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Types of Partners in the Partnership Firm under the Contract Law

Types of Partners in the Partnership Firm under the Contract Law

Types of Partners in the Partnership Firm under the Contract Law

Types of Partners in the Partnership Firm under the Contract Law

 

When two or more persons agree to operate and manage a business altogether and share profit and loss among themselves, it is known as a partnership. The general assumption is that partners always participate equally in the work as well as profits & losses, but there are different types of partnership arrangements and extent of their share in the business is based upon the extent of their liability or participation in carrying on the business of partnership firm.

Various kinds of partners generally found in a partnership business are:

 

 

 

  1. Representation: The person who has been held out have, by conduct or written/spoken words, made a representation that he was a partner in the firm.
  2. Knowledge: The person who held such person out have to prove that the person who has been held out had knowledge of the representation and he acted upon it.

 

 

Rights of a minor partner-

  1. He has the right to his share of the company’s profits.
  2. He may access the company’s accounts for inspection purposes.

Liability of a minor partner

  1. A minor’s liability will be only up to the extent of his share in the firm.
  2. A minor’s personal property cannot be attached by creditors.

 

Though the statute enables a minor to be a partner but it restricts him from suing the other partners for claiming profit and share of his property as long as he is in the firm. When he attains majority, he has to notify the partners through a public notice of his intention to be a regular partner or to withdraw his share from the partnership. If he fails to notify, he will be assumed and treated as a partner with all the liabilities and benefits as that of a regular partner. He will also be legally entitled to claim his share of property and profits from other partners.

 

  1. Secret partner– The one whose relationship with the firm is not disclosed to the general public.
  2. Outgoing Partner– The one who decides to take voluntary retirement without dissolving the firm.
  3. Limited Partner– The one whose liability is only up to the extent of his contributions to the capital of the firm.

 

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