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ownership does not by itself establish a partnership, even if | the co-owners share profits made by the use of the property. |
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| B.__The sharing of gross returns does not by itself | establish a partnership, even if the persons sharing them | have a joint or common right or interest in property from | which the returns are derived. |
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| C.__A person who receives a share of the profits of a | business is presumed to be a partner in the business, unless | the profits were received in payment: |
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| (1)__Of a debt by installments or otherwise; |
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| (2)__For services as an independent contractor or of | wages or other compensation to an employee; |
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| (4)__Of an annuity or other retirement or health | benefit to a beneficiary, representative or designee of | a deceased or retired partner; |
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| (5) of interest or other charge on a loan, even if the | amount of payment varies with the profits of the | business, including a direct or indirect present or | future ownership of the collateral, or rights to | income, proceeds or increase in value derived from the | collateral; or |
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| (6)__For the sale of the goodwill of a business or | other property by installments or otherwise. |
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| | (This is Section 202 of the Uniform Partnership Act (1997).) |
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| | 1. Section 202 combines UPA Sections 6 and 7. The | traditional UPA Section 6(1) "definition" of a partnership is | recast as an operative rule of law. No substantive change in the | law is intended. The UPA "definition" has always been understood | as an operative rule, as well as a definition. The addition of | the phrase, "whether or not the persons intend to form a | partnership," merely codifies the universal judicial construction | of UPA Section 6(1) that a partnership is created by the | association of persons whose intent is to carry on as co-owners a | business for profit, regardless of their subjective intention to | be "partners." Indeed, they may inadvertently create a |
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