| | Another significant change introduced by RUPA is provision for | the public filing of statements containing basic information | about a partnership, such as the agency authority of its | partners. Because of the informality of many partnerships, and | the inadvertence of some, mandatory filings were eschewed in | favor of a voluntary regime. It was the Drafting Committee's | belief, however, that filings would become routine for | sophisticated partnerships and would be required by lenders and | others for major transactions. |
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| | Another innovation is found in Article 9. For the first time, | the merger of two or more partnerships and the conversion of | partnerships to limited partnerships (and the reverse) is | expressly authorized, and a "safe harbor" procedure for effecting | such transactions is provided. |
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| | One final change deserves mention. Partnership law no longer | governs limited partnerships pursuant to the provisions of RUPA | itself. First, limited partnerships are not "partnerships" | within the RUPA definition. Second, UPA Section 6(2), which | provides that the UPA governs limited partnerships in cases not | provided for in the Uniform Limited Partnership Act (1976) (1985) | ("RULPA") has been deleted. No substantive change in result is | intended, however. Section 1105 of RULPA already provides that | the UPA governs in any case not provided for in RULPA, and thus | the express linkage in RUPA is unnecessary. Structurally, it is | more appropriately left to RULPA to determine the applicability | of RUPA to limited partnerships. It is contemplated that the | Conference will review the linkage question carefully, although | no changes in RULPA may be necessary despite the many changes in | RUPA. |
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| | Finally, the Drafting Committee wishes to express its deep | appreciation for the extraordinary time and effort that has been | devoted to this project by its Reporter, Donald J. Weidner, Dean | of the Florida State University College of Law; by its Assistant | Reporter, Professor John W. Larson of the Florida State | University College of Law; by its American Bar Association | Advisors Allan G. Donn, of Norfolk, Virginia (ABA Section of | Taxation and later the ABA Advisor, and a member of the original | ABA subcommittee that recommended revising the UPA), Harry J. | Haynsworth, Dean of the Southern Illinois University School of | Law (the original ABA Advisor until he became a Commissioner and | member of the Drafting Committee in 1992 and who was also a | member of the original ABA subcommittee), S. Stacy Eastland, of | Houston, Texas (Probate and Trust Division of the ABA Section of | Real Property, Probate and Trust Law), and Caryl B. Welborn, of | San Francisco, California (Real Property Division of the ABA | Section of Real Property, Probate and Trust Law); and by a number | of other advisors and observers without whose assistance the |
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