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Limited Liability Company Law - whether a Manager of a Manager-Managed Limited Liability Company Breached Fiduciary Duties Under Delaware Law to the Limited Liability Company and its Members

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Practical Pitfalls in Drafting Texas Limited Liability Company Agreements

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Model Company Agreements for Closely Held LLCs

It is often stated that one of the benefits of organizing an entity as a limited liability company is that this form of entity offers the owners and governing authority of the entity the flexibility to agree to provisions for the economic terms and governance that are more flexible than available with respect to a corporation. This is true, and indeed limited liability companies are sometimes used to create highly complex structures with multiple classes of ownership interests and highly customized provisions regarding management and governance of the entity, including complicated provisions for voting and management succession. However, given the large number of entities now being created as limited liability companies in Texas and other states, it is likely that many of these new entities are not entities with complex structures with multiple classes of ownership and complex bureaucracies for governance. Statistics compiled by the Internal Revenue Service show that for the tax year 2020 (the most recent year for which statistics are currently available), approximately 67% of the S corporation returns are for single-shareholder S corporations and approximately 24% have only two shareholders. The Internal Revenue Service does not publish similar statistics for limited liability companies, and single-member limited liability companies are typically disregarded entities that do not file tax returns. But if one assumes that most limited liability companies are closely held entities, then by analogy, it is likely that a large portion of limited liability companies have one or two owners. Therefore, it is much more likely that practitioners will find themselves needing to draft simple limited liability company agreements suitable for entities with one or two or a very few owners, rather than more complex documents.The purpose of this paper is to present and discuss models for governing agreements for limited liability companies when a simple structure is needed.
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Appendix A of 2024 Model Company Agreements for Closely Held LLCs

Model Company Agreement for Manager-Managed, Multi-Member Limited Liability Company. This Model Agreement is Appendix A to an article by Cliff Ernst and Elizabeth S. Miller entitled Model Company Agreements for Closely Held LLCs (the “Accompanying Article”). This Model Agreement should not be considered a form to be completed by filling in the blanks. Drafters should be certain that any agreement used by them is appropriate for the particular transaction. This Model Agreement should be read together with the Accompanying Article, including the various references to the Accompanying Article throughout this Model Agreement.
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Appendix B of 2024 Model Company Agreements for Closely Held LLCs

Model Company Agreement for Member-Managed, Multi-Member Limited Liability Company. This Model Agreement is Appendix B to an article by Cliff Ernst and Elizabeth S. Miller entitled Model Company Agreements for Closely Held LLCs (the “Accompanying Article”). This Model Agreement should not be considered a form to be completed by filling in the blanks. Drafters should be certain that any agreement used by them is appropriate for the particular transaction. This Model Agreement should be read together with the Accompanying Article, including the various references to the Accompanying Article throughout this Model Agreement.
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Appendix C of 2024 Model Company Agreements for Closely Held LLCs

Model Company Agreement for Single Member Limited Liability Company. This Model Agreement is Appendix C to an article by Cliff Ernst and Elizabeth S. Miller entitled Model Company Agreements for Closely Held LLCs (the “Accompanying Article”). This Model Agreement should not be considered a form to be completed by filling in the blanks. Drafters should be certain that any agreement used by them is appropriate for the particular transaction. This Model Agreement should be read together with the Accompanying Article, including the various references to the Accompanying Article throughout this Model Agreement.
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