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Dissolution and Winding Up

PARTNERSHIP LAW

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agong lodge
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
50 views4 pages

Dissolution and Winding Up

PARTNERSHIP LAW

Uploaded by

agong lodge
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Dissolution and Winding Up

1. Differentiating Dissolution, Winding Up, and Termination


a. Dissolution: the change in the relation of the partners caused by any
partner ceasing to be associated in the carrying on (Art. 1828)
b. Winding up: Process of settling business affairs after dissolution
c. Termination: point when all partnership affairs have been wound up

2. Causes of Dissolution
a. Without violating the agreement
i. Termination of definite term
ii. Achievement of particular undertaking
iii. Express will of any partner if partnership is at will
iv. Expulsion of any partner
b. In violation of the agreement – at will of any partner (may be liable for
damages)
c. By operation of law (Force majeure/not by will)
i. Loss of specific thing promised
ii. Business becomes unlawful
iii. Death, insolvency, or civil interdiction of a partner
iv. Insolvency of the partnership
d. By court decree
i. Partner is declared insane/of unsound mind
ii. Partner becomes incapacitated to perform partnership contract
iii. Partner is guilty of conduct prejudicial to partnership business
iv. Partners commits a breach of the partnership agreement
v. Business can only be carried on at a loss
vi. Other equitable circumstances
vii. On application of the purchaser of a partner’s interest
1. After termination of the term
2. After completion of undertaking
3. At any time, if partnership at will

3. Effects of Dissolution
a. General rule: Dissolution terminates all authority of any partner to act
for the partnership.
i. Exception 1: Acts that may be necessary to wind up partnership
affairs. (Art. 1832, 1834 (1))
ii. Exception 2: When dissolution is by the act, insolvency, or death
of a partner, a new contract entered into by a partner will bind the
other partners (i.e., good faith, the authority subsists).
1. Exception to the exception: this authority is terminated if the
acting partner had knowledge of that the partnership was dissolved
by the act of one partner or that it was dissolved by the death or
insolvency of a partner. (Bad faith)
iii. Exception 3: Transactions that would bind the partnership if
dissolution had not taken place, provided the other party to the
transaction extended credit to the partnership and did not know of the
dissolution, or did not extend credit but was not notified of the
dissolution nevertheless. (Art. 1834 (2))

4. Right to Wind Up: Unless otherwise agreed, the partners who have
not wrongfully dissolved the partnership or the legal representative of
the last surviving partner, not insolvent, has the right to wind up the
partnership affairs, provided, however, that any partner, his legal
representative or his assignee, upon cause shown, may obtain winding
up by the court. (Art. 1836)

5. Settlement of Accounts (Apply rules in Arts. 1797-1799, 1827)


a. Dissolution is not caused in contravention of the partnership
agreement: Each partner may have the partnership property applied
to discharge its liabilities, and the surplus applied to pay in cash the
net amount owing to the respective partners. (Art. 1837)
b. Dissolution is caused in contravention of the partnership
agreement: Apply Art. 1837 as follows:
i. If no desire to continue the business, the partners who have not caused
dissolution wrongfully are entitled to surplus and damages from
partners who caused the dissolution wrongfully
ii. If the partners who have not caused dissolution wrongfully desire to
continue the partnership, they may possess the partnership property
and buy out the partners who caused dissolution wrongfully (pay the
value of interest less damages)
iii. Partners who have caused dissolution wrongfully
1. If business will not be continued, entitled to surplus less damages
2. If business will be continued, entitled to value of his interest less
damages
6. Rescission
a. Party entitled to rescind is entitled to: (Art. 1838.)
i. Right to retain surplus after paying liabilities
ii. Stand in the place of creditors for any payments made by him in
respect of liabilities
iii. Be indemnified by the person guilty of fraud
b. Rules in settlement of accounts
i. Assets = property + contributions to pay liabilities
ii. Liabilities, in order or payment priority:
1. owing to creditors other than partners
2. owing to partners other than for capital and profits
3. owing to partners in respect of capital
4. owing to partners in respect of profits
When partner is insolvent, his separate property shall be liable in the
following order of priority:
1. Separate creditors
2. Partnership creditors
3. Partners, by way of contribution

7. Effect of Continuation of the Business


a. Creditors of the dissolved partnership are also creditors of the
person/partnership continuing the business when there is no
liquidation of partnership.
b. Liability of new partners shall be satisfied out of partnership
property only unless there is contrary stipulation.

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