HOUSE BILL REPORT
SB 6531
As Passed House:
February 28, 2006
Title: An act relating to preserving remedies when limited liability companies dissolve.
Brief Description: Preserving remedies when limited liability companies dissolve.
Sponsors: By Senators Weinstein, Fraser and Kline.
Brief History:
Judiciary: 2/20/06 [DP].
Floor Activity:
Passed House: 2/28/06, 97-0.
Brief Summary of Bill |
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HOUSE COMMITTEE ON JUDICIARY
Majority Report: Do pass. Signed by 9 members: Representatives Lantz, Chair; Flannigan, Vice Chair; Williams, Vice Chair; Priest, Ranking Minority Member; Rodne, Assistant Ranking Minority Member; Campbell, Kirby, Springer and Wood.
Staff: Bill Perry (786-7123).
Background:
A limited liability company (LLC) is a business entity that possesses some of the attributes of
a corporation and some of the attributes of a partnership.
Attributes of Corporations and LLCs
Corporations are creatures of statutory law and are created only by compliance with
prescribed formal procedures. A corporation is managed by directors and officers, but is
owned by shareholders who may have very little direct role in management. Generally,
ownership shares are transferable, and each shareholder is liable for corporate debts only to
the extent of his or her own investment in the corporation. A corporation is treated as a
taxable entity.
General partnerships, on the other hand, are business entities recognized as common law that
require no formal creation, and are owned and managed by the same individuals who are each
liable for the debts of the partnership. A general partnership is not a taxable entity.
The LLCs were authorized by the Legislature in 1994. An LLC is a noncorporate entity that
allows the owners to participate actively in management, but at the same time provides them
with limited liability. The Internal Revenue Service has ruled that an LLC with attributes that
make it more like a partnership than a corporation may be treated as a non-taxable entity.
A properly constructed LLC, then, can be a business entity in which the ownership enjoys the
limited liability of a corporation's shareholders, but the entity itself is not taxed as a
corporation.
Dissolution of an LLC
An LLCs may be dissolved in a number of ways, including:
Certificate of Cancellation
After an LLC is dissolved, or if an LLC has been merged with another entity and the new
entity is not the LLC, the certificate of formation that created the LLC is cancelled.
Cancellation may occur in a number of ways:
After dissolution of an LLC, but before cancellation of the certificate of formation, members
of the LLC or a court appointed receiver may wind up the business of the LLC. A person
winding up the affairs of an LLC may prosecute or defend legal actions in the name of the
LLC.
Preservation of Remedies
The law governing LLCs has no express provision regarding the preservation of remedies or
causes of actions following dissolution of the business entity. There is an implicit
recognition of the preservation of at least an already filed claim during the wind up period
following dissolution, since the person winding up the affairs is authorized to defend suits
against the LLC. However, there is no provision regarding the preservation of claims
following cancellation of the certificate of formation.
The current Business Corporation Act provides that dissolution of a corporation does not
eliminate any claim against the corporation that was incurred prior to dissolution if an action
on the claim is filed within two years after dissolution. There is no "certificate of
cancellation" necessary to end a corporation. (Note: Another currently pending bill, SSB
6596, would increase this two year period to three years, and would make the provision
apply to claims incurred before or after dissolution.)
Summary of Bill:
Dissolution of a limited liability company will not eliminate any cause of action against the
company that was incurred prior to or after the dissolution if an action on the claim is filed
within three years after the effective date of the dissolution.
Appropriation: None.
Fiscal Note: Not requested.
Effective Date: The bill takes effect 90 days after adjournment of session in which bill is passed.
Testimony For: A recent court decision has left many homeowners without a remedy for
claims against a dissolved corporation. The same problem exists with respect to claims
against LLCs. The Bar Association is working on a comprehensive review of the LLC law,
but it is not done yet. This bill addresses only the problem of survival of claims following
dissolution.
The bill is a step in the right direction. It affirmatively states that claims, such as
homeowners' warranty claims, will survive the dissolution of an LLC. Whether or not there
are any assets left to satisfy a claim is a separate problem that will have to be addressed later.
Testimony Against: None.
Persons Testifying: Senator Weinstein, prime sponsor; Alfred Donohue, Forsberg Umlauf, P.S.; and Sandi Swarthout and Michelle Ein, Washington Homeowners Coalition.