LD 1609
pg. 44
Page 43 of 148 An Act To Establish the Uniform Partnership Act Page 45 of 148
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LR 1469
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notice, a remote purchaser has no duty to inquire as to the
authority for the initial transfer, even if he knows it was
partnership property.

 
The burden of proof is on the transferee to show that value
was given. Value, as used in this context, is synonymous with
valuable consideration and means any consideration sufficient to
support a simple contract.

 
The burden of proof on all other issues is allocated to the
partnership because it is generally in a better position than the
transferee to produce the evidence. Moreover, the partnership
may protect itself against unauthorized transfers by ensuring
that partnership real property is held in the name of the
partnership and that a statement of partnership authority is
recorded specifying any limitations on the partners' authority to
convey real property. Under Section 303(e), transferees of real
property held in the partnership name are conclusively bound by
those limitations. On the other hand, transferees can protect
themselves by insisting that the partnership record a statement
specifying who is authorized to transfer partnership property.
Under Section 303(d), transferees for value, without actual
knowledge to the contrary, may rely on that grant of authority.

 
4. Subsection (b)(2) replaces UPA Section 10(3) and provides
that partners who hold partnership property in their own names,
without an indication in the record of their capacity as partners
or of the existence of a partnership, may transfer good title to
a transferee for value without knowledge or a notification that
it was partnership property. To recover the property under this
subsection, the partnership has the burden of proving that the
transferee knew or had received a notification of the
partnership's interest in the property, as well as of the
partner's lack of authority for the initial transfer.

 
5. Subsection (c) is new and provides that property may not
be recovered by the partnership from a remote transferee if any
intermediate transferee of the property would have prevailed
against the partnership. Cf. Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act, §§
8(a) (subsequent transferee from bona fide purchaser protected),
8(b)(2) (same).

 
6. Subsection (d) is new. The UPA does not have a provision
dealing with the situation in which all of the partners'
interests in the partnership are held by one person, such as a
surviving partner or a purchaser of all the other partners'
interests. Subsection (d) allows for clear record title, even
though the partnership no longer exists as a technical matter.
When a partnership becomes a sole proprietorship by reason of the
dissociation of all but one of


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