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Greenberg Traurig Alert
New Florida Limited Liability Company Act
June 1999
By Gregory M. Marks, Greenberg
Traurig, Miami Office
View or download the PDF version of this Alert
here.
On June 8, 1999, Governor Jeb Bush signed into law General Law
No. 99-315 (HB1513) restating the Florida Limited Liability Company Act
("Act"). The new law will become effective October 1, 1999.
In 1982, Florida became the second state in the Union to authorize the
formation of limited liability companies ("LLCs"). But because of both federal
and Florida tax policies and the perceived complexities of the organizational
requirements and documents for LLCs, they never became exceedingly popular
in Florida. Due to changes in the federal tax law in 1996, which made it
easier to elect the kind of tax treatment desired for business organizations,
and the changes to Florida’s corporate income tax laws in 1998 (eliminating
the corporate tax for LLCs), Florida has witnessed a surge in the formation
of LLCs. It soon became apparent to lawyers and businessmen alike that Florida’s
LLC law was outdated and that sweeping changes were in order. The revisions
to the Act are meant to modernize Florida’s limited liability statutes and
make them more attractive to businesses that have been looking elsewhere
to form their LLCs. The Act contains many of the same provisions found in
the Uniform Limited Liability Company Act and in the model LLC laws of states
such as Delaware and Virginia.
Simplified Filing, Reduced Fees and More Flexibility Generally
The filing fees and other Department of State administrative fees have
been reduced significantly. For example, the filing fee upon formation was
reduced from $250 to $100 and the recurring annual report fee was reduced
from $100 to $50. Also, because of the elimination of the requirement to
file an affidavit stating the anticipated capital contributions, there is
no longer a $250 fee for filing a supplemental affidavit when those contribution
amounts change. The new law simplifies the filing of the articles of organization
substantially by eliminating many of the former mandatory provisions and
clarifying that an authorized representative may file on behalf of a member
identified in the operating agreement of the LLC. (Note that the more common
term "operating agreement" now applies in the Act rather than the former
term of "regulations"). This will allow the articles to be filed immediately
by corporate service companies without a member’s signature. This change,
as well as the elimination of the need to include the names and addresses
of the initial managers and the amount of anticipated capital, should appeal
to clients with confidentiality concerns. It will now also be easier to
make significant organizational changes in the operating agreement alone
(without amending the articles).
With the advent of the simplified "check-the-box" rules for electing
income tax treatment, the Act offers more flexibility on issues like the
percentage of member consents required for dissolving the LLC, continuing
the business upon a dissolution event, adding new members or allowing an
assignee of a member’s interest to become a member. Voting by members is
based on percentage interest in the LLC’s profits and normally a majority
in interest is required. The Act still requires unanimous consent for certain
major decisions such as allowing assignees to become members or dissolution,
but makes it clear that these vote requirements can be changed by the operating
agreement. Action can also be taken by written consent of members holding
at least a majority in interest, as long as they provide notice to the other
members who have not voted within ten days.
Clarification of Members’ Rights, Responsibilities and Liabilities
The new law clarifies that members can be absolutely prevented from assigning
their member interests and changes the presumption under prior law that
a member could withdraw at any time and receive a return of that member’s
capital. It also clarifies a member’s right to receive information from
the LLC and review its records, including at times after the member has
withdrawn, while also providing that managers may withhold information if
in their reasonable discretion it constitutes a trade secret or the disclosure
could damage the company or its business.
The Act follows the example set by the uniform LLC and partnership laws
by imposing upon managers and managing members the minimal fiduciary duties
of loyalty and care, and the requirement of discharging their duties consistent
with the obligations of good faith and fair dealing. These duties cannot
be eliminated or substantially mitigated by the operating agreement. However,
the operating agreement may identify specific activities and standards of
performance that would not violate the duty of loyalty if not "manifestly
unreasonable." The Act also adds a conflict of interest section modeled
after the Florida corporate law. In general, the fiduciary standards for
managers and managing members under the Act are much more elaborate than
under prior law. By comparison, the Delaware LLC statute does not contain
provisions pertaining to fiduciary standards of conduct.
The new statute provides that any member or manager that relies in good
faith on the LLC’s articles of organization or operating agreement is not
liable to the LLC or its members, while allowing this exculpatory language
to be expanded or restricted by the operating agreement. Another part of
the statute also protects managers and managing members from personal liability
regarding claims pertaining to the exercise of their management authority
except for more egregious conduct (criminal or reckless acts, deriving improper
personal benefits, voting for unlawful distributions and the like). The
Act now also specifically allows derivative lawsuits similar to those that
a shareholder in a corporation could bring for improper acts of management,
and unlike the old law, the Act provides that indemnification of managers,
officers, employees and other agents of the LLC is elective and in theory
could be eliminated by the operating agreement. The new law does not allow
indemnification for specific situations pertaining to violations of criminal
law, deriving improper personal benefits, willful misconduct and the like.
In addition, unless the operating agreement states otherwise, all distributions,
as well as profits and losses, are to be allocated among members according
to the agreed value of their contributions, less the amount of contributions
returned to them.
Operating Agreement Flexibility
One of the benefits of an LLC over a corporation is the tremendous latitude
provided in the drafting of the operating agreement and the flexibility
afforded on fundamental issues such as members’ contribution obligations,
members’ distribution rights, member and management voting powers, profit
and loss allocations, governance structure and the like. The Act goes further
than former law in protecting the "freedom of contract" principle that underlies
LLCs generally, by allowing almost all of the "automatic" provisions of
the Act to be overridden or modified by the operating agreement. On the
other hand, the new law does contain certain "non-waivable provisions,"
such as the prohibitions on unreasonably restricting the right of a member’s
access to information or records, changing the winding-up requirement upon
dissolution of the LLC, restricting the rights of persons other than managers
or members (such as vendors and other third parties dealing with LLC), and
as noted above, eliminating the minimal fiduciary duties owed by a manager.
The new law contains detailed standards and rules relating to when certain
members or managers are entitled to bind the LLC, which generally follow
traditional principal-agent laws and concepts. It also makes clear that
members or managers of an LLC have the authority to delegate their rights
and powers to agents of the LLC, including boards of managers or directors,
officers, employees and other persons. There is no longer a suggestion in
the law that the managers, officers or other delegates need to be appointed
annually or from the manager group.
New Wrongful Distribution Rules
One of the troublesome areas of the former law was the rules pertaining
to the ability of creditors to recover distributions from members for up
to six years after the distribution and the hodge-podge of wrongful distribution
rules that applied. The new law states that a member will be required to
return the distribution to the LLC and its creditors for a period
of three years if a distribution was wrongfully made. The test for wrongful
distributions is greatly simplified, now providing that it is wrongful only
if all of the liabilities of the LLC exceed the value of the LLC’s assets
at the time of distribution. The test for whether managers may be liable
for improper distributions is a little different, following more closely
the bankruptcy definition of insolvency, but the manager’s liability exposure
is limited to two years after the distribution.
Dissolution, Continuation and Conversion
The dissolution provisions of the new law have been greatly simplified
allowing the entity to continue perpetually, except as set forth in the
articles of organization or operating agreement. Also, since a single-member
LLC is now allowed in Florida (actually since 1998), the new law makes it
clear that upon the death of an individual member or termination of an artificial
entity acting as a single member, the LLC may be continued by the personal
representative or other legal representative of the last remaining member,
or by assigning the right to continue to a designee of that representative
(such as someone purchasing the LLC business from the representative). The
new law also contains conversion procedures, allowing other entities (including
partnerships and LLC’s created outside of Florida) to become a Florida LLC.
This could become an attractive alternative to the cross-entities merger
statute passed in 1998 because of the lack of a recorded deed requirement
(and payment of documentary stamp tax) for converting entities holding real
estate.
Tax Treatment
The new law also contains a statutory provision consistent with the Department
of Revenue’s 1998 public announcement that LLCs would be treated for Florida
income tax purposes the same as they are treated for federal income tax
purposes. Generally speaking, a multi-member LLC will be treated as a partnership
and a single-member LLC will be "disregarded" as a separate entity for tax
purposes in the same manner as it is disregarded for federal income tax
purposes. This effectively exempts the LLC from the Florida corporate income
tax unless the LLC elects to be taxed as an "association" (i.e., a corporation).
While the Florida Bar LLC Act Revision Committee had also proposed a bill
eliminating the intangibles tax on member interests in LLCs, this bill did
not make it beyond committee during the 1999 session. Therefore, a member’s
LLC interest will continue to be treated the same as stock in a corporation
for Florida intangibles tax purposes.
©1999 Greenberg Traurig
This GT ALERT is issued for informational purposes only and is not intended
to be construed or used as general legal advice. Greenberg Traurig attorneys provide
practical, result-oriented strategies and solutions tailored to meet our clients’
individual legal needs.
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