Copyright Regulations and General Disclaimer

"http://cpajournal.blogspot.com" - Copyright Notice

This blog and its content are copyright of SonuRaj © 2008. All rights reserved.Some of these blog materials may be subject to copyrights held by third parties.
Any redistribution or reproduction of part or all of the contents in any form is prohibited without prior approval:

Submit requests to: mailmrsraj@gmail.com


You may not, except with my express written permission, distribute or commercially exploit the content. Nor may you transmit it or store it in any other website or other form of electronic retrieval system.

Comment Policy for Cpajournal blog

• Signature Links will be deleted. I see no use for them and they add clutter to the comment section.
• Relevant links are encouraged if they are strongly related to the topic discussed in the article. Irrelevant links will be deleted without any notice.
• Spamming your URL by posting short, pointless comments (’nice post’) will not help as I will delete these comments as well.
• Irrelevant but legitimate comments which are entirely off-topic and not related to the post in question will be removed. I will however personally email you to inform you of this and will continue the discussion off the blog, if necessary.
• Hate Remarks against another person’s race, religion or creed will be deleted as they are offensive.

Advertisements displayed in the blog: 

Advertisements from adsense, ebay and Amazon are displayed in my blog. Products purchased from such websites are the liability of the respective websites only. Complaints, disputes are not the liability of this blog.  Please take personal responsibility and consult the realted website personnel for knowing your  liability before your purchase.

Mrs.Raj

Limited partnership

A limited partnership is a form of partnership similar to a general partnership, except that in addition to one or more general partners (GPs), there are one or more limited partners (LPs). It is a partnership in which only one partner is required to be a general partner.[1]
The GPs are, in all major respects, in the same legal position as partners in a conventional firm, i.e. they have management control, share the right to use partnership property, share the profits of the firm in predefined proportions, and have joint and several liability for the debts of the partnership.
As in a general partnership, the GPs have actual authority as agents of the firm to bind all the other partners in contracts with third parties that are in the ordinary course of the partnership's business. As with a general partnership, "An act of a general partner which 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 was actually authorized by all the other partners." (United States Uniform Limited Partnership Act § 402(b).)
Like shareholders in a corporation, LPs have limited liability, meaning they are only liable on debts incurred by the firm to the extent of their registered investment and have no management authority. The GPs pay the LPs a return on their investment (similar to a dividend), the nature and extent of which is usually defined in the partnership agreement.
Limited partnerships are distinct from limited liability partnerships, in which all partners have limited liability.
Souce : Wikepedia

Links:  http://www.quickmba.com/law/partnership/limited/

Limited Liability Partnership

Small business owners sometimes choose the organizational form of a limited liability partnership (LLP) for their business. An LLP is a type of general partnership that provides its general partners with limited liability for certain obligations of the partnership. It has the benefits of a partnership and limitations on liabilities. For example, partners in LLPs are not liable for the debts caused by the negligence of other partners.

What is an LLP?

An LLP is a partnership that limits the exposure of general partners to certain kinds of partnership liabilities. The characteristic that the LLP shares with the corporation is limited liability. Under the typical LLP law, a general partner in an LLP:

Is not liable for the debts and obligations of the LLP arising from errors, negligence, wrongful acts, or misconduct committed in the course of the partnership's business by another partner or by an employee, agent, or representative of the LLP
Is liable for the general obligations of the partnership
Is liable for obligations arising from his or her own misconduct, and for obligations arising from the misconduct of a person over which he or she has direct supervision and control
May be liable when the partner had notice or knowledge of misconduct by another partner or representative
Origin of LLPs

Under traditional partnership law, each partner has the power to bind the partnership. The partnership is liable for the wrongful acts of any partner acting in the ordinary course of the partnership's business. In addition, partners in a general partnership are personally liable for partnership obligations if the assets of the partnership are insufficient to satisfy them. Therefore, partners in a general partnership are subject to personal liability for the negligence of other partners. These rules developed when partnerships were small and partners were aware of each other's activities.

In the 1990s, several trends combined to increase the risks to which partners of a general partnership were exposed under traditional partnership liability rules, especially in law and accounting firms. Among these trends were:

An increase in the number of partners in general partnerships
An increase in the complexity of practice areas at larger general partnerships
An increasing number of malpractice suits filed against larger general partnerships
Escalating malpractice insurance costs
The proliferation of claims with very high dollar values, such as claims brought by government regulators against law and accounting firms in connection with the savings and loan crisis
The limited liability partnership was conceived in the 1990s to address the needs of partners in light of these developments. The first limited liability partnership law was enacted in Texas in 1991. Almost all states currently have LLP laws.

LLP laws generally permit partners in professional general partnerships to shield themselves from liability for contractual obligations of the partnership, but hold them personally liable for their own negligent or wrongful acts and for the negligent or wrongful acts of individuals acting under their supervision or control. Partners are not liable for debts and obligations resulting from the negligence of other partners. Generally, rules applicable to general partnerships, including those that govern contributions, management, operation and dissolution, apply to LLPs.

State laws vary on the kinds of protections that they provide to partners in an LLP. Although the first Texas law shielded partners from personal liability only for partnership obligations arising from the malpractice of other partners, some more recent laws protect partners in LLPs from all partnership debts.
Source : Lawyers.com

Links:


http://www.lectlaw.com/files/buo04.htm



http://www.sos.state.ia.us/business/limliabpart.html


http://cpajournal.blogspot.com/2009/02/uniform-limited-partnership-act-2001.html