversion or merger became effective, the act
would have bound the converting or constituent limited
partnership under IC 23-16.1-5-2; and
(2) at the time the third party enters into the transaction, the third party:
(A) does not have notice of the conversion or merger; and
(B) reasonably believes that the converted or surviving business is the converting or constituent limited partnership and that the person is a general partner in the converting or constituent limited partnership.
(b) An act of a person that before a conversion or merger became effective was dissociated as a general partner from a converting or constituent limited partnership binds the converted or surviving organization after the conversion or merger becomes effective, if:
(1) before the conversion or merger became effective, the act would have bound the converting or constituent limited partnership under IC 23-16.1-5-2 if the person had been a general partner; and
(2) at the time the third party enters into the transaction, less than two (2) years have passed since the person dissociated as a general partner and the third party:
(A) does not have notice of the dissociation;
(B) does not have notice of the conversion or merger; and
(C) reasonably believes that the converted or surviving organization is the converting or constituent limited partnership and that the person is a general partner in the converting or constituent limited partnership.
(c) If a person having knowledge of the conversion or merger causes a converted or surviving organization to incur an obligation under subsection (a) or (b), the person is liable:
(1) to the converted or surviving organization for any damage caused to the organization arising from the obligation; and
(2) if another person is liable for the obligation, to that other person for any damage caused to that other person arising from the liability.
Sec. 13. This article does not preclude an entity from being converted or merged under other law.
Chapter 13. Miscellaneous Provisions
Sec. 1. In applying and construing this article, consideration must be given to the need to promote uniformity of the law with respect to its subject matter among states that enact it.
Sec. 2. If any provision of this article or its application to any person or circumstance is held invalid, the invalidity does not affect other provisions or applications of this article that can be given
effect without the invalid provision or application, and to this end
the provisions of this article are severable.
Sec. 3. This article modifies, limits, or supersedes the federal
Electronic Signatures in Global and National Commerce Act, 15
U.S.C. 7001 et seq. This article does not modify, limit, or supersede
Section 101(c) of that act or authorize electronic delivery of any of
the notices described in Section 103(b) of that act.
Sec. 4. (a) Before July 1, 2011, this article governs only:
(1) a limited partnership formed on or after July 1, 2010; and
(2) except as otherwise provided in subsections (c) and (d), a
limited partnership formed before July 1, 2010, that elects, in
the manner provided in its partnership agreement or by law
for amending the partnership agreement, to be subject to this
article.
(b) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (c), on and after
July 1, 2011, this article governs all limited partnerships.
(c) With respect to a limited partnership formed before July 1,
2010, the following rules apply except as the partners otherwise
elect in the manner provided in the partnership agreement or by
law for amending the partnership agreement:
(1) IC 23-16.1-2-3(c) does not apply and the limited
partnership has whatever duration it had under IC 23-16
(before its repeal).
(2) The limited partnership is not required to amend its
certificate of limited partnership to comply with
IC 23-16.1-3-1(a)(4).
(3) IC 23-16.1-7-1 and IC 23-16.1-7-2 do not apply and a
limited partner has the same right and power to dissociate
from the limited partnership, with the same consequences, as
existed immediately before July 1, 2010.
(4) IC 23-16.1-7-3(4) does not apply.
(5) IC 23-16.1-7-3(5) does not apply and a court has the same
power to expel a general partner as the court had immediately
before July 1, 2010.
(6) IC 23-16.1-9-1(3) does not apply and the connection
between a person's dissociation as a general partner and the
dissolution of the limited partnership is the same as existed
immediately before July 1, 2010.
(d) With respect to a limited partnership that elects under
subsection (a)(2) to be subject to this article, after the election takes
effect, the provisions of this article relating to the liability of the
limited partnership's general partners to third parties apply:
(1) before July 1, 2011, to:
(A) a third party that had not done business with the limited partnership in the year before the election took effect; and
(B) a third party that had done business with the limited partnership in the year before the election took effect only if the third party knows or has received a notification of the election; and
(2) on and after July 1, 2011, to all third parties, but those provisions remain inapplicable to any obligation incurred while those provisions were inapplicable under subdivision (1)(B).
Sec. 5. This article does not affect an action commenced, proceeding brought, or right accrued before July 1, 2010.
Sec. 6. (a) The secretary of state shall collect the following fees when the records specified in this section are delivered by a domestic or foreign limited partnership to the secretary of state for filing:
Record Electronic Filing Fee
Filing Fee (Other than
electronic
filing)
(1) Application for
reservation of name $10 $20
(2) Application for use
of indistinguishable name $10 $20
(3) Application for
renewal of reservation $10 $20
(4) Notice of transfer of reserved
name $10 $20
(5) Certificate of change
of registered agent's
business address No fee No fee
(6) Certificate of resignation
of agent No fee No fee
(7) Certificate of limited
partnership $75 $90
(8) Certificate of amendment $20 $30
(9) Certificate of cancellation $75 $90
(10) Restated certificate of
limited partnership or
authority $20 $30
(11) Restated certificate of
limited partnership or
authority with amendments $20 $30
(12) Application for certificate of
authority $75 $90
(13) Certificate of change of
application $20 $30
(14) Notice of cancellation of
certificate of authority $20 $30
(15) Certificate of change
of registered agent No fee No fee
(16) Application for certificate
of existence or authority $15 $15
(17) Biennial report $20 $30
(18) Any other record required or
permitted to be filed under this
article, including an application
for any other certificates or
certification certificate (except
for any such other certificates
that the secretary of state may
determine to issue without
additional fee in connection with
particular filings) $20 $30
The secretary of state shall prescribe the electronic means of filing records to which the electronic filing fees set forth in this section apply.
(b) The secretary of state shall collect a fee of ten dollars ($10) each time process is served on the secretary of state under this article. If the party to a proceeding causing service of process prevails in the proceeding, that party is entitled to recover this fee as costs from the nonprevailing party.
(c) The secretary of state shall collect the following fees for copying and certifying the copy of any filed record relating to a domestic or foreign limited partnership:
(1) Per page for copying $ 1
(2) For a certification stamp $15
Sec. 7. (a) A record must satisfy the requirements of this article to be entitled to filing by the secretary of state.
(b) The record must contain the information required by this article. It may contain other information as well.
(c) A record must be typewritten or printed.
(d) The record must be legible and otherwise suitable for filing.
(e) The record must be in the English language. A limited partnership name need not be in English if written in English letters or Arabic or Roman numerals.
(f) Every person executing the record shall sign it and state beneath or opposite the signature the person's name and the capacity in which the person signs. A signature on a record authorized to be filed under this article may be a facsimile. A signature on a record under this subsection that is transmitted and filed electronically is sufficient if the person transmitting and filing the record:
(1) has the intent to file the record as evidenced by a symbol executed or adopted by a party with present intention to authenticate the filing; and
(2) enters the filing party's name on the electronic form in a signature box or other place indicated by the secretary of state.
(g) The record must be delivered to the office of the secretary of state as required by section 8 of this chapter, and the correct filing fee must be paid in the manner and form required by the secretary of state.
(h) The secretary of state may accept payment of the correct filing fee by credit card, debit card, charge card, or similar method. However, if the filing fee is paid by credit card, debit card, charge card, or similar method, the liability is not finally discharged until the secretary of state receives payment or credit from the institution responsible for making the payment or credit. The secretary of state may contract with a bank or credit card vendor for acceptance of bank or credit cards. However, if there is a vendor transaction charge or discount fee, whether billed to the secretary of state or charged directly to the secretary of state's account, the secretary of state or the credit card vendor may collect from the person using the bank or credit card a fee that may not exceed the highest transaction charge or discount fee charged to the secretary of state by the bank or credit card vendor during the most recent collection period. This fee may be collected regardless of any agreement between the bank and a credit card vendor or regardless of any internal policy of the credit card vendor that may prohibit this type of fee. The fee is a permitted additional charge under IC 24-4.5-3-202.
Sec. 8. (a) For purposes of this article, a record is delivered for filing if the record is transferred to the secretary of state by hand,
mail, telecopy, facsimile, or other form of electronic transmission
meeting the requirements established by the secretary of state.
(b) If a record is delivered for filing by hand or mail, the record
must be accompanied by:
(1) two (2) exact or conformed copies of a record filed under
IC 23-16.1-2-7(e) or IC 23-16.1-2-15; or
(2) one (1) exact or conformed copy of any other record filed
under this article.
(c) The office of the secretary of state shall create any copies of
a record delivered by telecopy, facsimile, or other form of
electronic transmission that are required for distribution under
this article.
ARTICLE 18.1. LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANIES
Chapter 1. Definitions
Sec. 1. The definitions in this chapter apply throughout this article.
Sec. 2. "Appropriate court" means:
(1) in the case of a limited liability company, the circuit or superior court, as applicable, of:
(A) the county in which the designated office of the limited liability company is located, if the limited liability company has a designated office;
(B) the county in which the designated office of the limited liability company will be located, if the designated office of the limited liability company has not yet been established initially; or
(C) the county in which the limited liability company last maintained a designated office, if the limited liability company does not have a designated office.
(2) in the case of a foreign limited liability company, the circuit or superior court, as applicable, of:
(A) the county in which the street address of the foreign limited liability company's agent for service of process is located, if the foreign limited liability company has appointed an agent for service of process; or
(B) Marion County, if the foreign limited liability company does not have an agent for service of process.
Sec. 3. "Certificate of organization" means the certificate required by IC 23-18.1-3-1. The term includes the certificate as
amended or restated.
Sec. 4. "Contribution" means any benefit provided by a person
to a limited liability company:
(1) in order to become a member upon formation of the
company and in accordance with an agreement between or
among the persons that have agreed to become the initial
members of the company;
(2) in order to become a member after formation of the
company and in accordance with an agreement between the
person and the company; or
(3) in the person's capacity as a member and in accordance
with the operating agreement or an agreement between the
member and the company.
Sec. 5. "Debtor in bankruptcy" means a person that is the
subject of:
(1) an order for relief under Title 11 of the United States Code
or a successor statute of general application; or
(2) a comparable order under federal, state, or foreign law
governing insolvency.
Sec. 6. "Designated office" means:
(1) the office that a limited liability company is required to
designate and maintain under IC 23-18.1-2-12; or
(2) the principal office of a foreign limited liability company.
Sec. 7. "Distribution", except as otherwise provided in
IC 23-18.1-5-5(g), means a transfer of money or other property
from a limited liability company to another person on account of
a transferable interest.
Sec. 8. "Effective", with respect to a record required or
permitted to be delivered to the secretary of state for filing under
this article, means effective under IC 23-18.1-3-5(c).
Sec. 9. "Foreign limited liability company" means an
unincorporated entity formed under the law of a jurisdiction other
than this state and denominated by that law as a limited liability
company.
Sec. 10. "Limited liability company", except in the term
"foreign limited liability company", means an entity formed under
this article.
Sec. 11. "Manager" means a person that under the operating
agreement of a manager managed limited liability company is
responsible, alone or in concert with others, for performing the
management functions stated in IC 23-18.1-5-7(c).
Sec. 12. "Manager managed limited liability company" means
a limited liability company whose operating agreement conforms
with IC 23-18.1-5-7(a)(1) or IC 23-18.1-5-7(a)(2).
Sec. 13. "Member" means a person that has become a member
of a limited liability company under IC 23-18.1-5-1 and has not
dissociated under IC 23-18.1-7-2.
Sec. 14. "Member managed limited liability company" means
a limited liability company that is not a manager managed limited
liability company.
Sec. 15. "Operating agreement" means the agreement, whether
or not referred to as an operating agreement and whether oral, in
a record, implied, or some combination thereof, of all the members
of a limited liability company, including a sole member, concerning
the matters described in IC 23-18.1-2-9(a). The term includes the
agreement as amended or restated.
Sec. 16. "Organizer" means a person that acts under
IC 23-18.1-3-1 to form a limited liability company.
Sec. 17. "Person" means an individual, corporation, business
trust, estate, trust, partnership, limited liability company,
association, joint venture, public corporation, government or
governmental subdivision, agency, or instrumentality, or any other
legal or commercial entity.
Sec. 18. "Principal office" means the principal executive office
of a limited liability company or foreign limited liability company,
whether or not the office is located in this state.
Sec. 19. "Record" means information that is inscribed on a
tangible medium or that is stored in an electronic or other medium
and may be retrieved in perceivable form.
Sec. 20. "Sign" means, with the present intent to authenticate or
adopt a record:
(1) to execute or adopt a tangible symbol; or
(2) to attach to or logically associate with the record an
electronic symbol, sound, or process.
Sec. 21. "State" means a state of the United States, the District
of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the United States Virgin Islands, or any
territory or insular possession subject to the jurisdiction of the
United States.
Sec. 22. "Transfer" includes an assignment, conveyance, deed,
bill of sale, lease, mortgage, security interest, encumbrance, gift,
and transfer by operation of law.
Sec. 23. "Transferable interest" means the right, as originally
associated with a person's capacity as a member, to receive
distributions from a limited liability company in accordance with
the operating agreement, whether or not the person remains a
member or continues to own any part of the right.
Sec. 24. "Transferee" means a person to which all or part of a
transferable interest has been transferred, whether or not the
transferor is a member.
Chapter 2. General Provisions
Sec. 1. This article may be cited as the Revised Uniform Limited
Liability Company Act.
Sec. 2. (a) A person knows a fact when the person:
(1) has actual knowledge of it; or
(2) is deemed to know it under subsection (d)(1) or law other
than this article.
(b) A person has notice of a fact when the person:
(1) has reason to know the fact from all of the facts known to
the person at the time in question; or
(2) is considered to have notice of the fact under subsection
(d)(2).
(c) A person notifies another of a fact by taking steps reasonably
required to inform the other person in ordinary course, whether or
not the other person knows the fact.
(d) A person that is not a member is considered:
(1) to know of a limitation on authority to transfer real
property as provided in IC 23-18.1-4-2(g); and
(2) to have notice of a limited liability company's:
(A) dissolution, ninety (90) days after a statement of
dissolution under IC 23-18.1-8-2(b)(2)(A) becomes
effective;
(B) termination, ninety (90) days after a statement of
termination under IC 23-18.1-8-2(b)(2)(F) becomes
effective; and
(C) merger, conversion, or domestication, ninety (90) days
after articles of merger, conversion, or domestication
under IC 23-18.1-11 become effective.
Sec. 3. (a) A limited liability company is an entity distinct from
its members.
(b) A limited liability company may have any lawful purpose,
regardless of whether for profit.
(c) A limited liability company has perpetual duration.
Sec. 4. A limited liability company has the capacity to sue and
be sued in its own name and the power to do all things necessary or
convenient to carry on its activities.
Sec. 5. The law of this state governs:
(1) the internal affairs of a limited liability company; and
(2) the liability of a member as member and a manager as manager for the debts, obligations, or other liabilities of a limited liability company.
Sec. 6. Unless displaced by particular provisions of this article, the principles of law and equity supplement this article.
Sec. 7. (a) The name of a limited liability company must contain the words "limited liability company" or "limited company" or the abbreviation "L.L.C.", "LLC", "L.C.", or "LC". "Limited" may be abbreviated as "Ltd.", and "company" may be abbreviated as "Co.".
(b) Unless authorized by subsection (c), the name of a limited liability company must be distinguishable in the records of the secretary of state from:
(1) the name of each person that is not an individual and that is incorporated, organized, or authorized to transact business in this state;
(2) the limited liability company name stated in each certificate of organization that contains the statement as provided in IC 23-18.1-3-1(b)(3) and that has not lapsed; and
(3) each name reserved under section 8 of this chapter or other state laws allowing the reservation or registration of business names, including assumed business names under IC 23-15-1.
(c) A limited liability company may apply to the secretary of state for authorization to use a name that does not comply with subsection (b). The secretary of state shall authorize use of the name applied for if, as to each noncomplying name:
(1) the present user, registrant, or owner of the noncomplying name consents in a signed record to the use and submits an undertaking in a form satisfactory to the secretary of state to change the noncomplying name to a name that complies with subsection (b) and is distinguishable in the records of the secretary of state from the name applied for; or
(2) the applicant delivers to the secretary of state a certified copy of the final judgment of a court establishing the applicant's right to use in this state the name applied for.
(d) Subject to IC 23-18.1-9-5, this section applies to a foreign limited liability company transacting business in this state that has a certificate of authority to transact business in this state or that has applied for a certificate of authority.
Sec. 8. (a) A person may reserve the exclusive use of the name
of a limited liability company, including a fictitious or assumed
name for a foreign limited liability company whose name is not
available, by delivering an application to the secretary of state for
filing. The application must state the name and address of the
applicant and the name proposed to be reserved. If the secretary
of state finds that the name applied for is available, it must be
reserved for the applicant's exclusive use for a one hundred twenty
(120) day period.
(b) The owner of a name reserved for a limited liability
company may transfer the reservation to another person by
delivering to the secretary of state for filing a signed notice of the
transfer that states the name and address of the transferee.
Sec. 9. (a) Except as otherwise provided in subsections (b) and
(c), the operating agreement governs:
(1) relations among the members as members and between the
members and the limited liability company;
(2) the rights and duties under this article of a person in the
capacity of manager;
(3) the activities of the company and the conduct of those
activities; and
(4) the means and conditions for amending the operating
agreement.
(b) To the extent the operating agreement does not otherwise
provide for a matter described in subsection (a), this article
governs the matter.
(c) An operating agreement may not:
(1) vary a limited liability company's capacity under section
4 of this chapter to sue and be sued in its own name;
(2) vary the law applicable under section 5 of this chapter;
(3) vary the power of the court under IC 23-18.1-3-4;
(4) subject to subsections (d) through (g), eliminate the duty
of loyalty, the duty of care, or any other fiduciary duty;
(5) subject to subsections (d) through (g), eliminate the
contractual obligation of good faith and fair dealing under
IC 23-18.1-5-9(d);
(6) unreasonably restrict the duties and rights stated in
IC 23-18.1-5-10;
(7) vary the power of a court to decree dissolution in the
circumstances specified in IC 23-18.1-8-1(a)(4) and
IC 23-18.1-8-1(a)(5);
(8) vary the requirement to wind up a limited liability
company's business as specified in IC 23-18.1-8-2(a) and
IC 23-18.1-8-2(b)(1);
(9) unreasonably restrict the right of a member to maintain
an action under IC 23-18.1-10;
(10) restrict the right to approve a merger, conversion, or
domestication under IC 23-18.1-11-14 to a member that will
have personal liability with respect to a surviving, converted,
or domesticated organization; or
(11) except as otherwise provided in section 11(b) of this
chapter, restrict the rights under this article of a person other
than a member or manager.
(d) If not manifestly unreasonable, the operating agreement
may:
(1) restrict or eliminate the duty:
(A) as required in IC 23-18.1-5-9(b)(1) and
IC 23-18.1-5-9(g), to account to the limited liability
company and to hold as trustee for it any property, profit,
or benefit derived by the member in the conduct or
winding up of the company's business, from a use by the
member of the company's property, or from the
appropriation of a limited liability company opportunity;
(B) as required in IC 23-18.1-5-9(b)(2) and
IC 23-18.1-5-9(g), to refrain from dealing with the
company in the conduct or winding up of the company's
business as or on behalf of a party having an interest
adverse to the company; and
(C) as required by IC 23-18.1-5-9(b)(3) and
IC 23-18.1-5-9(g), to refrain from competing with the
company in the conduct of the company's business before
the dissolution of the company;
(2) identify specific types or categories of activities that do not
violate the duty of loyalty;
(3) alter the duty of care, except to authorize intentional
misconduct or knowing violation of law;
(4) alter any other fiduciary duty, including eliminating
particular aspects of that duty; and
(5) prescribe the standards by which to measure the
performance of the contractual obligation of good faith and
fair dealing under IC 23-18.1-5-9(d).
(e) The operating agreement may specify the method by which
a specific act or transaction that would otherwise violate the duty
of loyalty may be authorized or ratified by one (1) or more
disinterested and independent persons after full disclosure of all
material facts.
(f) To the extent the operating agreement of a member managed
limited liability company expressly relieves a member of a
responsibility that the member would otherwise have under this
article and imposes the responsibility on one (1) or more other
members, the operating agreement may, to the benefit of the
member that the operating agreement relieves of the responsibility,
also eliminate or limit any fiduciary duty that would have
pertained to the responsibility.
(g) The operating agreement may alter or eliminate the
indemnification for a member or manager provided by
IC 23-18.1-5-8(a) and may eliminate or limit a member or
manager's liability to the limited liability company and members
for money damages, except for:
(1) breach of the duty of loyalty;
(2) a financial benefit received by the member or manager to
which the member or manager is not entitled;
(3) a breach of a duty under IC 23-18.1-5-6;
(4) intentional infliction of harm on the company or a
member; or
(5) an intentional violation of criminal law.
(h) The court shall decide any claim under subsection (d) that a
term of an operating agreement is manifestly unreasonable. The
court:
(1) shall make its determination as of the time the challenged
term became part of the operating agreement and by
considering only circumstances existing at that time; and
(2) may invalidate the term only if, in light of the purposes
and activities of the limited liability company, it is readily
apparent that:
(A) the objective of the term is unreasonable; or
(B) the term is an unreasonable means to achieve the
provision's objective.
Sec. 10. (a) A limited liability company is bound by and may
enforce the operating agreement, whether or not the company has
itself manifested assent to the operating agreement.
(b) A person that becomes a member of a limited liability
company is considered to assent to the operating agreement.
(c) Two (2) or more persons intending to become the initial
members of a limited liability company may make an agreement
providing that upon the formation of the company the agreement
will become the operating agreement. One (1) person intending to
become the initial member of a limited liability company may
assent to terms providing that upon the formation of the company
the terms will become the operating agreement.
Sec. 11. (a) An operating agreement may specify that its
amendment requires the approval of a person that is not a party to
the operating agreement or the satisfaction of a condition. An
amendment is ineffective if its adoption does not include the
required approval or satisfy the specified condition.
(b) The obligations of a limited liability company and its
members to a person in the person's capacity as a transferee or
dissociated member are governed by the operating agreement.
Subject only to any court order issued under IC 23-18.1-6-3(b)(2)
to effectuate a charging order, an amendment to the operating
agreement made after a person becomes a transferee or dissociated
member is effective with regard to any debt, obligation, or other
liability of the limited liability company or its members to the
person in the person's capacity as a transferee or dissociated
member.
(c) If a record that has been delivered by a limited liability
company to the secretary of state for filing and has become
effective under this article contains a provision that would be
ineffective under section 9(c) of this chapter if contained in the
operating agreement, the provision is likewise ineffective in the
record.
(d) Subject to subsection (c), if a record that has been delivered
by a limited liability company to the secretary of state for filing
and has become effective under this article conflicts with a
provision of the operating agreement:
(1) the operating agreement prevails as to members,
dissociated members, transferees, and managers; and
(2) the record prevails as to other persons to the extent they
reasonably rely on the record.
Sec. 12. (a) A limited liability company shall designate and
continuously maintain in this state:
(1) an office, which need not be a place of its activity in this
state; and
(2) an agent for service of process.
(b) A foreign limited liability company that has a certificate of
authority under IC 23-18.1-9-2 shall designate and continuously
maintain in this state an agent for service of process.
(c) An agent for service of process of a limited liability company
or foreign limited liability company must be an individual who is
a resident of this state or other person with authority to transact
business in this state.
Sec. 13. (a) A limited liability company or foreign limited
liability company may change its designated office, its agent for
service of process, or the address of its agent for service of process
by delivering to the secretary of state for filing a statement of
change containing:
(1) the name of the company;
(2) the street and mailing addresses of its current designated
office;
(3) if the current designated office is to be changed, the street
and mailing addresses of the new designated office;
(4) the name and street and mailing addresses of its current
agent for service of process; and
(5) if the current agent for service of process or an address of
the agent is to be changed, the new information.
(b) Subject to IC 23-18.1-3-5(c), a statement of change is
effective when filed by the secretary of state.
Sec. 14. (a) To resign as an agent for service of process of a
limited liability company or foreign limited liability company, the
agent must deliver to the secretary of state for filing a statement of
resignation containing the company name and stating that the
agent is resigning.
(b) The secretary of state shall file a statement of resignation
delivered under subsection (a) and mail or otherwise provide or
deliver a copy to the designated office of the limited liability
company or foreign limited liability company and another copy to
the principal office of the company if the mailing address of the
principal office appears in the records of the secretary of state and
is different from the mailing address of the designated office.
(c) An agency for service of process terminates on the earlier of:
(1) the thirty-first day after the secretary of state files the
statement of resignation; or
(2) when a record designating a new agent for service of
process is delivered to the secretary of state for filing on
behalf of the limited liability company and becomes effective.
Sec. 15. (a) An agent for service of process appointed by a
limited liability company or foreign limited liability company is an
agent of the company for service of any process, notice, or demand
required or permitted by law to be served on the company.
(b) If a limited liability company or foreign limited liability
company does not appoint or maintain an agent for service of
process in this state or the agent for service of process cannot with
reasonable diligence be found at the agent's street address, the
secretary of state is an agent of the company upon whom process,
notice, or demand may be served.
(c) Service of any process, notice, or demand on the secretary of
state as agent for a limited liability company or foreign limited
liability company may be made by delivering to the secretary of
state duplicate copies of the process, notice, or demand. If a
process, notice, or demand is served on the secretary of state, the
secretary of state shall forward one (1) of the copies by registered
or certified mail, return receipt requested, to the company at its
designated office.
(d) Service is effected under subsection (c) at the earliest of:
(1) the date the limited liability company or foreign limited
liability company receives the process, notice, or demand;
(2) the date shown on the return receipt, if signed on behalf of
the company; or
(3) five (5) days after the process, notice, or demand is
deposited with the United States Postal Service, if correctly
addressed and with sufficient postage.
(e) The secretary of state shall keep a record of each process,
notice, and demand served under this section and record the time
of, and the action taken regarding, the service.
(f) This section does not affect the right to serve process, notice,
or demand in any other manner provided by law.
Chapter 3. Formation; Certificate of Organization and Other
Filings
Sec. 1. (a) One (1) or more persons may act as organizers to
form a limited liability company by signing and delivering to the
secretary of state for filing a certificate of organization.
(b) A certificate of organization must state:
(1) the name of the limited liability company, which must
comply with IC 23-18.1-2-7;
(2) the street and mailing addresses of the initial designated
office and the name and street and mailing addresses of the
initial agent for service of process of the company; and
(3) if the company will have no members when the secretary
of state files the certificate, a statement to that effect.
(c) Subject to IC 23-18.1-2-11(c), a certificate of organization
may also contain statements as to matters other than those
required by subsection (b). However, a statement in a certificate of
organization is not effective as a statement of authority.
(d) Unless the filed certificate of organization contains the statement as provided in subsection (b)(3), the following rules apply:
(1) A limited liability company is formed when the secretary of state has filed the certificate of organization and the company has at least one (1) member, unless the certificate states a delayed effective date under section 5(c) of this chapter.
(2) If the certificate states a delayed effective date, a limited liability company is not formed if, before the certificate takes effect, a statement of cancellation is signed and delivered to the secretary of state for filing and the secretary of state files the certificate.
(3) Subject to any delayed effective date and except in a proceeding by this state to dissolve a limited liability company, the filing of the certificate of organization by the secretary of state is conclusive proof that the organizer satisfied all conditions to the formation of a limited liability company.
(e) If a filed certificate of organization contains a statement as provided in subsection (b)(3), the following rules apply:
(1) The certificate lapses and is void unless, within ninety (90) days from the date the secretary of state files the certificate, an organizer signs and delivers to the secretary of state for filing a notice stating:
(A) that the limited liability company has at least one (1) member; and
(B) the date on which a person or persons became the company's initial member or members.
(2) If an organizer complies with subdivision (1), a limited liability company is deemed formed as of the date of initial membership stated in the notice delivered under subdivision (1).
(3) Except in a proceeding by this state to dissolve a limited liability company, the filing of the notice described in subdivision (1) by the secretary of state is conclusive proof that the organizer satisfied all conditions to the formation of a limited liability company.
Sec. 2. (a) A certificate of organization may be amended or restated at any time.
(b) To amend its certificate of organization, a limited liability company must deliver to the secretary of state for filing an
amendment stating:
(1) the name of the company;
(2) the date of filing of its certificate of organization; and
(3) the changes the amendment makes to the certificate as
most recently amended or restated.
(c) To restate its certificate of organization, a limited liability
company must deliver to the secretary of state for filing a
restatement, designated as such in its heading, stating:
(1) in the heading or an introductory paragraph, the
company's present name and the date of the filing of the
company's initial certificate of organization;
(2) if the company's name has been changed at any time since
the company's formation, each of the company's former
names; and
(3) the changes the restatement makes to the certificate as
most recently amended or restated.
(d) Subject to IC 23-18.1-2-11(c) and section 5(c) of this chapter,
an amendment to or restatement of a certificate of organization is
effective when filed by the secretary of state.
(e) If a member of a member managed limited liability
company, or a manager of a manager managed limited liability
company, knows that any information in a filed certificate of
organization was inaccurate when the certificate was filed or has
become inaccurate owing to changed circumstances, the member
or manager shall promptly:
(1) cause the certificate to be amended; or
(2) if appropriate, deliver to the secretary of state for filing a
statement of change under IC 23-18.1-2-13 or a statement of
correction under section 6 of this chapter.
Sec. 3. (a) A record delivered to the secretary of state for filing
under this article must be signed as follows:
(1) Except as otherwise provided in subdivisions (2) through
(4), a record signed on behalf of a limited liability company
must be signed by a person authorized by the company.
(2) A limited liability company's initial certificate of
organization must be signed by at least one (1) person acting
as an organizer.
(3) A notice under section 1(e)(1) of this chapter must be
signed by an organizer.
(4) A record filed on behalf of a dissolved limited liability
company that has no members must be signed by the person
winding up the company's activities under IC 23-18.1-8-2(c)
or a person appointed under IC 23-18.1-8-2(d) to wind up
those activities.
(5) A statement of cancellation under section 1(d)(2) of this
chapter must be signed by each organizer that signed the
initial certificate of organization, but a personal
representative of a deceased or incompetent organizer may
sign in the place of the decedent or incompetent.
(6) A statement of denial by a person under IC 23-18.1-4-3
must be signed by that person.
(7) Any other record must be signed by the person on whose
behalf the record is delivered to the secretary of state.
(b) Any record filed under this article may be signed by an
agent.
Sec. 4. (a) If a person required by this article to sign a record or
deliver a record to the secretary of state for filing under this article
does not do so, any other person that is aggrieved may petition the
appropriate court to order:
(1) the person to sign the record;
(2) the person to deliver the record to the secretary of state
for filing; or
(3) the secretary of state to file the record unsigned.
(b) If a petitioner under subsection (a) is not the limited liability
company or foreign limited liability company to which the record
pertains, the petitioner shall make the company a party to the
action.
Sec. 5. (a) A record authorized or required to be delivered to the
secretary of state for filing under this article must be captioned to
describe the record's purpose, be in a medium permitted by the
secretary of state, and be delivered to the secretary of state. If the
filing fees have been paid, unless the secretary of state determines
that a record does not comply with the filing requirements of this
article, the secretary of state shall file the record and:
(1) for a statement of denial under IC 23-18.1-4-3, send a copy
of the filed statement and a receipt for the fees to the person
on whose behalf the statement was delivered for filing and to
the limited liability company; and
(2) for all other records, send a copy of the filed record and a
receipt for the fees to the person on whose behalf the record
was filed.
(b) Upon request and payment of the requisite fee, the secretary
of state shall send to the requester a certified copy of a requested
record.
(c) Except as otherwise provided in IC 23-18.1-2-14 and section 6 of this chapter and except for a certificate of organization that contains a statement as provided in section 1(b)(3) of this chapter, a record delivered to the secretary of state for filing under this article may specify an effective time and a delayed effective date. Subject to IC 23-18.1-2-14 and sections 1(d)(1) and 6 of this chapter, a record filed by the secretary of state is effective:
(1) if the record does not specify either an effective time or a delayed effective date, on the date and at the time the record is filed as evidenced by the secretary of state's endorsement of the date and time on the record;
(2) if the record specifies an effective time but not a delayed effective date, on the date the record is filed at the time specified in the record;
(3) if the record specifies a delayed effective date but not an effective time, at 12:01 a.m. on the earlier of:
(A) the specified date; or
(B) the ninetieth day after the record is filed; or
(4) if the record specifies an effective time and a delayed effective date, at the specified time on the earlier of:
(A) the specified date; or
(B) the ninetieth day after the record is filed.
Sec. 6. (a) A limited liability company or foreign limited liability company may deliver to the secretary of state for filing a statement of correction to correct a record previously delivered by the company to the secretary of state and filed by the secretary of state, if at the time of filing the record contained inaccurate information or was defectively signed.
(b) A statement of correction under subsection (a) may not state a delayed effective date and must:
(1) describe the record to be corrected, including its filing date, or attach a copy of the record as filed;
(2) specify the inaccurate information and the reason it is inaccurate or the manner in which the signing was defective; and
(3) correct the defective signature or inaccurate information.
(c) When filed by the secretary of state, a statement of correction under subsection (a) is effective retroactively as of the effective date of the record the statement corrects, but the statement is effective when filed:
(1) for purposes of IC 23-18.1-2-2(d); and
(2) as to persons that previously relied on the uncorrected
record and would be adversely affected by the retroactive
effect.
Sec. 7. (a) If a record delivered to the secretary of state for filing
under this article and filed by the secretary of state contains
inaccurate information, a person that suffers a loss by reliance on
the information may recover damages for the loss from:
(1) a person that signed the record, or caused another to sign
it on the person's behalf, and knew the information to be
inaccurate at the time the record was signed; and
(2) subject to subsection (b), a member of a member managed
limited liability company or the manager of a manager
managed limited liability company, if:
(A) the record was delivered for filing on behalf of the
company; and
(B) the member or manager had notice of the inaccuracy
for a reasonably sufficient time before the information was
relied upon so that, before the reliance, the member or
manager reasonably could have:
(i) effected an amendment under section 2 of this
chapter;
(ii) filed a petition under section 4 of this chapter; or
(iii) delivered to the secretary of state for filing a
statement of change under IC 23-18.1-2-13 or a
statement of correction under section 6 of this chapter.
(b) To the extent that the operating agreement of a member
managed limited liability company expressly relieves a member of
responsibility for maintaining the accuracy of information
contained in records delivered on behalf of the company to the
secretary of state for filing under this article and imposes that
responsibility on one (1) or more other members, the liability
stated in subsection (a)(2) applies to those other members and not
to the member that the operating agreement relieves of the
responsibility.
(c) An individual who signs a record authorized or required to
be filed under this article affirms under penalty of perjury that the
information stated in the record is accurate.
Sec. 8. (a) The secretary of state, upon request and payment of
the requisite fee, shall furnish to any person a certificate of
existence for a limited liability company if the records filed in the
office of the secretary of state show that the company has been
formed under section 1 of this chapter and the secretary of state
has not filed a statement of termination pertaining to the company.
A certificate of existence must state:
(1) the company's name;
(2) that the company was duly formed under the laws of this
state and the date of formation;
(3) whether all fees, taxes, and penalties due under this article
or other law to the secretary of state have been paid;
(4) whether the company's most recent biennial report
required by section 9 of this chapter has been filed by the
secretary of state;
(5) whether the secretary of state has administratively
dissolved the company;
(6) whether the company has delivered to the secretary of
state for filing a statement of dissolution;
(7) that a statement of termination has not been filed by the
secretary of state; and
(8) other facts of record in the office of the secretary of state
that are specified by the person requesting the certificate.
(b) The secretary of state, upon request and payment of the
requisite fee, shall furnish to any person a certificate of
authorization for a foreign limited liability company if the records
filed in the office of the secretary of state show that the secretary
of state has filed a certificate of authority, has not revoked the
certificate of authority, and has not filed a notice of cancellation.
A certificate of authorization must state:
(1) the company's name and any alternate name adopted
under IC 23-18.1-9-5(a) for use in this state;
(2) that the company is authorized to transact business in this
state;
(3) whether all fees, taxes, and penalties due under this article
or other law to the secretary of state have been paid;
(4) whether the company's most recent biennial report
required by section 9 of this chapter has been filed by the
secretary of state;
(5) that the secretary of state has not revoked the company's
certificate of authority and has not filed a notice of
cancellation; and
(6) other facts of record in the office of the secretary of state
that are specified by the person requesting the certificate.
(c) Subject to any qualification stated in the certificate, a
certificate of existence or certificate of authorization issued by the
secretary of state is conclusive evidence that the limited liability
company is in existence or the foreign limited liability company is
authorized to transact business in this state.
Sec. 9. (a) Every two (2) years, a limited liability company or a
foreign limited liability company authorized to transact business
in this state shall deliver to the secretary of state for filing a report
that states:
(1) the name of the company;
(2) the street and mailing addresses of the company's
designated office and the name and street and mailing
addresses of its agent for service of process in this state;
(3) the street and mailing addresses of its principal office; and
(4) in the case of a foreign limited liability company, the state
or other jurisdiction under whose law the company is formed
and any alternate name adopted under IC 23-18.1-9-5(a).
(b) Information in a biennial report under this section must be
current as of the date the report is delivered to the secretary of
state for filing.
(c) The first biennial report under this section must be delivered
to the secretary of state in the second year following the calendar
year in which a limited liability company was formed or a foreign
limited liability company was authorized to transact business. The
report is due during the same month as the month in which the
limited liability company was organized or authorized to transact
business. Subsequent biennial reports must be delivered to the
secretary of state during the same month every two (2) calendar
years thereafter. The secretary of state may accept biennial reports
during the two (2) months before the month the limited liability
company's report is due.
(d) If a biennial report under this section does not contain the
information required in subsection (a), the secretary of state shall
promptly notify the reporting limited liability company or foreign
limited liability company and return the report to it for correction.
If the report is corrected to contain the information required in
subsection (a) and delivered to the secretary of state within thirty
(30) days after the effective date of the notice, it is timely delivered.
(e) If a biennial report submitted under this section contains an
address of a designated office or the name or address of an agent
for service of process that differs from the information shown in
the records of the secretary of state immediately before the
biennial report becomes effective, the differing information in the
biennial report is considered a statement of change under
IC 23-18.1-2-13.
Chapter 4. Relations of Members and Managers to Persons
Dealing With Limited Liability Company
Sec. 1. (a) A member is not an agent of a limited liability
company solely by reason of being a member.
(b) A person's status as a member does not prevent or restrict
law other than this article from imposing liability on a limited
liability company because of the person's conduct.
Sec. 2. (a) A limited liability company may deliver to the
secretary of state for filing a statement of authority. The statement:
(1) must include the name of the company and the street and
mailing addresses of its designated office;
(2) with respect to any position that exists in or with respect
to the company, may state the authority, or limitations on the
authority, of all persons holding the position to:
(A) execute an instrument transferring real property held
in the name of the company; or
(B) enter into other transactions on behalf of, or otherwise
act for or bind, the company; and
(3) may state the authority, or limitations on the authority, of
a specific person to:
(A) execute an instrument transferring real property held
in the name of the company; or
(B) enter into other transactions on behalf of, or otherwise
act for or bind, the company.
(b) To amend or cancel a statement of authority filed by the
secretary of state under IC 23-18.1-3-5(a), a limited liability
company must deliver to the secretary of state for filing an
amendment or cancellation stating:
(1) the name of the company;
(2) the street and mailing addresses of the company's
designated office;
(3) the caption of the statement being amended or canceled
and the date the statement being affected became effective;
and
(4) the contents of the amendment or a declaration that the
statement being affected is canceled.
(c) A statement of authority affects only the power of a person
to bind a limited liability company to persons that are not
members.
(d) Subject to subsection (c) and IC 23-18.1-2-2(d) and except as
otherwise provided in subsections (f), (g), and (h), a limitation on
the authority of a person or a position contained in an effective
statement of authority is not by itself evidence of knowledge or
notice of the limitation by any person.
(e) Subject to subsection (c), a grant of authority not pertaining
to transfers of real property and contained in an effective
statement of authority is conclusive in favor of a person that gives
value in reliance on the grant, except to the extent that when the
person gives value:
(1) the person has knowledge to the contrary;
(2) the statement has been canceled or restrictively amended
under subsection (b); or
(3) a limitation on the grant is contained in another statement
of authority that became effective after the statement
containing the grant became effective.
(f) Subject to subsection (c), an effective statement of authority
that grants authority to transfer real property held in the name of
the limited liability company and that is recorded by certified copy
in the office for recording transfers of the real property is
conclusive in favor of a person that gives value in reliance on the
grant without knowledge to the contrary, except to the extent that
when the person gives value:
(1) the statement has been canceled or restrictively amended
under subsection (b) and a certified copy of the cancellation
or restrictive amendment has been recorded in the office for
recording transfers of the real property; or
(2) a limitation on the grant is contained in another statement
of authority that became effective after the statement
containing the grant became effective and a certified copy of
the later effective statement is recorded in the office for
recording transfers of the real property.
(g) Subject to subsection (c), if a certified copy of an effective
statement containing a limitation on the authority to transfer real
property held in the name of a limited liability company is
recorded in the office for recording transfers of that real property,
all persons are considered to know of the limitation.
(h) Subject to subsection (i), an effective statement of dissolution
or termination is a cancellation of any filed statement of authority
for purposes of subsection (f) and is a limitation on authority for
purposes of subsection (g).
(i) After a statement of dissolution becomes effective, a limited
liability company may deliver to the secretary of state for filing
and, if appropriate, may record a statement of authority that is
designated as a postdissolution statement of authority. The
statement operates as provided in subsections (f) and (g).
(j) Unless earlier canceled, an effective statement of authority is canceled by operation of law five (5) years after the date on which the statement, or its most recent amendment, becomes effective. This cancellation operates without need for any recording under subsection (f) or (g).
(k) An effective statement of denial operates as a restrictive amendment under this section and may be recorded by certified copy for purposes of subsection (f)(1).
Sec. 3. A person named in a filed statement of authority granting that person authority may deliver to the secretary of state for filing a statement of denial that:
(1) provides the name of the limited liability company and the caption of the statement of authority to which the statement of denial pertains; and
(2) denies the grant of authority.
Sec. 4. (a) The debts, obligations, or other liabilities of a limited liability company, whether arising in contract, tort, or otherwise:
(1) are solely the debts, obligations, or other liabilities of the company; and
(2) do not become the debts, obligations, or other liabilities of a member or manager solely by reason of the member acting as a member or manager acting as a manager.
(b) The failure of a limited liability company to observe any particular formalities relating to the exercise of its powers or management of its activities is not a ground for imposing liability on the members or managers for the debts, obligations, or other liabilities of the company.
Chapter 5. Relations of Members to Each Other and to Limited Liability Company
Sec. 1. (a) If a limited liability company is to have only one (1) member upon formation, the person becomes a member as agreed by that person and the organizer of the company. That person and the organizer may be, but need not be, different persons. If different, the organizer acts on behalf of the initial member.
(b) If a limited liability company is to have more than one (1) member upon formation, those persons become members as agreed by the persons before the formation of the company. The organizer acts on behalf of the persons in forming the company and may be, but need not be, one (1) of the persons.
(c) If a filed certificate of organization contains the statement required by IC 23-18.1-3-1(b)(3), a person becomes an initial member of the limited liability company with the consent of a
majority of the organizers. The organizers may consent to more
than one (1) person simultaneously becoming the company's initial
members.
(d) After formation of a limited liability company, a person
becomes a member:
(1) as provided in the operating agreement;
(2) as the result of a transaction effective under IC 23-18.1-11;
(3) with the consent of all the members; or
(4) if, within ninety (90) consecutive days after the company
ceases to have any members:
(A) the last person to have been a member, or the legal
representative of that person, designates a person to
become a member; and
(B) the designated person consents to become a member.
(e) A person may become a member without acquiring a
transferable interest and without making or being obligated to
make a contribution to the limited liability company.
Sec. 2. A contribution may consist of tangible or intangible
property or other benefit to a limited liability company, including
money, services performed, promissory notes, other agreements to
contribute money or property, and contracts for services to be
performed.
Sec. 3. (a) A person's obligation to make a contribution to a
limited liability company is not excused by the person's death,
disability, or other inability to perform personally. If a person does
not make a required contribution, the person or the person's estate
is obligated to contribute money equal to the value of the part of
the contribution that has not been made, at the option of the
company.
(b) A creditor of a limited liability company that extends credit
or otherwise acts in reliance on an obligation described in
subsection (a) may enforce the obligation.
Sec. 4. (a) Any distributions made by a limited liability company
before its dissolution and winding up must be in equal shares
among members and dissociated members, except to the extent
necessary to comply with any transfer effective under
IC 23-18.1-6-2 and any charging order in effect under
IC 23-18.1-6-3.
(b) A person has a right to a distribution before the dissolution
and winding up of a limited liability company only if the company
decides to make an interim distribution. A person's dissociation
does not entitle the person to a distribution.
(c) A person does not have a right to demand or receive a distribution from a limited liability company in any form other than money. Except as otherwise provided in IC 23-18.1-8-8(c), a limited liability company may distribute an asset in kind if each part of the asset is fungible with each other part and each person receives a percentage of the asset equal in value to the person's share of distributions.
(d) If a member or transferee becomes entitled to receive a distribution, the member or transferee has the status of, and is entitled to all remedies available to, a creditor of the limited liability company with respect to the distribution.
Sec. 5. (a) A limited liability company may not make a distribution if after the distribution:
(1) the company would not be able to pay its debts as they become due in the ordinary course of the company's activities; or
(2) the company's total assets would be less than the sum of its total liabilities plus the amount that would be needed, if the company were to be dissolved, wound up, and terminated at the time of the distribution, to satisfy the preferential rights upon dissolution, winding up, and termination of members whose preferential rights are superior to those of persons receiving the distribution.
(b) A limited liability company may base a determination that a distribution is not prohibited under subsection (a) on financial statements prepared on the basis of accounting practices and principles that are reasonable in the circumstances or on a fair valuation or other method that is reasonable under the circumstances.
(c) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (f), the effect of a distribution under subsection (a) is measured:
(1) in the case of a distribution by purchase, redemption, or other acquisition of a transferable interest in the company, as of the date money or other property is transferred or debt incurred by the company; and
(2) in all other cases, as of the date:
(A) the distribution is authorized, if the payment occurs within one hundred twenty (120) days after that date; or
(B) the payment is made, if the payment occurs more than one hundred twenty (120) days after the distribution is authorized.
(d) A limited liability company's indebtedness to a member
incurred by reason of a distribution made in accordance with this
section is at parity with the company's indebtedness to its general,
unsecured creditors.
(e) A limited liability company's indebtedness, including
indebtedness issued in connection with or as part of a distribution,
is not a liability for purposes of subsection (a) if the terms of the
indebtedness provide that payment of principal and interest are
made only to the extent that a distribution could be made to
members under this section.
(f) If indebtedness is issued as a distribution, each payment of
principal or interest on the indebtedness is treated as a
distribution, the effect of which is measured on the date the
payment is made.
(g) In subsection (a), the term "distribution" does not include
amounts constituting reasonable compensation for present or past
services or reasonable payments made in the ordinary course of
business under a bona fide retirement plan or other benefits
program.
Sec. 6. (a) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (b), if a
member of a member managed limited liability company or
manager of a manager managed limited liability company consents
to a distribution made in violation of section 5 of this chapter and
in consenting to the distribution fails to comply with section 9 of
this chapter, the member or manager is personally liable to the
company for the amount of the distribution that exceeds the
amount that could have been distributed without the violation of
section 5 of this chapter.
(b) To the extent the operating agreement of a member
managed limited liability company expressly relieves a member of
the authority and responsibility to consent to distributions and
imposes that authority and responsibility on one (1) or more other
members, the liability stated in subsection (a) applies to the other
members and not the member that the operating agreement
relieves of authority and responsibility.
(c) A person that receives a distribution knowing that the
distribution to that person was made in violation of section 5 of this
chapter is personally liable to the limited liability company but
only to the extent that the distribution received by the person
exceeded the amount that could have been properly paid under
section 5 of this chapter.
(d) A person against which an action is commenced because the
person is liable under subsection (a) may:
(1) implead any other person that is subject to liability under subsection (a) and seek to compel contribution from the person; and
(2) implead any person that received a distribution in violation of subsection (c) and seek to compel contribution from the person in the amount the person received in violation of subsection (c).
(e) An action under this section is barred if not commenced within two (2) years after the distribution.
Sec. 7. (a) A limited liability company is a member managed limited liability company unless the operating agreement:
(1) expressly provides that:
(A) the company is or will be "manager managed";
(B) the company is or will be "managed by managers"; or
(C) management of the company is or will be "vested in managers"; or
(2) includes words of similar import.
(b) In a member managed limited liability company, the following rules apply:
(1) The management and conduct of the company are vested in the members.
(2) Each member has equal rights in the management and conduct of the company's activities.
(3) A difference arising among members as to a matter in the ordinary course of the activities of the company may be decided by a majority of the members.
(4) An act outside the ordinary course of the activities of the company may be undertaken only with the consent of all members.
(5) The operating agreement may be amended only with the consent of all members.
(c) In a manager managed limited liability company, the following rules apply:
(1) Except as otherwise expressly provided in this article, any matter relating to the activities of the company is decided exclusively by the managers.
(2) Each manager has equal rights in the management and conduct of the activities of the company.
(3) A difference arising among managers as to a matter in the ordinary course of the activities of the company may be decided by a majority of the managers.
(4) The consent of all members is required to:
(A) sell, lease, exchange, or otherwise dispose of all, or substantially all, of the company's property, with or without the good will, outside the ordinary course of the company's activities;
(B) approve a merger, conversion, or domestication under IC 23-18.1-11;
(C) undertake any other act outside the ordinary course of the company's activities; and
(D) amend the operating agreement.
(5) A manager may be chosen at any time by the consent of a majority of the members and remains a manager until a successor has been chosen, unless the manager at an earlier time resigns, is removed, or dies, or, in the case of a manager that is not an individual, terminates. A manager may be removed at any time by the consent of a majority of the members without notice or cause.
(6) A person need not be a member to be a manager, but the dissociation of a member that is also a manager removes the person as a manager. If a person that is both a manager and a member ceases to be a manager, that cessation does not by itself dissociate the person as a member.
(7) A person's ceasing to be a manager does not discharge any debt, obligation, or other liability to the limited liability company or members which the person incurred while a manager.
(d) An action requiring the consent of members under this article may be taken without a meeting, and a member may appoint a proxy or other agent to consent or otherwise act for the member by signing an appointing record, personally or by the member's agent.
(e) The dissolution of a limited liability company does not affect the applicability of this section. However, a person that wrongfully causes dissolution of the company loses the right to participate in management as a member and a manager.
(f) This article does not entitle a member to remuneration for services performed for a member managed limited liability company, except for reasonable compensation for services rendered in winding up the activities of the company.
Sec. 8. (a) A limited liability company shall reimburse for any payment made and indemnify for any debt, obligation, or other liability incurred by a member of a member managed company or the manager of a manager managed company in the course of the
member's or manager's activities on behalf of the company, if, in
making the payment or incurring the debt, obligation, or other
liability, the member or manager complied with the duties stated
in section 5 or 9 of this chapter.
(b) A limited liability company may purchase and maintain
insurance on behalf of a member or manager of the company
against liability asserted against or incurred by the member or
manager in that capacity or arising from that status even if, under
IC 23-18.1-2-9(g), the operating agreement could not eliminate or
limit the person's liability to the company for the conduct giving
rise to the liability.
Sec. 9. (a) A member of a member managed limited liability
company owes to the company and, subject to IC 23-18.1-10-1(b),
the other members the fiduciary duties of loyalty and care stated
in subsections (b) and (c).
(b) The duty of loyalty of a member in a member managed
limited liability company includes the duties:
(1) to account to the company and to hold as trustee for it any
property, profit, or benefit derived by the member:
(A) in the conduct or winding up of the company's
activities;
(B) from a use by the member of the company's property;
or
(C) from the appropriation of a limited liability company
opportunity;
(2) to refrain from dealing with the company in the conduct
or winding up of the company's activities as or on behalf of a
person having an interest adverse to the company; and
(3) to refrain from competing with the company in the
conduct of the company's activities before the dissolution of
the company.
(c) Subject to the business judgment rule, the duty of care of a
member of a member managed limited liability company in the
conduct and winding up of the company's activities is to act with
the care that a person in a like position would reasonably exercise
under similar circumstances and in a manner the member
reasonably believes to be in the best interests of the company. In
discharging this duty, a member may rely in good faith upon
opinions, reports, statements, or other information provided by
another person that the member reasonably believes is a competent
and reliable source for the information.
(d) A member in a member managed limited liability company
or a manager managed limited liability company shall discharge
the duties under this article or under the operating agreement and
exercise any rights consistently with the contractual obligation of
good faith and fair dealing.
(e) It is a defense to a claim under subsection (b)(2) and any
comparable claim in equity or at common law that the transaction
was fair to the limited liability company.
(f) All of the members of a member managed limited liability
company or a manager managed limited liability company may
authorize or ratify, after full disclosure of all material facts, a
specific act or transaction that otherwise would violate the duty of
loyalty.
(g) In a manager managed limited liability company, the
following rules apply:
(1) Subsections (a), (b), (c), and (e) apply to the manager or
managers and not the members.
(2) The duty stated under subsection (b)(3) continues until
winding up is completed.
(3) Subsection (d) applies to the members and managers.
(4) Subsection (f) applies only to the members.
(5) A member does not have any fiduciary duty to the
company or to any other member solely by reason of being a
member.
Sec. 10. (a) In a member managed limited liability company, the
following rules apply:
(1) On reasonable notice, a member may inspect and copy
during regular business hours, at a reasonable location
specified by the company, any record maintained by the
company regarding the company's activities, financial
condition, and other circumstances, to the extent the
information is material to the member's rights and duties
under the operating agreement or this article.
(2) The company shall furnish to each member:
(A) without demand, any information concerning the
company's activities, financial condition, and other
circumstances that the company knows and is material to
the proper exercise of the member's rights and duties
under the operating agreement or this article, except to the
extent the company can establish that it reasonably
believes the member already knows the information; and
(B) on demand, any other information concerning the
company's activities, financial condition, and other
circumstances, except to the extent the demand or
information demanded is unreasonable or otherwise
improper under the circumstances.
(3) The duty to furnish information under subdivision (2) also
applies to each member to the extent the member knows any
of the information described in subdivision (2).
(b) In a manager managed limited liability company, the
following rules apply:
(1) The informational rights stated in subsection (a) and the
duty stated in subsection (a)(3) apply to the managers and not
the members.
(2) During regular business hours and at a reasonable location
specified by the company, a member may obtain from the
company and inspect and copy full information regarding the
activities, financial condition, and other circumstances of the
company as is just and reasonable if:
(A) the member seeks the information for a purpose
material to the member's interest as a member;
(B) the member makes a demand in a record received by
the company, describing with reasonable particularity the
information sought and the purpose for seeking the
information; and
(C) the information sought is directly connected to the
member's purpose.
(3) Within ten (10) days after receiving a demand under
subdivision (2)(B), the company shall in a record inform the
member that made the demand:
(A) of the information that the company will provide in
response to the demand and when and where the company
will provide the information; and
(B) if the company declines to provide any demanded
information, the company's reasons for declining.
(4) Whenever this article or an operating agreement provides
for a member to give or withhold consent to a matter, before
the consent is given or withheld, the company shall, without
demand, provide the member with all information that is
known to the company and is material to the member's
decision.
(c) On ten (10) days demand made in a record received by a
limited liability company, a dissociated member may have access
to information to which the person was entitled while a member if
the information pertains to the period during which the person was
a member, the person seeks the information in good faith, and the
person satisfies the requirements imposed on a member by
subsection (b)(2). The company shall respond to a demand made
under this subsection in the manner provided in subsection (b)(3).
(d) A limited liability company may charge a person that makes
a demand under this section the reasonable costs of copying,
limited to the costs of labor and material.
(e) A member or dissociated member may exercise rights under
this section through an agent or, in the case of an individual under
legal disability, a legal representative. Any restriction or condition
imposed by the operating agreement or under subsection (g)
applies both to the agent or legal representative and the member
or dissociated member.
(f) The rights under this section do not extend to a person as
transferee.
(g) In addition to any restriction or condition stated in its
operating agreement, a limited liability company, as a matter
within the ordinary course of its activities, may impose reasonable
restrictions and conditions on access to and use of information to
be furnished under this section, including designating information
confidential and imposing nondisclosure and safeguarding
obligations on the recipient. In a dispute concerning the
reasonableness of a restriction under this subsection, the company
has the burden of proving reasonableness.
Chapter 6. Transferable Interests and Rights of Transferees and
Creditors
Sec. 1. A transferable interest is personal property.
Sec. 2. (a) A transfer, in whole or in part, of a transferable
interest:
(1) is permissible;
(2) does not by itself cause a member's dissociation or a
dissolution and winding up of the limited liability company's
activities; and
(3) subject to section 4 of this chapter, does not entitle the
transferee to:
(A) participate in the management or conduct of the
company's activities; or
(B) except as otherwise provided in subsection (c), have
access to records or other information concerning the
company's activities.
(b) A transferee has the right to receive, in accordance with the
transfer, distributions to which the transferor would otherwise be
entitled.
(c) In a dissolution and winding up of a limited liability
company, a transferee is entitled to an account of the company's
transactions only from the date of dissolution.
(d) A transferable interest may be evidenced by a certificate of
the interest issued by the limited liability company in a record, and,
subject to this section, the interest represented by the certificate
may be transferred by a transfer of the certificate.
(e) A limited liability company need not give effect to a
transferee's rights under this section until the company has notice
of the transfer.
(f) A transfer of a transferable interest in violation of a
restriction on transfer contained in the operating agreement is
ineffective as to a person having notice of the restriction at the time
of transfer.
(g) Except as otherwise provided in IC 23-18.1-7-2(4)(B), when
a member transfers a transferable interest, the transferor retains
the rights of a member other than the interest in distributions
transferred and retains all duties and obligations of a member.
(h) When a member transfers a transferable interest to a person
that becomes a member with respect to the transferred interest, the
transferee is liable for the member's obligations under
IC 23-18.1-5-3 and IC 23-18.1-5-6(c) known to the transferee when
the transferee becomes a member.
Sec. 3. (a) On application by a judgment creditor of a member
or transferee, a court may enter a charging order against the
transferable interest of the judgment debtor for the unsatisfied
amount of the judgment. A charging order constitutes a lien on a
judgment debtor's transferable interest and requires the limited
liability company to pay over to the person to which the charging
order was issued any distribution that would otherwise be paid to
the judgment debtor.
(b) To the extent necessary to effectuate the collection of
distributions under a charging order in effect under subsection (a),
the court may:
(1) appoint a receiver of the distributions subject to the
charging order, with the power to make all inquiries the
judgment debtor might have made; and
(2) make all other orders necessary to give effect to the
charging order.
(c) Upon a showing that distributions under a charging order
will not pay the judgment debt within a reasonable time, the court
may foreclose the lien and order the sale of the transferable
interest. The purchaser at the foreclosure sale obtains only the
transferable interest, does not thereby become a member, and is
subject to section 2 of this chapter.
(d) At any time before foreclosure under subsection (c), the
member or transferee whose transferable interest is subject to a
charging order under subsection (a) may extinguish the charging
order by satisfying the judgment and filing a certified copy of the
satisfaction with the court that issued the charging order.
(e) At any time before foreclosure under subsection (c), a limited
liability company or one (1) or more members whose transferable
interests are not subject to the charging order may pay to the
judgment creditor the full amount due under the judgment and
thereby succeed to the rights of the judgment creditor, including
the charging order.
(f) This article does not deprive any member or transferee of the
benefit of any exemption laws applicable to the member's or
transferee's transferable interest.
(g) This section provides the exclusive remedy by which a
person seeking to enforce a judgment against a member or
transferee may, in the capacity of judgment creditor, satisfy the
judgment from the judgment debtor's transferable interest.
Sec. 4. If a member dies, the deceased member's personal
representative or other legal representative may exercise the rights
of a transferee provided in section 2(c) of this chapter and, for the
purposes of settling the estate, the rights of a current member
under IC 23-18.1-5-10.
Chapter 7. Member's Dissociation
Sec. 1. (a) A person has the power to dissociate as a member at
any time, rightfully or wrongfully, by withdrawing as a member by
express will under section 2(1) of this chapter.
(b) A person's dissociation from a limited liability company is
wrongful only if the dissociation:
(1) is in breach of an express provision of the operating
agreement; or
(2) occurs before the termination of the company and:
(A) the person withdraws as a member by express will;
(B) the person is expelled as a member by judicial order
under section 2(5) of this chapter;
(C) the person is dissociated under section 2(7)(A) of this
chapter by becoming a debtor in bankruptcy; or
(D) in the case of a person that is not a trust other than a
business trust, an estate, or an individual, the person is
expelled or otherwise dissociated as a member because it
willfully dissolved or terminated.
(c) A person that wrongfully dissociates as a member is liable to
the limited liability company and, subject to IC 23-18.1-10-1, to the
other members for damages caused by the dissociation. The
liability is in addition to any other debt, obligation, or other
liability of the member to the company or the other members.
Sec. 2. A person is dissociated as a member from a limited
liability company when:
(1) the company has notice of the person's express will to
withdraw as a member, but, if the person specified a
withdrawal date later than the date the company had notice,
on that later date;
(2) an event stated in the operating agreement as causing the
person's dissociation occurs;
(3) the person is expelled as a member under the operating
agreement;
(4) the person is expelled as a member by the unanimous
consent of the other members if:
(A) it is unlawful to carry on the company's activities with
the person as a member;
(B) there has been a transfer of all of the person's
transferable interest in the company, other than:
(i) a transfer for security purposes; or
(ii) a charging order in effect under IC 23-18.1-6-3 that
has not been foreclosed;
(C) the person is a corporation and, within ninety (90) days
after the company notifies the person that it will be
expelled as a member because the person has filed a
certificate of dissolution or the equivalent, its charter has
been revoked, or its right to conduct business has been
suspended by the jurisdiction of its incorporation, the
certificate of dissolution has not been revoked or its
charter or right to conduct business has not been
reinstated; or
(D) the person is a limited liability company or partnership
that has been dissolved and whose business is being wound
up;
(5) on application by the company, the person is expelled as a
member by judicial order because the person:
(A) has engaged, or is engaging, in wrongful conduct that
has adversely and materially affected, or will adversely
and materially affect, the company's activities;
(B) has willfully or persistently committed, or is willfully
and persistently committing, a material breach of the
operating agreement or the person's duties or obligations
under IC 23-18.1-5-9; or
(C) has engaged in, or is engaging in, conduct relating to
the company's activities that makes it not reasonably
practicable to carry on the activities with the person as a
member;
(6) in the case of a person who is an individual:
(A) the person dies; or
(B) in a member managed limited liability company:
(i) a guardian or general conservator for the person is
appointed; or
(ii) there is a judicial order that the person has otherwise
become incapable of performing the person's duties as a
member under this article or the operating agreement;
(7) in a member managed limited liability company, the
person:
(A) becomes a debtor in bankruptcy;
(B) executes an assignment for the benefit of creditors; or
(C) seeks, consents to, or acquiesces in the appointment of
a trustee, receiver, or liquidator of the person or of all or
substantially all of the person's property;
(8) in the case of a person that is a trust or is acting as a
member by virtue of being a trustee of a trust, the trust's
entire transferable interest in the company is distributed;
(9) in the case of a person that is an estate or is acting as a
member by virtue of being a personal representative of an
estate, the estate's entire transferable interest in the company
is distributed;
(10) in the case of a member that is not an individual,
partnership, limited liability company, corporation, trust, or
estate, the member is terminated;
(11) the company participates in a merger under
IC 23-18.1-11, if:
(A) the company is not the surviving entity; or
(B) otherwise as a result of the merger, the person ceases
to be a member;
(12) the company participates in a conversion under
IC 23-18.1-11;
(13) the company participates in a domestication under IC 23-18.1-11, if, as a result of the domestication, the person ceases to be a member; or
(14) the company terminates.
Sec. 3. (a) When a person is dissociated as a member of a limited liability company:
(1) the person's right to participate as a member in the management and conduct of the company's activities terminates;
(2) if the company is member managed, the person's fiduciary duties as a member end with regard to matters arising and events occurring after the person's dissociation; and
(3) subject to IC 23-18.1-6-4 and IC 23-18.1-11, any transferable interest owned by the person immediately before dissociation in the person's capacity as a member is owned by the person solely as a transferee.
(b) A person's dissociation as a member of a limited liability company does not of itself discharge the person from any debt, obligation, or other liability to the company or the other members that the person incurred while a member.
Chapter 8. Dissolution and Winding Up
Sec. 1. (a) A limited liability company is dissolved, and its activities must be wound up, upon the occurrence of any of the following:
(1) An event or circumstance that the operating agreement states causes dissolution.
(2) The consent of all the members.
(3) The passage of ninety (90) consecutive days during which the company has no members.
(4) On application by a member, the entry by the appropriate court of an order dissolving the company on the grounds that:
(A) the conduct of all or substantially all of the company's activities is unlawful; or
(B) it is not reasonably practicable to carry on the company's activities in conformity with the certificate of organization and the operating agreement.
(5) On application by a member, the entry by the appropriate court of an order dissolving the company on the grounds that the managers or those members in control of the company:
(A) have acted, are acting, or will act in a manner that is illegal or fraudulent; or
(B) have acted or are acting in a manner that is oppressive
and was, is, or will be directly harmful to the applicant.
(b) In a proceeding brought under subsection (a)(5), the court
may order a remedy other than dissolution.
Sec. 2. (a) A dissolved limited liability company shall wind up its
activities, and the company continues after dissolution only for the
purpose of winding up.
(b) In winding up its activities, a limited liability company:
(1) shall discharge the company's debts, obligations, or other
liabilities, settle and close the company's activities, and
marshal and distribute the assets of the company; and
(2) may:
(A) deliver to the secretary of state for filing a statement of
dissolution stating the name of the company and that the
company is dissolved;
(B) preserve the company activities and property as a
going concern for a reasonable time;
(C) prosecute and defend actions and proceedings, whether
civil, criminal, or administrative;
(D) transfer the company's property;
(E) settle disputes by mediation or arbitration;
(F) deliver to the secretary of state for filing a statement of
termination stating the name of the company and that the
company is terminated; and
(G) perform other acts necessary or appropriate to the
winding up.
(c) If a dissolved limited liability company has no members, the
legal representative of the last person to have been a member may
wind up the activities of the company. If the person does so, the
person has the powers of a sole manager under IC 23-18.1-5-7(c)
and is considered to be a manager for purposes of
IC 23-18.1-4-4(a)(2).
(d) If the legal representative under subsection (c) declines or
fails to wind up the company's activities, a person may be
appointed to do so by the consent of transferees owning a majority
of the rights to receive distributions as transferees at the time the
consent is to be effective. A person appointed under this
subsection:
(1) has the powers of a sole manager under IC 23-18.1-5-7(c)
and is considered to be a manager for purposes of
IC 23-18.1-4-4(a)(2); and
(2) shall promptly deliver to the secretary of state for filing an
amendment to the company's certificate of organization to:
(A) state that the company has no members;
(B) state that the person has been appointed under this subsection to wind up the company; and
(C) provide the street and mailing addresses of the person.
(e) The appropriate court may order judicial supervision of the winding up of a dissolved limited liability company, including the appointment of a person to wind up the company's activities:
(1) on application of a member, if the applicant establishes good cause;
(2) on the application of a transferee, if:
(A) the company does not have any members;
(B) the legal representative of the last person to have been a member declines or fails to wind up the company's activities; and
(C) within a reasonable time following the dissolution a person has not been appointed under subsection (d); or
(3) in connection with a proceeding under section 1(a)(4) or 1(a)(5) of this chapter.
Sec. 3. (a) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (d), a dissolved limited liability company may give notice of a known claim under subsection (b), which has the effect as provided in subsection (c).
(b) A dissolved limited liability company may in a record notify its known claimants of the dissolution. The notice must:
(1) specify the information required to be included in a claim;
(2) provide a mailing address to which the claim is to be sent;
(3) state the deadline for receipt of the claim, which may not be less than one hundred twenty (120) days after the date the notice is received by the claimant; and
(4) state that the claim will be barred if not received by the deadline.
(c) A claim against a dissolved limited liability company is barred if the requirements of subsection (b) are met and:
(1) the claim is not received by the specified deadline; or
(2) if the claim is timely received but rejected by the company:
(A) the company causes the claimant to receive a notice in a record stating that the claim is rejected and will be barred unless the claimant commences an action against the company to enforce the claim within ninety (90) days after the claimant receives the notice; and
(B) the claimant does not commence the required action within the ninety (90) days.
(d) This section does not apply to a claim based on an event occurring after the effective date of dissolution or a liability that on that date is contingent.
Sec. 4. (a) A dissolved limited liability company may publish notice of its dissolution and request persons having claims against the company to present them in accordance with the notice.
(b) The notice authorized by subsection (a) must:
(1) be published at least once in a newspaper of general circulation in the county in this state in which the dissolved limited liability company's principal office is located or, if it has none in this state, in the county in which the company's designated office is or was last located;
(2) describe the information required to be contained in a claim and provide a mailing address to which the claim is to be sent; and
(3) state that a claim against the company is barred unless an action to enforce the claim is commenced within five (5) years after publication of the notice.
(c) If a dissolved limited liability company publishes a notice in accordance with subsection (b), unless the claimant commences an action to enforce the claim against the company within five (5) years after the publication date of the notice, the claim of each of the following claimants is barred:
(1) A claimant that did not receive notice in a record under section 3 of this chapter.
(2) A claimant whose claim was timely sent to the company but not acted on.
(3) A claimant whose claim is contingent at, or based on an event occurring after, the effective date of dissolution.
(d) A claim not barred under this section may be enforced:
(1) against a dissolved limited liability company to the extent of its undistributed assets; and
(2) if assets of the company have been distributed after dissolution, against a member or transferee to the extent of that person's proportionate share of the claim or of the assets distributed to the member or transferee after dissolution, whichever is less, but a person's total liability for all claims under this subdivision does not exceed the total amount of assets distributed to the person after dissolution.
Sec. 5. (a) The secretary of state may dissolve a limited liability company administratively if the company does not:
(1) pay, within sixty (60) days after the due date, any fee, tax,
or penalty due to the secretary of state under this article or
law other than this article; or
(2) deliver, within sixty (60) days after the due date, its
biennial report to the secretary of state.
(b) If the secretary of state determines that a ground exists for
administratively dissolving a limited liability company, the
secretary of state shall file a record of the determination and serve
the company with a copy of the filed record.
(c) If within sixty (60) days after service of the copy under
subsection (b) a limited liability company does not correct each
ground for dissolution or demonstrate to the reasonable
satisfaction of the secretary of state that each ground determined
by the secretary of state does not exist, the secretary of state shall
dissolve the company administratively by preparing, signing, and
filing a declaration of dissolution that states the grounds for
dissolution. The secretary of state shall serve the company with a
copy of the filed declaration.
(d) A limited liability company that has been administratively
dissolved continues in existence but, subject to section 6 of this
chapter, may carry on only activities necessary to wind up its
activities and liquidate its assets under sections 2 and 8 of this
chapter and to notify claimants under sections 3 and 4 of this
chapter.
(e) The administrative dissolution of a limited liability company
does not terminate the authority of its agent for service of process.
Sec. 6. (a) A limited liability company that has been
administratively dissolved may apply to the secretary of state for
reinstatement within two (2) years after the effective date of
dissolution. The application must be delivered to the secretary of
state for filing and state:
(1) the name of the company and the effective date of its
dissolution;
(2) that the grounds for dissolution did not exist or have been
eliminated; and
(3) that the company's name satisfies the requirements of
IC 23-18.1-2-7.
(b) If the secretary of state determines that an application under
subsection (a) contains the required information and that the
information is correct, the secretary of state shall prepare a
declaration of reinstatement that states this determination, sign
and file the original of the declaration of reinstatement, and serve
the limited liability company with a copy.
(c) When a reinstatement becomes effective, it relates back to and takes effect as of the effective date of the administrative dissolution and the limited liability company may resume its activities as if the dissolution had not occurred.
Sec. 7. (a) If the secretary of state rejects a limited liability company's application for reinstatement following administrative dissolution, the secretary of state shall prepare, sign, and file a notice that explains the reason for rejection and serve the company with a copy of the notice.
(b) Within thirty (30) days after service of a notice of rejection of reinstatement under subsection (a), a limited liability company may appeal from the rejection by petitioning the appropriate court to set aside the dissolution. The petition must be served on the secretary of state and contain a copy of the secretary of state's declaration of dissolution, the company's application for reinstatement, and the secretary of state's notice of rejection.
(c) The court may order the secretary of state to reinstate a dissolved limited liability company or take other action the court considers appropriate.
Sec. 8. (a) In winding up its activities, a limited liability company must apply its assets to discharge its obligations to creditors, including members that are creditors.
(b) After a limited liability company complies with subsection (a), any surplus must be distributed in the following order, subject to any charging order in effect under IC 23-18.1-6-3:
(1) to each person owning a transferable interest that reflects contributions made by a member and not previously returned, an amount equal to the value of the unreturned contributions; and
(2) in equal shares among members and dissociated members, except to the extent necessary to comply with any transfer effective under IC 23-18.1-6-2.
(c) If a limited liability company does not have sufficient surplus to comply with subsection (b)(1), any surplus must be distributed among the owners of transferable interests in proportion to the value of their respective unreturned contributions.
(d) All distributions made under subsections (b) and (c) must be paid in money.
Chapter 9. Foreign Limited Liability Companies
Sec. 1. (a) The law of the state or other jurisdiction under which a foreign limited liability company is formed governs:
(1) the internal affairs of the company; and
(2) the liability of a member as member and a manager as manager for the debts, obligations, or other liabilities of the company.
(b) A foreign limited liability company may not be denied a certificate of authority by reason of any difference between the law of the jurisdiction under which the company is formed and the law of this state.
(c) A certificate of authority does not authorize a foreign limited liability company to engage in any business or exercise any power that a limited liability company may not engage in or exercise in this state.
Sec. 2. (a) A foreign limited liability company may apply for a certificate of authority to transact business in this state by delivering an application to the secretary of state for filing. The application must state:
(1) the name of the company and, if the name does not comply with IC 23-18.1-2-7, an alternate name adopted as provided under section 5(a) of this chapter;
(2) the name of the state or other jurisdiction under whose law the company is formed;
(3) the street and mailing addresses of the company's principal office and, if the law of the jurisdiction under which the company is formed requires the company to maintain an office in that jurisdiction, the street and mailing addresses of the required office; and
(4) the name and street and mailing addresses of the company's initial agent for service of process in this state.
(b) A foreign limited liability company shall deliver with a completed application under subsection (a) a certificate of existence or a record of similar import signed by the secretary of state or other official having custody of the company's publicly filed records in the state or other jurisdiction under whose law the company is formed.
Sec. 3. (a) Activities of a foreign limited liability company that do not constitute transacting business in this state within the meaning of this article include:
(1) maintaining, defending, or settling an action or proceeding;
(2) carrying on any activity concerning its internal affairs, including holding meetings of its members or managers;
(3) maintaining accounts in financial institutions;
(4) maintaining offices or agencies for the transfer, exchange,
and registration of the company's own securities or
maintaining trustees or depositories with respect to those
securities;
(5) selling through independent contractors;
(6) soliciting or obtaining orders, whether by mail or
electronic means or through employees or agents or
otherwise, if the orders require acceptance outside this state
before they become contracts;
(7) creating or acquiring indebtedness, mortgages, or security
interests in real or personal property;
(8) securing or collecting debts or enforcing mortgages or
other security interests in property securing the debts and
holding, protecting, or maintaining property so acquired;
(9) conducting an isolated transaction that is completed within
thirty (30) days and is not in the course of similar
transactions; and
(10) transacting business in interstate commerce.
(b) For purposes of this article, the ownership in this state of
income producing real property or tangible personal property,
other than property excluded under subsection (a), constitutes
transacting business in this state.
(c) This section does not apply in determining the contacts or
activities that may subject a foreign limited liability company to
service of process, taxation, or regulation under law of this state
other than this article.
Sec. 4. Unless the secretary of state determines that an
application for a certificate of authority does not comply with the
filing requirements of this article, the secretary of state, upon
payment of all filing fees, shall file the application of a foreign
limited liability company, prepare, sign, and file a certificate of
authority to transact business in this state, and send a copy of the
filed certificate, together with a receipt for the fees, to the company
or its representative.
Sec. 5. (a) A foreign limited liability company whose name does
not comply with IC 23-18.1-2-7 may not obtain a certificate of
authority until it adopts, for the purpose of transacting business in
this state, an alternate name that complies with IC 23-18.1-2-7. A
foreign limited liability company that adopts an alternate name
under this subsection and obtains a certificate of authority with the
alternate name need not comply with IC 23-15-1. After obtaining
a certificate of authority with an alternate name, a foreign limited
liability company shall transact business in this state under the
alternate name unless the company is authorized under IC 23-15-1
to transact business in this state under another name.
(b) If a foreign limited liability company authorized to transact
business in this state changes its name to a name that does not
comply with IC 23-18.1-2-7, it may not thereafter transact business
in this state until it complies with subsection (a) and obtains an
amended certificate of authority.
Sec. 6. (a) A certificate of authority of a foreign limited liability
company to transact business in this state may be revoked by the
secretary of state in the manner provided in subsections (b) and (c)
if the company does not:
(1) pay, within sixty (60) days after the due date, any fee, tax,
or penalty due to the secretary of state under this article or
law other than this article;
(2) deliver, within sixty (60) days after the due date, its
biennial report required under IC 23-18.1-3-9;
(3) appoint and maintain an agent for service of process as
required by IC 23-18.1-2-12(b); or
(4) deliver for filing a statement of a change under
IC 23-18.1-2-13 within thirty (30) days after a change has
occurred in the name or address of the agent.
(b) To revoke a certificate of authority of a foreign limited
liability company, the secretary of state must prepare, sign, and file
a notice of revocation and send a copy to the company's agent for
service of process in this state, or if the company does not appoint
and maintain a proper agent in this state, to the company's
designated office. The notice must state:
(1) the revocation's effective date, which must be at least sixty
(60) days after the date the secretary of state sends the copy;
and
(2) the grounds for revocation under subsection (a).
(c) The authority of a foreign limited liability company to
transact business in this state ceases on the effective date of the
notice of revocation unless before that date the company cures each
ground for revocation stated in the notice filed under subsection
(b). If the company cures each ground, the secretary of state shall
file a record so stating.
Sec. 7. To cancel its certificate of authority to transact business
in this state, a foreign limited liability company must deliver to the
secretary of state for filing a notice of cancellation stating the name
of the company and that the company desires to cancel its
certificate of authority. The certificate is canceled when the notice
becomes effective.
Sec. 8. (a) A foreign limited liability company transacting
business in this state may not maintain an action or proceeding in
this state unless it has a certificate of authority to transact business
in this state.
(b) The failure of a foreign limited liability company to have a
certificate of authority to transact business in this state does not
impair the validity of a contract or act of the company or prevent
the company from defending an action or proceeding in this state.
(c) A member or manager of a foreign limited liability company
is not liable for the debts, obligations, or other liabilities of the
company solely because the company transacted business in this
state without a certificate of authority.
(d) If a foreign limited liability company transacts business in
this state without a certificate of authority or cancels its certificate
of authority, it appoints the secretary of state as its agent for
service of process for rights of action arising out of the transaction
of business in this state.
Sec. 9. The attorney general may maintain an action to enjoin
a foreign limited liability company from transacting business in
this state in violation of this article.
Chapter 10. Actions by Members
Sec. 1. (a) Subject to subsection (b), a member may maintain a
direct action against another member, a manager, or the limited
liability company to enforce the member's rights and otherwise
protect the member's interests, including rights and interests under
the operating agreement or this article or arising independently of
the membership relationship.
(b) A member maintaining a direct action under this section
must plead and prove an actual or threatened injury that is not
solely the result of an injury suffered or threatened to be suffered
by the limited liability company.
Sec. 2. A member may maintain a derivative action to enforce
a right of a limited liability company if:
(1) the member first makes a demand on the other members
in a member managed limited liability company, or the
managers of a manager managed limited liability company,
requesting that they cause the company to bring an action to
enforce the right, and the managers or other members do not
bring the action within a reasonable time; or
(2) a demand under subdivision (1) would be futile.
Sec. 3. (a) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (b), a
derivative action under section 2 of this chapter may be maintained
only by a person that is a member at the time the action is
commenced and remains a member while the action continues.
(b) If the sole plaintiff in a derivative action dies while the action
is pending, the court may permit another member of the limited
liability company to be substituted as plaintiff.
Sec. 4. In a derivative action under section 2 of this chapter, the
complaint must state with particularity:
(1) the date and content of the plaintiff's demand and the
response to the demand by the managers or other members;
or
(2) if a demand has not been made, the reasons a demand
under section 2(1) of this chapter would be futile.
Sec. 5. (a) If a limited liability company is named as or made a
party in a derivative proceeding, the company may appoint a
special litigation committee to investigate the claims asserted in the
proceeding and determine whether pursuing the action is in the
best interests of the company. If the company appoints a special
litigation committee, on motion by the committee made in the name
of the company, except for good cause shown, the court shall stay
discovery for the time reasonably necessary to permit the
committee to make its investigation. This subsection does not
prevent the court from enforcing a person's right to information
under IC 23-18.1-5-10 or, for good cause shown, granting
extraordinary relief in the form of a temporary restraining order
or preliminary injunction.
(b) A special litigation committee may be composed of one (1) or
more disinterested and independent individuals, who may be
members.
(c) A special litigation committee may be appointed:
(1) in a member managed limited liability company:
(A) by the consent of a majority of the members not named
as defendants or plaintiffs in the proceeding; and
(B) if all members are named as defendants or plaintiffs in
the proceeding, by a majority of the members named as
defendants; or
(2) in a manager managed limited liability company:
(A) by a majority of the managers not named as
defendants or plaintiffs in the proceeding; and
(B) if all managers are named as defendants or plaintiffs in
the proceeding, by a majority of the managers named as
defendants.
(d) After appropriate investigation, a special litigation committee may determine that it is in the best interests of the limited liability company that the proceeding:
(1) continue under the control of the plaintiff;
(2) continue under the control of the committee;
(3) be settled on terms approved by the committee; or
(4) be dismissed.
(e) After making a determination under subsection (d), a special litigation committee shall file with the court a statement of its determination and its report supporting its determination, giving notice to the plaintiff. The court shall determine whether the members of the committee were disinterested and independent and whether the committee conducted its investigation and made its recommendation in good faith, independently, and with reasonable care, with the committee having the burden of proof. If the court finds that the members of the committee were disinterested and independent and that the committee acted in good faith, independently, and with reasonable care, the court shall enforce the determination of the committee. Otherwise, the court shall dissolve the stay of discovery entered under subsection (a) and allow the action to proceed under the direction of the plaintiff.
Sec. 6. (a) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (b):
(1) any proceeds or other benefits of a derivative action under section 2 of this chapter, whether by judgment, compromise, or settlement, belong to the limited liability company and not to the plaintiff; and
(2) if the plaintiff receives any proceeds, the plaintiff shall remit them immediately to the company.
(b) If a derivative action under 2 of this chapter is successful in whole or in part, the court may award the plaintiff reasonable expenses, including reasonable attorney's fees and costs, from the recovery of the limited liability company.
Chapter 11. Merger, Conversion, and Domestication
Sec. 1. The following definitions apply throughout this chapter:
(1) "Constituent limited liability company" means a constituent organization that is a limited liability company.
(2) "Constituent organization" means an organization that is party to a merger.
(3) "Converted organization" means the organization into which a converting organization converts as provided under sections 6 through 9 of this chapter.
(4) "Converting limited liability company" means a
converting organization that is a limited liability company.
(5) "Converting organization" means an organization that
converts into another organization as provided under section
6 of this chapter.
(6) "Domesticated company" means the company that exists
after a domesticating foreign limited liability company or
limited liability company effects a domestication as provided
under sections 10 through 13 of this chapter.
(7) "Domesticating company" means the company that effects
a domestication as provided under sections 10 through 13 of
this chapter.
(8) "Governing statute" means the statute that governs an
organization's internal affairs.
(9) "Organization" means a general partnership, including a
limited liability partnership, limited partnership, including a
limited liability limited partnership, limited liability company,
business trust, corporation, or any other person having a
governing statute. The term includes a domestic or foreign
organization regardless of whether organized for profit.
(10) "Organizational documents" means:
(A) for a domestic or foreign general partnership, its
partnership agreement;
(B) for a limited partnership or foreign limited
partnership, its certificate of limited partnership and
partnership agreement;
(C) for a domestic or foreign limited liability company, its
certificate or articles of organization and operating
agreement, or comparable records as provided in its
governing statute;
(D) for a business trust, its agreement of trust and
declaration of trust;
(E) for a domestic or foreign corporation for profit, its
articles of incorporation, bylaws, and other agreements
among its shareholders that are authorized by its
governing statute, or comparable records as provided in its
governing statute; and
(F) for any other organization, the basic records that
create the organization and determine its internal
governance and the relations among the persons that own
it, have an interest in it, or are members of it.
(11) "Personal liability" means liability for a debt, obligation,
or other liability of an organization that is imposed on a
person that co-owns, has an interest in, or is a member of the
organization:
(A) by the governing statute solely by reason of the person
co-owning, having an interest in, or being a member of the
organization; or
(B) by the organization's organizational documents under
a provision of the governing statute authorizing those
documents to make one (1) or more specified persons liable
for all or specified debts, obligations, or other liabilities of
the organization solely by reason of the person or persons
co-owning, having an interest in, or being a member of the
organization.
(12) "Surviving organization" means an organization into
which one (1) or more other organizations are merged
whether the organization preexisted the merger or was
created by the merger.
Sec. 2. (a) A limited liability company may merge with one (1)
or more other constituent organizations under this section, sections
3 through 5 of this chapter, and a plan of merger, if:
(1) the governing statute of each of the other organizations
authorizes the merger;
(2) the merger is not prohibited by the law of a jurisdiction
that enacted any of the governing statutes; and
(3) each of the other organizations complies with its governing
statute in effecting the merger.
(b) A plan of merger must be in a record and must include:
(1) the name and form of each constituent organization;
(2) the name and form of the surviving organization and, if
the surviving organization is to be created by the merger, a
statement to that effect;
(3) the terms and conditions of the merger, including the
manner and basis for converting the interests in each
constituent organization into any combination of money,
interests in the surviving organization, and other
consideration;
(4) if the surviving organization is to be created by the
merger, the surviving organization's organizational
documents that are proposed to be in a record; and
(5) if the surviving organization is not to be created by the
merger, any amendments to be made by the merger to the
surviving organization's organizational documents that are,
or are proposed to be, in a record.
Sec. 3. (a) Subject to section 14 of this chapter, a plan of merger must be consented to by all the members of a constituent limited liability company.
(b) Subject to section 14 of this chapter and any contractual rights, after a merger is approved, and at any time before articles of merger are delivered to the secretary of state for filing under section 4 of this chapter, a constituent limited liability company may amend the plan or abandon the merger:
(1) as provided in the plan; or
(2) except as otherwise prohibited in the plan, with the same consent as was required to approve the plan.
Sec. 4. (a) After each constituent organization has approved a merger, articles of merger must be signed on behalf of:
(1) each constituent limited liability company, as provided in IC 23-18.1-3-3(a); and
(2) each other constituent organization, as provided in its governing statute.
(b) Articles of merger under this section must include:
(1) the name and form of each constituent organization and the jurisdiction of its governing statute;
(2) the name and form of the surviving organization, the jurisdiction of its governing statute, and, if the surviving organization is created by the merger, a statement to that effect;
(3) the date the merger is effective under the governing statute of the surviving organization;
(4) if the surviving organization is to be created by the merger:
(A) if it will be a limited liability company, the company's certificate of organization; or
(B) if it will be an organization other than a limited liability company, the organizational document that creates the organization that is in a public record;
(5) if the surviving organization preexists the merger, any amendments provided for in the plan of merger for the organizational document that created the organization that are in a public record;
(6) a statement as to each constituent organization that the merger was approved as required by the organization's governing statute;
(7) if the surviving organization is a foreign organization not authorized to transact business in this state, the street and
mailing addresses of an office that the secretary of state may
use for purposes of section 5(b) of this chapter; and
(8) any additional information required by the governing
statute of any constituent organization.
(c) Each constituent limited liability company shall deliver the
articles of merger for filing in the office of the secretary of state.
(d) A merger becomes effective under this article:
(1) if the surviving organization is a limited liability company,
upon the later of:
(A) compliance with subsection (c); or
(B) subject to IC 23-18.1-3-5(c), as specified in the articles
of merger; or
(2) if the surviving organization is not a limited liability
company, as provided by the governing statute of the
surviving organization.
Sec. 5. (a) When a merger becomes effective:
(1) the surviving organization continues or comes into
existence;
(2) each constituent organization that merges into the
surviving organization ceases to exist as a separate entity;
(3) all property owned by each constituent organization that
ceases to exist vests in the surviving organization;
(4) all debts, obligations, or other liabilities of each constituent
organization that ceases to exist continue as debts, obligations,
or other liabilities of the surviving organization;
(5) an action or proceeding pending by or against any
constituent organization that ceases to exist may be continued
as if the merger had not occurred;
(6) except as prohibited by other law, all of the rights,
privileges, immunities, powers, and purposes of each
constituent organization that ceases to exist vest in the
surviving organization;
(7) except as otherwise provided in the plan of merger, the
terms and conditions of the plan of merger take effect; and
(8) except as otherwise agreed, if a constituent limited liability
company ceases to exist, the merger does not dissolve the
limited liability company for purposes of IC 23-18.1-8;
(9) if the surviving organization is created by the merger:
(A) if it is a limited liability company, the certificate of
organization becomes effective; or
(B) if it is an organization other than a limited liability
company, the organizational document that creates the
organization becomes effective; and
(10) if the surviving organization preexisted the merger, any
amendments provided for in the articles of merger for the
organizational document that created the organization
become effective.
(b) A surviving organization that is a foreign organization
consents to the jurisdiction of the courts of this state to enforce any
debt, obligation, or other liability owed by a constituent
organization, if before the merger the constituent organization was
subject to suit in this state on the debt, obligation, or other liability.
A surviving organization that is a foreign organization and not
authorized to transact business in this state appoints the secretary
of state as its agent for service of process for purposes of enforcing
a debt, obligation, or other liability under this subsection. Service
on the secretary of state under this subsection must be made in the
same manner and has the same consequences as in
IC 23-18.1-2-15(c) and IC 23-18.1-2-15(d).
Sec. 6. (a) An organization other than a limited liability
company or a foreign limited liability company may convert to a
limited liability company, and a limited liability company may
convert to an organization other than a foreign limited liability
company under this section, sections 7 through 9 of this chapter,
and a plan of conversion, if:
(1) the other organization's governing statute authorizes the
conversion;
(2) the conversion is not prohibited by the law of the
jurisdiction that enacted the other organization's governing
statute; and
(3) the other organization complies with its governing statute
in effecting the conversion.
(b) A plan of conversion must be in a record and must include:
(1) the name and form of the organization before conversion;
(2) the name and form of the organization after conversion;
(3) the terms and conditions of the conversion, including the
manner and basis for converting interests in the converting
organization into any combination of money, interests in the
converted organization, and other consideration; and
(4) the organizational documents of the converted
organization that are, or are proposed to be, in a record.
Sec. 7. (a) Subject to section 14 of this chapter, a plan of
conversion must be consented to by all the members of a
converting limited liability company.
(b) Subject to section 14 of this chapter and any contractual rights, after a conversion is approved, and at any time before articles of conversion are delivered to the secretary of state for filing under section 8 of this chapter, a converting limited liability company may amend the plan or abandon the conversion:
(1) as provided in the plan; or
(2) except as otherwise prohibited in the plan, by the same consent as was required to approve the plan.
Sec. 8. (a) After a plan of conversion is approved:
(1) a converting limited liability company shall deliver to the secretary of state for filing articles of conversion, which must be signed as provided in IC 23-18.1-3-3(a) and must include:
(A) a statement that the limited liability company has been converted into another organization;
(B) the name and form of the organization and the jurisdiction of its governing statute;
(C) the date the conversion is effective under the governing statute of the converted organization;
(D) a statement that the conversion was approved as required by this article;
(E) a statement that the conversion was approved as required by the governing statute of the converted organization; and
(F) if the converted organization is a foreign organization not authorized to transact business in this state, the street and mailing addresses of an office that the secretary of state may use for the purposes of section 9(c) of this chapter; and
(2) if the converting organization is not a converting limited liability company, the converting organization shall deliver to the secretary of state for filing a certificate of organization, which must include, in addition to the information required by IC 23-18.1-3-1(b):
(A) a statement that the converted organization was converted from another organization;
(B) the name and form of that converting organization and the jurisdiction of its governing statute; and
(C) a statement that the conversion was approved in a manner that complied with the converting organization's governing statute.
(b) A conversion becomes effective:
(1) if the converted organization is a limited liability company,
when the certificate of organization takes effect; and
(2) if the converted organization is not a limited liability
company, as provided by the governing statute of the
converted organization.
Sec. 9. (a) An organization that has been converted as provided
by this article is for all purposes the same entity that existed before
the conversion.
(b) When a conversion takes effect:
(1) all property owned by the converting organization remains
vested in the converted organization;
(2) all debts, obligations, or other liabilities of the converting
organization continue as debts, obligations, or other liabilities
of the converted organization;
(3) an action or proceeding pending by or against the
converting organization may be continued as if the conversion
had not occurred;
(4) except as prohibited by law other than this article, all of
the rights, privileges, immunities, powers, and purposes of the
converting organization remain vested in the converted
organization;
(5) except as otherwise provided in the plan of conversion, the
terms and conditions of the plan of conversion take effect; and
(6) except as otherwise agreed, the conversion does not
dissolve a converting limited liability company for the
purposes of IC 23-18.1-8.
(c) A converted organization that is a foreign organization
consents to the jurisdiction of the courts of this state to enforce any
debt, obligation, or other liability for which the converting limited
liability company is liable if, before the conversion, the converting
limited liability company was subject to suit in this state on the
debt, obligation, or other liability. A converted organization that
is a foreign organization and not authorized to transact business in
this state appoints the secretary of state as its agent for service of
process for purposes of enforcing a debt, obligation, or other
liability under this subsection. Service on the secretary of state
under this subsection must be made in the same manner and has
the same consequences as in IC 23-18.1-2-15(c) and
IC 23-18.1-2-15(d).
Sec. 10. (a) A foreign limited liability company may become a
limited liability company under this section, sections 11 through 13
of this chapter, and a plan of domestication, if:
(1) the foreign limited liability company's governing statute
authorizes the domestication;
(2) the domestication is not prohibited by the law of the
jurisdiction that enacted the governing statute; and
(3) the foreign limited liability company complies with its
governing statute in effecting the domestication.
(b) A limited liability company may become a foreign limited
liability company under this section, sections 11 through 13 of this
chapter, and a plan of domestication, if:
(1) the foreign limited liability company's governing statute
authorizes the domestication;
(2) the domestication is not prohibited by the law of the
jurisdiction that enacted the governing statute; and
(3) the foreign limited liability company complies with its
governing statute in effecting the domestication.
(c) A plan of domestication must be in a record and must
include:
(1) the name of the domesticating company before
domestication and the jurisdiction of its governing statute;
(2) the name of the domesticated company after domestication
and the jurisdiction of its governing statute;
(3) the terms and conditions of the domestication, including
the manner and basis for converting interests in the
domesticating company into any combination of money,
interests in the domesticated company, and other
consideration; and
(4) the organizational documents of the domesticated
company that are, or are proposed to be, in a record.
Sec. 11. (a) A plan of domestication must be consented to:
(1) by all the members, subject to section 14 of this chapter, if
the domesticating company is a limited liability company; and
(2) as provided in the domesticating company's governing
statute, if the company is a foreign limited liability company.
(b) Subject to any contractual rights, after a domestication is
approved, and at any time before articles of domestication are
delivered to the secretary of state for filing under section 12 of this
chapter, a domesticating limited liability company may amend the
plan or abandon the domestication:
(1) as provided in the plan; or
(2) except as otherwise prohibited in the plan, by the same
consent as was required to approve the plan.
Sec. 12. (a) After a plan of domestication is approved, a
domesticating company shall deliver to the secretary of state for
filing articles of domestication that must include:
(1) a statement, as the case may be, that the company has been
domesticated from or into another jurisdiction;
(2) the name of the domesticating company and the
jurisdiction of its governing statute;
(3) the name of the domesticated company and the
jurisdiction of its governing statute;
(4) the date the domestication is effective under the governing
statute of the domesticated company;
(5) if the domesticating company was a limited liability
company, a statement that the domestication was approved as
required by this article;
(6) if the domesticating company was a foreign limited
liability company, a statement that the domestication was
approved as required by the governing statute of the other
jurisdiction; and
(7) if the domesticated company was a foreign limited liability
company not authorized to transact business in this state, the
street and mailing addresses of an office that the secretary of
state may use for purposes of section 13(b) of this chapter.
(b) A domestication becomes effective:
(1) when the certificate of organization takes effect, if the
domesticated company is a limited liability company; and
(2) according to the governing statute of the domesticated
company, if the domesticated organization is a foreign limited
liability company.
Sec. 13. (a) When a domestication takes effect:
(1) the domesticated company is for all purposes the company
that existed before the domestication;
(2) all property owned by the domesticating company remains
vested in the domesticated company;
(3) all debts, obligations, or other liabilities of the
domesticating company continue as debts, obligations, or
other liabilities of the domesticated company;
(4) an action or proceeding pending by or against a
domesticating company may be continued as if the
domestication had not occurred;
(5) except as prohibited by other law, all of the rights,
privileges, immunities, powers, and purposes of the
domesticating company remain vested in the domesticated
company;
(6) except as otherwise provided in the plan of domestication,
the terms and conditions of the plan of domestication take
effect; and
(7) except as otherwise agreed, the domestication does not
dissolve a domesticating limited liability company for the
purposes of IC 23-18.1-8.
(b) A domesticated company that is a foreign limited liability
company consents to the jurisdiction of the courts of this state to
enforce any debt, obligation, or other liability owed by the
domesticating company, if, before the domestication, the
domesticating company was subject to suit in this state on the debt,
obligation, or other liability. A domesticated company that is a
foreign limited liability company and not authorized to transact
business in this state appoints the secretary of state as its agent for
service of process for purposes of enforcing a debt, obligation, or
other liability under this subsection. Service on the secretary of
state under this subsection must be made in the same manner and
has the same consequences as in IC 23-18.1-2-15(c) and
IC 23-18.1-2-15(d).
(c) If a limited liability company has adopted and approved a
plan of domestication under section 10 of this chapter providing
for the company to be domesticated in a foreign jurisdiction, a
statement surrendering the company's certificate of organization
must be delivered to the secretary of state for filing setting forth:
(1) the name of the company;
(2) a statement that the certificate of organization is being
surrendered in connection with the domestication of the
company in a foreign jurisdiction;
(3) a statement the domestication was approved as required
by this article; and
(4) the jurisdiction of formation of the domesticated foreign
limited liability company.
Sec. 14. (a) If a member of a constituent, converting, or
domesticating limited liability company will have personal liability
with respect to a surviving, converted, or domesticated
organization, approval or amendment of a plan of merger,
conversion, or domestication is ineffective without the consent of
the member, unless:
(1) the company's operating agreement provides for approval
of a merger, conversion, or domestication with the consent of
fewer than all the members; and
(2) the member has consented to the provision of the
operating agreement.
(b) A member does not give the consent required by subsection (a) merely by consenting to a provision of the operating agreement that permits the operating agreement to be amended with the consent of fewer than all the members.
Sec. 15. This article does not preclude an entity from being merged, converted, or domesticated under law other than this article.
Chapter 12. Filing Requirements, Fees, and Other Administrative Provisions
Sec. 1. (a) A record required or permitted under this article may be filed with the secretary of state if the record meets the requirements under this article, including the following requirements:
(1) The record must contain the information required by this article. However, it may also contain additional information.
(2) The record must be typewritten or printed.
(3) The record must be legible.
(4) The record must be in the English language. A limited liability company's name need not be in English if written in English letters or Arabic or Roman numerals, and the certificate of existence required of foreign limited liability companies need not be in English if accompanied by a reasonably authenticated English translation.
(5) The record must be executed:
(A) by a member or an agent designated by the limited liability company if the articles of organization do not provide for a manager or managers;
(B) by a manager or an agent designated by the limited liability company if the articles of organization provide for a manager or managers; or
(C) if the limited liability company is in the hands of a receiver, trustee, or other court appointed fiduciary, by that fiduciary.
(6) The person executing the record must sign the record and state beneath or opposite the signature the person's name and the capacity in which the person signs. A signature on a record authorized to be filed under this article may be a facsimile. A signature on a record under this subdivision that is transmitted and filed electronically is sufficient if the person transmitting and filing the record:
(A) has the intent to file the record as evidenced by a symbol executed or adopted by a party with present
intention to authenticate the filing; and
(B) enters the filing party's name on the electronic form in
a signature box or other place indicated by the secretary of
state.
(7) If the secretary of state has prescribed a mandatory form
for the record under section 2 of this chapter, the record must
be in or on the prescribed form.
(8) The record must be delivered to the secretary of state for
filing and must be accompanied by the correct filing fee. The
filing fee must be paid in the manner and form required by
the secretary of state.
(b) The secretary of state may accept payment of the correct
filing fee by credit card, debit card, charge card, or similar
method. However, if the filing fee is paid by credit card, debit card,
charge card, or similar method, the liability is not finally
discharged until the secretary of state receives payment or credit
from the institution responsible for making the payment or credit.
The secretary of state may contract with a bank or credit card
vendor for acceptance of bank or credit cards. However, if there is
a vendor transaction charge or discount fee, whether billed to the
secretary of state or charged directly to the secretary of state's
account, the secretary of state or the credit card vendor may
collect from the person using the bank or credit card a fee that may
not exceed the highest transaction charge or discount fee charged
to the secretary of state by the bank or credit card vendor during
the most recent collection period. This fee may be collected
regardless of any agreement between the bank and a credit card
vendor or regardless of any internal policy of the credit card
vendor that may prohibit this type of fee. The fee is a permitted
additional charge under IC 24-4.5-3-202.
Sec. 2. (a) For purposes of this article, a record is delivered for
filing if the record is transferred to the secretary of state by hand,
mail, telecopy, facsimile, or other form of electronic transmission
meeting the requirements established by the secretary of state.
(b) If a record is delivered for filing by hand or mail, the record
must be accompanied by:
(1) two (2) exact or conformed copies of a record filed under
IC 23-18.1-2-14; or
(2) one (1) exact or conformed copy of any other record filed
under this article.
(c) The office of the secretary of state shall create any copies of
a record delivered by telecopy, facsimile, or other form of
electronic transmission that are required for distribution under
this article.
Sec. 3. (a) The secretary of state may prescribe and furnish on
request forms for the following:
(1) Biennial report forms for domestic and foreign limited
liability companies.
(2) A foreign limited liability company's application for a
certificate of authority to transact business in Indiana.
(3) A foreign limited liability company's application for a
certificate of withdrawal.
If the secretary of state requires and the form so states, use of these
forms is mandatory.
(b) The secretary of state may prescribe and furnish on request
forms for other records required or permitted to be filed by this
article, but their use is not mandatory.
Sec. 4. (a) The secretary of state shall collect the following fees
when the records specified in this section are delivered for filing:
Record Electronic Filing Fee
Filing Fee (Other than
electronic
filing)
(1) Certificate of organization $75 $90
(2) Application for use of
indistinguishable name $10 $20
(3) Application for reservation
of name $10 $20
(4) Application for renewal of
reservation $10 $20
(5) Notice of transfer or cancellation
of reservation $10 $20
(6) Application of registered
name $20 $30
(7) Application for renewal
of registered name $20 $30
(8) Statement of agent's change
of business address No Fee No Fee
(9) Statement of resignation
of agent No Fee No Fee
(10) Statement of change of
agent No Fee No Fee
(11) Amendment of certificate
of organization $20 $30
(12) Restatement of certificate of
organization $20 $30
(13) Statement of dissolution $20 $30
(14) Application for certificate of
authority $75 $90
(15) Application for amended
certificate of authority $20 $30
(16) Application for certificate of
withdrawal $20 $30
(17) Application for reinstatement
following administrative
dissolution $20 $30
(18) Statement of correction $20 $30
(19) Application for certificate of
existence or authorization $15 $15
(20) Biennial report $20 $30
(21) Articles of merger
involving a limited liability
company $75 $90
(22) Any other record
required or permitted to be
filed under this article $20 $30
(23) Registration of intent
to sell sexually explicit materials,
products, or services $250
The secretary of state shall prescribe the electronic means of filing records to which the electronic filing fees set forth in this section apply.
(b) The fee set forth in subsection (a)(20) for filing a biennial report is:
(1) for an electronic filing, ten dollars ($10) per year; or
(2) for a filing other than an electronic filing, fifteen dollars ($15) per year;
to be paid biennially.
(c) The secretary of state shall collect a fee of ten dollars ($10) each time process is served on the secretary of state under this article. If the party to a proceeding causing service of process prevails in the proceeding, that party is entitled to recover this fee as costs from the nonprevailing party.
(d) The secretary of state shall collect the following fees for copying and certifying the copy of any filed records relating to a domestic or foreign limited liability company:
(1) One dollar ($1) per page for copying.
(2) Fifteen dollars ($15) for certification stamp.
Sec. 5. (a) If a record delivered to the office of the secretary of state for filing satisfies the requirements of section 1 of this chapter, the secretary of state must file the record.
(b) The secretary of state files a record by stamping or otherwise endorsing "Filed" together with the secretary of state's name and official title and the date and time of receipt on both the original and the record copy and on the receipt for the filing fee. After filing a record, except as provided under IC 23-18.1-2-14, the secretary of state shall deliver the record copy, with the filing fee receipt attached, or acknowledgment of receipt if no fee is required, to the domestic or foreign limited liability company or its representative.
(c) If the secretary of state refuses to file a record, the secretary of state shall return the record to the domestic or foreign limited liability company or its representative not more than ten (10) days after the record was delivered, together with a brief, written explanation of the reason for the refusal.
(d) The secretary of state's duty to file records under this section is ministerial. The secretary of state's filing or refusing to file a record does not:
(1) affect the validity or invalidity of the record in whole or in part;
(2) relate to the correctness or incorrectness of the information contained in the record; or
(3) create a presumption that the record is valid or invalid or that information contained in the record is correct or incorrect.
Sec. 6. (a) If the secretary of state refuses to file a record delivered to the secretary of state for filing, the domestic or foreign limited liability company may appeal the refusal to the appropriate court. The appeal is commenced by petitioning the court to compel the filing of the record and by attaching to the petition the record and the secretary of state's explanation of the refusal to file.
(b) The court may order the secretary of state to file the record or take other action the court considers appropriate.
(c) The court's final decision may be appealed as in other civil proceedings.
Sec. 7. A certification stamp affixed on or a certification certificate attached to a copy of a record under this chapter, bearing the secretary of state's signature, which may be in
facsimile, and the seal of this state is conclusive evidence that the
original record is on file with the secretary of state.
Sec. 8. A person commits a Class A misdemeanor if the person
signs a record that the person knows is false in a material respect
with the intent that the record be delivered to the secretary of state
for filing.
Chapter 13. Miscellaneous Provisions
Sec. 1. In applying and construing this uniform act,
consideration must be given to the need to promote uniformity of
the law with respect to its subject matter among states that enact
it.
Sec. 2. This article modifies, limits, and supersedes the federal
Electronic Signatures in Global and National Commerce Act, 15
U.S.C. 7001 et seq., but does not modify, limit, or supersede Section
101(c) of that act, 15 U.S.C. 7001(c), or authorize electronic
delivery of any of the notices described in Section 103(b) of that
act, 15 U.S.C. 7003(b).
Sec. 3. This article does not affect an action commenced,
proceeding brought, or right accrued before July 1, 2010.
Sec. 4. (a) Before July 1, 2011, this article governs only:
(1) a limited liability company formed on or after July 1,
2010; and
(2) except as otherwise provided in subsection (c), a limited
liability company formed before July 1, 2010, that elects, in
the manner provided in its operating agreement or by law for
amending the operating agreement, to be subject to this
article.
(b) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (c), on and after
July 1, 2011, this article governs all limited liability companies.
(c) Under this article, the following apply to a limited liability
company formed before July 1, 2010:
(1) The company's articles of organization are considered to
be the company's certificate of organization.
(2) Subject to IC 23-18.1-2-11(d), for the purpose of
construing IC 23-18.1-1-12, language in the company's
articles of organization designating the company's
management structure operates as if that language were in
the operating agreement.
(1) be organized as a limited liability company;
(2) convert to a limited liability company; or
(3) merge with or into a limited liability company;
under the laws of Indiana or the United States, including any rules or regulations adopted or promulgated under the laws of Indiana or the United States.
(b) A bank organized as a limited liability company is subject to:
(1) IC 23-18.1 or IC 23-18 (before its repeal); and
(2) this title.
If a provision of IC 23-18.1 or IC 23-18 (before its repeal) conflicts with a provision of this title or with any rule of the department, the provision of this title or the rule the department controls.
(c) Any filing required to be made under IC 23-18.1 or IC 23-18 (before its repeal) shall be made in the same manner as for a bank that is organizing or is organized in stock form.
(d) The department may prescribe any requirements for:
(1) the articles of organization; and
(2) the operating agreement;
of a financial institution that is organized and operates as a limited liability company.
(e) The department has the exclusive authority under this title to regulate a financial institution organized as a limited liability company. A financial institution that is a limited liability company is subject to the department's authority in the same manner as a bank that is organized in stock form.
(f) A financial institution that is a limited liability company is subject to the provisions of this title that apply to banks, except for the provisions concerning corporate governance (IC 28-13), in the same manner as a financial institution that is organized in stock form, subject to the following:
(1) In the case of a manager managed limited liability company, "director" means a manager of the limited liability company.
(2) In the case of a member managed limited liability company, "director" means a member of the limited liability company.
(g) A financial institution may not:
(1) organize as;
(2) convert to; or
(3) merge with or into;
a limited liability company without the prior approval of the department under this title.
IC 23-16-3-8 (before their repeal) (Concerning persons filing or
failing to file amended certificates of limited partnership reporting the
occurrence of certain events).
SECTION 11. THE FOLLOWING ARE REPEALED [EFFECTIVE JULY 1, 2011]: IC 23-16; IC 23-18.