LD 1609
pg. 3
Page 2 of 148 An Act To Establish the Uniform Partnership Act Page 4 of 148
Download Bill Text
LR 1469
Item 1

 
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.

 
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.

 
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.

 
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


Page 2 of 148 Top of Page Page 4 of 148