Partnership Q&A: What are my minority shareholder rights?

Nina L. Kaufman, Esq.

Nina L. Kaufman, Esq.

Nina L. Kaufman, Esq., owner of Ask The Business Lawyer, is an award-winning business attorney, speaker, and Entrepreneur Magazine online contributor. She saves consulting and professional services companies time, money, and aggravation by serving as their outsourced legal counsel.

Posted on May 19, 2010 in Planning & Advisors

Q.:  What are my rights as the minority shareholder who is being laid off by majority shareholder?  I’m a guarantor on the company credit line? We are the only guarantors on the credit line. There are two other minority shareholders, one was laid off nine months ago but kept his shares, and the other is still working at the company.

As I responded on Ask Entrepreneur:

A.:  The rights of a minority shareholder depend on a number of considerations:

1. The terms of your shareholder’s agreement
2. Your state’s law
3. whether the minority shareholder is being bought out of his ownership interest or merely terminated as an employee.

Often, employment and ownership are linked–for example, if your employment is terminated, you are deemed to offer your shares to the company for sale.

If that’s the case, you have a strong argument for not having to continue to advance funds to a company that you no longer have an interest in. Yet another factor will be the terms of the credit line agreement: whether the guaranty is contingent on you remaining an owner of the company or not.

But it’s best to review your shareholders’ agreement (assuming you have one) with a local attorney. Minority shareholders do have rights concerning fair treatment and you may have negotiating leverage to get yourself off the credit line if it turns out the majority shareholder hasn’t done right by you, which could be a violation of your state’s corporate laws.

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  3. The Brass Tacks of a Corporation Buy-Out
  4. When a Partnership Dissolution Comes Back to Haunt You
  5. What to Look for in a Business Partner

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