LD 1609
pg. 52
Page 51 of 148 An Act To Establish the Uniform Partnership Act Page 53 of 148
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LR 1469
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debtors on every partnership debt. It is already the law in some
States.

 
As a general rule, a final judgment against a partner cannot
be enforced by a creditor against the partner's separate assets
unless a writ of execution against the partnership has been
returned unsatisfied. Under subsection (d), however, a creditor
may proceed directly against the partner's assets if (i) the
partnership is a debtor in bankruptcy (see Section 101(2)); (ii)
the partner has consented; or (iii) the liability is imposed on
the partner independently of the partnership. For example, a
judgment creditor may proceed directly against the assets of a
partner who is liable independently as the primary tortfeasor,
but must exhaust the partnership's assets before proceeding
against the separate assets of the other partners who are liable
only as partners.

 
There is also a judicial override provision in subsection
(d)(4). A court may authorize execution against the partner's
assets on the grounds that (i) the partnership's assets are
clearly insufficient; (ii) exhaustion of the partnership's assets
would be excessively burdensome; or (iii) it is otherwise
equitable to do so. For example, if the partners who are parties
to the action have assets located in the forum State, but the
partnership does not, a court might find that exhaustion of the
partnership's assets would be excessively burdensome.

 
5. Although subsection (d) is silent with respect to pre-
judgment remedies, the law of pre-judgment remedies already
adequately embodies the principle that partnership assets should
be exhausted before partners' assets are attached or garnished.
Attachment, for example, typically requires a showing that the
partnership's assets are being secreted or fraudulently
transferred or are otherwise inadequate to satisfy the
plaintiff's claim. A showing of some exigent circumstance may
also be required to satisfy due process. See Connecticut v.
Doehr, 501 U.S. 1, 16 (1991).

 
6. Subsection (e) clarifies that actions against the
partnership under Section 308, involving representations by
partners or purported partners, are subject to Section 307.

 
§1036.__Liability of purported partner

 
1.__Liability of purported partner.__If a person, by words or
conduct, purports to be a partner, or consents to being
represented by another as a partner, in a partnership or with one
or more persons not partners, the purported partner is liable to
a person to whom the representation is made, if that person,
relying on the representation, enters into a transaction with the


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