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PARTNERSHIP (VENTURE CAPITAL FUNDS) AMENDMENT BILL 2004
2004
LEGISLATIVE
ASSEMBLY FOR THE AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL
TERRITORY
PARTNERSHIP (VENTURE CAPITAL FUNDS) AMENDMENT BILL
2004
EXPLANATORY
STATEMENT
Circulated by authority of the
Attorney General
Mr Jon
Stanhope MLA
PARTNERSHIP (VENTURE CAPITAL FUNDS) AMENDMENT BILL
2004
Outline
The Partnership (Venture Capital Funds) Amendment Bill 2004 (the Bill)
amends the Partnership Act 1963 (Partnership Act) and provides for a
framework for registration and regulation of incorporated limited partnerships.
The Bill is based on the Partnership (Venture Capital Funds) Act
2003 (Vic) and incorporates a number of features provided in the
Partnership Amendment (Venture Capital Funds) Act 2004 (NSW). The Bill
introduces a new part 6 into the Partnership Act that deals with formation and
registration of limited partnerships, powers of incorporated limited
partnerships, liability and powers of limited partners, and winding up of
incorporated limited partnerships. The Bill also amends a number of provisions
in the Partnership Act to clarify their respective applications to a firm other
than an incorporated limited partnership and to an incorporated limited
partnership. The Bill provides for the commissioner of fair trading under the
Fair Trading (Consumer Affairs) Act 1973 to administer the scheme for
incorporated limited partnerships.
Incorporated limited partnerships are
vehicles for venture capital investments. Persons or partnerships registered,
or proposing to register, under the Venture Capital Act 2002 (Cwlth)
(Venture Capital Act) as a venture capital limited partnership (VCLP) or an
Australian Fund of Funds (AFOF) are eligible to register themselves as an
incorporated limited partnership. A partnership which is a venture capital
management partnership (VCMP) within the meaning of section 94D(3) of the
Income Tax Assessment
Act 1936 or a proposed venture capital
management partnership may also be registered as an incorporated limited
partnership. A VCMP is a general partner in a VCLP or an AFOF. Key features of
these entities are flow through taxation benefits to partners and the benefit of
limited liability for limited partners in them.
An incorporated limited
partnership will have not more than 20 general partners and any number of
limited partners. A general partner’s liability will be unlimited while
the liability of a limited partner is limited to the capital or property that
partner contributed or agreed to contribute to the capital of the partnership.
Only a general partner could take part in the management of the business of an
incorporated limited partnership. A limited partner taking part in the
management of the business of the partnership will be liable to the consequences
that arise as a direct result of the limited partner’s action.
Financial implications
Proposed legislation has no financial impact in this fiscal year. It
is not possible to forecast the future financial implications. Administration
of the scheme provided in the Bill will require resources, however, in the first
year of its operation, this need is expected to be met from existing
resources.
General comment about strict liability offences
provided in the Bill
The Bill includes a number of offences where strict
liability applies to a specific element of the offence or to the offence.
Section 23 of the Criminal Code 2002 (Criminal Code) provides that
if a law that creates an offence provides for strict liability, there are no
fault elements for the physical elements of the offence. Essentially, this
means that conduct alone is sufficient to make the defendant culpable. However,
if strict liability applies, the defence of mistake of fact is available where
the person considered whether or not facts existed and was under a mistaken but
reasonable belief about the facts. Other defences, such as intervening conduct
or event (section 39 of the Criminal Code), are also available.
Offences incorporating strict liability
elements are carefully considered when developing legislation and generally
arise in a regulatory context where for reasons such as public safety or
protection of the public revenue, etc, the public interest in ensuring that
regulatory schemes are observed requires the sanction of criminal
penalties
Notes on Clauses
Clause 1 Name of the Act
The Bill, once enacted, will be known as the Partnership (Venture
Capital Funds) Amendment Act 2004.
Clause 2 Commencement
The Act will commence on a day fixed by the Minister by written
notice.
Clause 3 Legislation amended
The Act amends the Partnership Act 1963 (the Act).
Clause 4 Section
2
New section 2 Dictionary
The dictionary at the end of the Act is part of the Act.
New section 3 Notes
New section 3 explains that a note included in the Act is for
explanatory purposes only and does not form part of the Act.
New section 4 Offences against Act –
application of Criminal Code etc
This new section provides that other legislation applies in relation to
an offence against the Act. Note 1 mentions that the Criminal Code, chapter 2
applies to all offences against the Act.
Clause 5 Section
5
New section 5 Application of certain laws
and rules of equity
New section 5 preserves the application of the rules of equity and the
common law that apply to partnerships except where they are inconsistent with
the Act.
This section precludes the application of law relating to
partnership to or in relation to an incorporated limited partnership, the
partners in it or the relationship between an incorporated limited partnership
and its partners, except as provided (expressly or by necessary implication)
under this or another Act.
Clause 6 Section
6
New section 6 Meaning of
Partnership
This section explains that partnership is the relation between
people carrying on a business with a view to profit and includes an incorporated
limited partnership. The relationship between members of a corporation is not a
partnership.
Clause 7 Rules for determining existence of
partnership
This clause provides that section 7 of the Partnership Act does not
apply to an incorporated limited partnership. Section 7 specifies circumstances
which do not amount to a partnership.
Clause 8 Firms and firm names
This clause omits section 8. The definitions of firm and
firm name are inserted in the dictionary.
Clause 9 Sections 9
to 13
Clause 9 replaces sections 9 to 13 of the Partnership Act with
new sections.
New section 9 Power of certain partners to bind
firm
New section 9 sets out where a partner may bind the firm. These
are as follows:
§ A partner in a firm other than an
incorporated limited partnership is the agent of the firm, and of the other
partners, for the purpose of the firm’s
business.
§ In a firm other than an incorporated
limited partnership, a partner’s act for carrying on of the firm’s
business in a usual way binds the firm. However, such act will not bind the
firm where the partner has no authority to act in the matter and the person who
deals with the partner knows it or does not know or believe the partner to be a
partner in the firm.
§ A general partner in an incorporated
limited partnership is the agent of the partnership, and of the other general
partners in it for the purposes of the partnership
business.
§ A general partner’s act for carrying
on the business of an incorporated limited partnership in a usual way binds the
partnership and its general partners. However, that will not be the case where
the general partner who does the act has no authority to act in the particular
matter and the person who deals with that general partner knows it or does not
know or believe the general partner to be a general partner of the
partnership.
New section 10 Partners bound by acts on behalf of
firm
New Section 10 provides that a firm other than an incorporated
limited partnership and all the partners in that firm are bound by an act or
instrument relating to the business of the firm done or executed in the
firm’s name or in any other way showing an intention to bind the
firm.
This section also provides that an act or instrument relating to
the business of an incorporated limited partnership binds the partnership and
all the general partners in it where the act was done or instrument was executed
in the partnership name or in any other way showing an intention to bind the
partnership.
A firm other than an incorporated limited partnership, or an
incorporated limited partnership will be bound by an act or instrument only
where the act was done or an instrument was executed by a person authorised for
that purpose.
This section does not affect a rule of law about the
execution of deeds or negotiable instruments.
New section 11 Partner
using credit of firm for private purpose
New section 11 specifies the
circumstances in which a partner pledging the credit of the firm will bind the
firm. It provides that,
§ a firm other than an incorporated limited
partnership is not bound if a partner pledges the credit of the firm for the
purpose apparently not connected with the ordinary course of business of the
firm unless the firm has specially authorised the partner to do so,
and
§ an
incorporated limited partnership is not bound if a general partner pledges the
credit of the partnership for the purpose apparently not connected with the
ordinary course of business of the partnership unless the partnership has
specially authorised the partner to do so.
However, a personal liability
of an individual partner in a firm other than incorporated limited partnership,
or of a general partner in an incorporated limited partnership, is not
affected.
New section 12 Effect of notice that firm will not be bound
by acts of partner
New section 12 provides that where the partners in
a firm other than an incorporated limited partnership agreed to place
restrictions on the power of one or more of them to bind the firm, an act in
breach of that agreement does not bind the firm in relation to a person who has
notice of the agreement.
This section also provides that where the partners in an incorporated
limited partnership agreed to place restrictions on the power (if any) of one or
more of them to bind the partnership, an act that contravenes the agreement does
not bind the partnership in relation to a person who has notice of the
agreement.
New Section 13 Liability of partner
New Section
13 provides that each partner in a firm other than an incorporated limited
partnership is jointly liable with the other partners of the firm for its debts
and obligations incurred while he or she is a partner. Where the partner is an
individual, after his or her death, the dead partner’s estate is severally
liable for such debts and obligations where they remain unsatisfied, but subject
to the earlier payment of the dead partner’s separate debts.
In the
case of an incorporated limited partnership, this section provides that a
general partner in it is liable jointly with the partnership for the debts and
obligations of the partnership incurred while that partner is a general partner.
Where the general partner is an individual, after his or her death, the dead
general partner’s estate is severally liable for such debts and
obligations where they remain unsatisfied, but subject to the earlier payment of
the dead partner’s separate debts.
This section also provides that
a general partner in an incorporated limited partnership is only liable to the
extent the partnership cannot satisfy the debts and obligations or to a greater
extent provided by the partnership agreement.
Clauses 10, 11, 12 and
13 Liability of firm not an incorporated limited partnership for
wrongs
These clauses amend section 14 of the Partnership Act to make
it apply to a partner in a firm other than an incorporated limited partnership.
Section 14 deals with the liability of a firm for wrongs..
Clauses
14 Liability of incorporated limited partnerships for wrongs
This
clause inserts section 14A into the Partnership Act. New section 14A provides
for the liability of an incorporated limited partnership for loss or injury to a
person outside the partnership or a penalty incurred, because of a wrongful act
or omission of a general partner. The partnership is liable to the same extent
as the relevant general partner where the general partner was acting in the
ordinary course of the partnership’s business or with its
authority.
This section also provides that, for the purpose of this
provision, a general partner in an incorporated limited partnership is not to be
taken to be acting in the ordinary course of the partnership’s business
where the partner commits a wrongful act or omission as a director of a company
or other body (within the meaning of the Corporations Act 2001
(Cwlth)(Corporations Act)), as a member of a Territory authority, or as a
member of the board of a Territory authority, only because of one or more of the
following:
a) the general partner obtained the agreement or authority of the
partnership to be appointed or to act as director or member;
b) the
remuneration that the general partner receives as director or member forms part
of the income of the partnership;
c) any other general partner in the
partnership is also a director of a company or other body (within the meaning of
the Corporations Act), member of a Territory authority, or member of the board
of a Territory authority, whether of the same or a different body corporate,
Territory authority or board.
Clause 15 Sections 15 to
21
This clause inserts new sections 15 to 21.
New Section
15 Misapplication of money or property received for, or in custody of,
firm
New section 15 provides for:
§ the liability of a firm other than an
incorporated limited partnership where a partner or the firm receives someone
else’s money or property and the partner or one or more partners misapply
it, and
§ the liability of an incorporated limited
partnership where a general partner or the partnership receives money or
property and the general partner or one or more general partners misapply it.
The reference to “some one else” in relation to an
incorporated limited partnership does not include a partner in the
partnership.
New section 16 Liability for wrongs joint and
several
New section 16 provides that
§ each partner in a firm other than an
incorporated limited partnership is liable jointly with the other partners, and
severally, for the liability of the firm under section 14 (Liability of firm not
incorporated limited partnership for wrongs) or 15 while the partner was a
partner in the firm, and
§ each general partner in an incorporated
limited partnership is liable jointly with the other general partners, and
severally, for the liability of the partnership under section 14A (Liability of
incorporated limited partnership for wrongs) or 15 while the general partner was
a general partner. However, the general partner’s liability is only to
the extent the partnership cannot satisfy the liability or the greater extent
provided by the partnership agreement.
New section 17 Improper use
of trust property for partnership other than incorporated limited
partnership
New section 17 provides that where a partner in a firm other than an
incorporated limited partnership who is a trustee improperly uses trust property
in the firm’s business, or for the firm, another partner in the firm is
not liable to the people beneficially interested in the property.
However, that other partner is liable if that partner knew about a breach
of trust. Trust money still in the possession of, or under the control, of the
firm can be followed and recovered from the firm.
New section 17A Improper use of trust property for incorporated limited
partnership
New section 17A is a provision similar to new section 17 but
applies in relation to an incorporated limited partnership.
New
section 18 People liable by holding out
New section 18 makes a person
(apparent partner) liable if he or she represents himself or herself as a
partner in a firm other than an incorporated limited partnership or knowingly
allowing himself or herself to be represented as such partner, that person is
liable as a partner in that firm to a person giving credit to the firm because
of that representation. It does not matter whether or not the representation
has been made or communicated to the person giving credit or the apparent
partner knew that credit was given because of his or her
representation.
Where similar circumstances occur in relation to an
incorporated limited partnership because of a person representing himself or
herself as its general partner (apparent general partner), that person is liable
as a general partner of the partnership to the person giving credit to the
partnership. It does not matter whether or not the representation has been made
or communicated to the person giving credit or the apparent general partner knew
that credit was given because of his or her representation.
A continued
use by a firm of its old firm name or the name of a dead partner as part of that
name does not, of itself, make the partner’s legal personal
representatives, estate or effects liable for the firm’s debts contracted
after the partner’s death.
New section 19 Admissions and
representations of partners
New section 19 provides that an
admission or representation made by a partner in a firm other than an
incorporated limited partnership or a general partner in an incorporated limited
partnership in the course of the firm’s or the partnership’s
business about the firm’s or the partnership’s affairs, is evidence
against the firm or the partnership.
New section 20 Notice to
acting partners to be notice in firm
New section 20 provides that
notice to a partner who habitually acts in the business of a firm other than an
incorporated limited partnership about a matter relating to the firm’s
affairs operates as notice to the firm. Such notice to a general partner who
habitually acts in the business of an incorporated limited partnership operates
as notice to the partnership. Notice does not have such effect if the partner
of the firm or the general partner of the partnership committed, or consented to
the commission of, fraud.
New section 21 Liabilities of incoming and outgoing
partners
New section 21 provides for the liabilities of incoming and
outgoing partners of incorporated limited partnerships and other partnerships.
Under this section, a partner of a firm other than incorporated limited
partnership is not liable, by the partner’s admission in the firm alone,
for anything done in relation to the firm before the partner’s admission,
and a partner retiring from the firm does not cease to be liable for the
firm’s debts and obligations only because of the partner’s
retirement.
A partner in an incorporated limited partnership is not
liable, by the partner’s admission in the partnership alone, for anything
done in relation to the partnership before the partner’s admission to the
partnership. A retiring partner does not, by the partner’s retirement
alone, cease to be liable for the partnership’s liabilities.
This
clause also enables a retiring partner in a firm other than an incorporated
limited partnership or in an incorporated limited partnership to be discharged
from any existing liabilities of the firm or the partnership by an
agreement.
Clauses 16 and 17 Revocation of continuing guaranty by
change of firm
These clauses amend section 22 of the Partnership Act
to clarify that that section does not apply to an incorporated limited
partnership.
Clauses 18 and 19 Partnership Property of firms other
than incorporated limited partnerships
These clauses amend section
24 of the Partnership Act to clarify that that section does not apply to an
incorporated limited partnership.
Clause 20 Partnership property of
incorporated limited partnership
This clause inserts new section 24A
into the Partnership Act.
New section 24A Partnership property of
incorporated limited partnership
New section 24A provides that all
property, and rights and interests in property, acquired on account of an
incorporated limited partnership, or for or in the course of its business are
partnership property. They must be applied exclusively for the partnership. No
partner, only because the partner is a partner in the partnership has a legal or
beneficial interest in the partnership property.
Clauses 21 to 23
Land bought by co-owners out of profits from land—other than incorporated
limited partnerships
These clauses provide for amendments to section
25 of the Partnership Act to clarify that that section does not apply to an
incorporated limited partnership.
Clauses 24 and 25 Conversion into
personalty of land held by firm
These clauses provide for amendments
to clarify that section 27 of the Partnership Act does not apply to an
incorporated limited partnership.
Clause 26 Procedure against
partnership property for partner’s separate judgment
debt
Amendments clarify that subsections 28(2) and (3) of the
Partnership Act do not apply to an incorporated limited
partnership.
Clauses 27 and 28 Rules as to interests and duties of
partners other than partners in incorporated limited partnership subject to
agreement
These clauses provide for amendments to clarify that
section 29 of the Partnership Act does not apply to an incorporated limited
partnership.
Clauses 29 and 30 Retirement from partnership at
will
These clauses provide for amendments to clarify that section 31
of the Partnership Act does not apply to an incorporated limited
partnership.
Clause 31 Partnership for term continued
over
This clause provides that section 32 of the Partnership Act does
not apply to an incorporated limited partnership.
Clause
32 Duty of partner to give
accounts
This clause inserts new section 33. This section provides
for the obligation of a partner in a firm other than an incorporated limited
partnership to give accounts and information about everything affecting the firm
and for the obligation of an incorporated limited partnership to give similar
accounts and information affecting it to a partner or a partner’s legal
representatives.
Clauses 33 Accountability of partners for private
profits
These clauses provide for amendments to clarify that section
34 of the Partnership Act does not apply to an incorporated limited partnership
and provide a new section 34A.
Clauses 34 and 35 Duty of
partner not to compete with firm
These clauses clarify that section
35 of the Partnership Act does not apply to an incorporated limited
partnership.
Clause 36 Rights of assignee of share in
partnership
This clause clarifies that section 36 of the Partnership
Act does not apply to an incorporated limited partnership.
Clause
37 New section 36A Application of pt 5
This clause provides that part
5 (Dissolution of partnership and its consequences) of the Partnership Act does
not apply to an incorporated limited partnership. Part 6, division 6.6 deals
with the winding up of incorporated limited partnerships
Clause 38 New
parts 6 and 7
This clause inserts new parts 6 and 7 into the
Partnership Act.
Part 6 Incorporated limited
partnership
Division 6.1 Preliminary
New
section 51 Definitions for part 6
This section defines certain terms
applying in part 6.
New section 52 Application of other provisions of
this Act
Parts 1 to 4 of the Partnership Act do not apply to
incorporated limited partnerships. Appropriate amendments to the provisions in
those parts are made to clarify their application or non-application to
incorporated limited partnerships.
This section also clarifies that in
the case of inconsistency within the Partnership Act, provisions in part 6
prevail in relation to incorporated limited partnerships.
Division
6.2 Nature and formation of incorporated limited partnerships
New
section 53 Incorporated limited partnership formed on registration
New section 53 provides for the formation of an incorporated limited
partnership on its being registered under part 6.
New section
54 Incorporated limited partnership is separate legal entity
This
section provides that an incorporated limited partnership is a corporation with
legal personality separate from its partners and with perpetual succession, may
have a common seal, and may sue and be sued in its firm name.
The common
seal must be kept as the partnership directs and may only be used as authorised
by the partnership.
New section 55 Partners in incorporated limited
partnership
An incorporated limited partnership is required to have
at least one general partner but no more than 20 general partners; and at least
one limited partner. A corporation or a partnership (including an external
partnership) may be a general partner or a limited partner.
This section
provides for counting the number of partners in a partnership or an external
partnership when that partnership is a general partner in an incorporated
limited partnership. Only the number of partners whose liability is not limited
are counted.
An external partnership is a partnership formed under a
law of a jurisdiction outside the ACT.
New section 56 Partnership
agreement
This section requires the partners of an incorporated
limited partnership to have a written partnership agreement between them at all
times. Such an agreement has effect as a contract between the incorporated
limited partnership and each partner. The interests of the partners of an
incorporated limited partnership and their rights and duties in relation to the
partnership are, subject to the Partnership Act, determined in accordance with
the agreement. An incorporated limited partnership may also sign the agreement.
Division 6.3 Registration of incorporated limited
partnerships
New section 57 Who may apply for
registration
This section provides that those who may apply to
register an incorporated limited partnership are
§ a
partnership (including an external partnership), or
§ any
people or partnerships (including external partnerships), or both, proposing to
be the partners in the proposed incorporated limited partnership.
The
circumstances in which such application for registration may be made are as
follows:
§ the partnership is registered under the
Venture Capital Act 2002 (Cwlth),
part 2 (Registration of venture
capital limited partnerships and Australian venture capital funds of funds) as a
VCLP or an AFOF under that Act, or
§ a general partner in the partnership or a
proposed general partner in the proposed incorporated limited partnership
intends to apply for registration of the incorporated limited partnership or
proposed partnership as a VCLP or an AFOF under the Venture Capital Act, part 2,
or
§ the
partnership is a venture capital management partnership under the Income Tax
Assessment Act 1936 (Cwlth), section 94D (3) (Corporate limited
partnerships) or
§ the partners in the partnership or the
proposed partners in the proposed incorporated limited partnership intend that
the partnership or proposed incorporated limited partnership will meet the
requirements set out in the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 (Cwlth),
section 94D (3) for recognition as a venture capital management partnership;
or
§ other
circumstances prescribed under the regulations.
New section
58 Application for registration
This section provides for
particulars and statements that an application for registration of an
incorporated limited partnership must contain and how it should be
signed.
New section 59 Registration of incorporated limited
partnership
New section 59 provides for registration of an
incorporated limited partnership by the commissioner for fair trading. The
commissioner does not register an incorporated limited partnership if its firm
name would not, in the opinion of the registrar-general, be eligible for
registration as a business name under the Business Names Act
1963.
New section 60 Register of incorporated limited
partnerships
This section deals with a register of incorporated
limited partnerships and empowers the commissioner for fair trading to correct
any mistake or omission in the register.
New section 61 Changes in
registered information
This section requires a statement to be lodged
with the commissioner for fair trading if the registered information relating to
an incorporated limited partnership changes, and signed by all the general
partners in the incorporated limited partnership or by a general partner
authorised by all the general partners. Non-compliance is a strict liability
offence. A general partner has a defence if the partner did not know about the
failure to comply with the requirement and has taken reasonable precautions and
exercised appropriate diligence to avoid the failure. The statement is required
to contain the information required by the regulations.
New section
62 Certificates of registration etc
New section 62 provides for the
issuing of a certificate of registration of an incorporated limited partnership,
and a certificate relating to a change in the registered information or the
correction of a mistake or omission in the register. The commissioner for fair
trading is required to issue a certificate to the general partners of the
relevant incorporated limited partnership. The commissioner may also give an
applicant a certificate for an incorporated limited partnership about its
formation and registered information as at the time of the application.
A certificate under this provision is to be conclusive evidence, as
appropriate, about the formation of an incorporated limited partnership, or the
registered information for an incorporated limited partnership at a stated time,
the general partners and limited partners of an incorporated limited partnership
at a stated time, or any other information in the register about an incorporated
limited partnership at a stated time.
New section 63 Business Names
Act not to apply
This New section provides that an incorporated
limited partnership need not register a business name under the Business
Names Act 1963 if the name is the firm name of the partnership registered
under this part.
New section 64 Acts preparatory to registration do
not create partnership
This section clarifies that a preparatory act
for the registration of an incorporated limited partnership does not itself
create a partnership.
Division 6.4 Powers of incorporated limited
partnerships
New section 65 Powers of partnership
New
section 65 provides that an incorporated limited partnership has the legal
capacity and powers of an individual and also all the powers of a corporation
and gives examples of such powers.
This section also provides that the
powers of an incorporated limited partnership may be limited by the partnership
agreement.
New section 66 Relationship of partners to others and
between themselves
This section clarifies that
§ a general
partner, an incorporated limited partnership or any one acting for
them
is not an agent of a limited partner and acts of these persons do not
bind a limited partner; and
§ a limited partner is not an agent of, or
fiduciary for, a general partner,
another limited partner, or the
incorporated limited partnership, and the acts
of a limited partner do
not bind these persons.
This rule may be changed by the partnership agreement
for an incorporated limited partnership or as agreed by its
partners.
This rule also does not prevent an agreement whereby a partner
acts as an agent of another partner or the incorporated limited partnership, or
the partnership acts as an agent of a partner. In both cases, acts of an agent
binds the principal.
A partner or two or more partners or all partners
may give consent or authority for an incorporated limited partnership under an
agreement either in relation to all cases, or in relation to all cases subject
to stated exceptions, or in relation to any stated case or class of case. Such
consent or authority may be given under the partnership agreement. A general
partner or two or more general partners acting in accordance with the
partnership agreement may give any consent or authority required or permitted to
be given by an incorporated limited partnership.
This section also
provides that a limited partner, as limited partner, is not a proper party to a
court or tribunal proceeding begun by or against the incorporated limited
partnership. However, a limited partner is a proper party in a proceeding begun
by the incorporated limited partnership against the limited partner or in a
proceeding begun by the limited partner against the incorporated limited
partnership.
New section 66 is subject to section 68 (Limited partner
not to take part in incorporated limited partnership’s
management).
Division 6.5 Liability and powers of limited
partners
New section 67 Limitation of liability of limited
partners
This section clarifies that a limited partner is not liable for the
liabilities of the incorporated limited partnership or of a general
partner.
However, a limited partner’s contribution of capital or
property to the incorporated limited partnership may be used in satisfaction of
a liability of the incorporated limited partnership or of a general partner. A
limited partner’s obligation to contribute capital or property to the
incorporated limited partnership may also be enforced in satisfaction of a
liability of the incorporated limited partnership or of a general partner.
New section 67 is subject to section 68 (Limited partner not to take
part in incorporated limited partnership’s management).
New
section 68 Limited partner not to take part in management of
incorporated limited partnership This section
prohibits a limited partner in an incorporated limited partnership from taking
part in the management of the partnership’s business. Where a limited
partner takes part in the management of the partnership and the person to whom
the liability was incurred believed that the limited partner was a general
partner, the partnership is bound by the acts of the limited partner. In that
case, the limited partner is liable, as if a general partner, for the liability
the partnership incurred to a person as a direct result of the acts of the
limited partner if the partnership is unable to satisfy the
liability.
There are a number of circumstances and acts in relation to
which a limited partner is not to be taken as taking part in the management of
the partnership’s business, such as being an employee of the incorporated
limited partnership, giving advice to or for the incorporated limited
partnership in a professional capacity, giving a guarantee in respect of any
liability of the incorporated limited partnership or of a general partner,
acting as a lender to an associate of the partnership, and certain acts
permitted by the partnership agreement. Subsection 68(4) lists these
circumstances and acts.
This section also provides for the right of a
limited partner, to the extent authorised by the partnership agreement, to
access and inspect the books or records of the incorporated limited partnership
or copy them, and to examine the state or prospects of the partnership’s
business and advise, or consult with other partners in relation to them. Except
for this right, the operation of this section cannot be varied by the
partnership agreement or with the consent of the partners.
A limited
partner does anything in connection with the conduct of the business of an
incorporated limited partnership is not to be regarded as that partner taking
part in the management of the partnership’s business.
A limited
partner in an incorporated limited partnership that is a venture capital
management partnership under the
Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 (Cwlth),
section 94D93 is not to be taking part in the management of the
partnership’s business only because of any act that partner takes in
respect of an incorporated limited partnership in the capacity of a partner or
an associate of a partner in the venture capital management
partnership.
New section 69 Interpretation for s 68 This
section defines the references to an associate of a general partner, of a
limited partner or of an incorporated limited partnership for the purpose of
section 68 (Limited partner not to take part in incorporated limited
partnership’s management.)
New section 70 Differences between
partners This section provides that in an incorporated limited
partnership, a difference arising as to ordinary matters connected with its
business may be decided by a majority of the general partners. The partners may
vary the operation of this provision.
New section 71 Change in
partners This section enables a limited partner to transfer all or
part of the partner’s interests to a transferee with the general
partners’ consent and the transferee’s agreement. Where all of the
limited partner’s interests are transferred, the transferee becomes a
limited partner in substitution for the transferor. If only a part of the
limited partner’s interests were transferred, and that part is a part of
the transferor’s legal interest in the partnership, the transferee becomes
a limited partner in place of the transferor in respect of that part.
This section also enables a person to be admitted as a partner in an
incorporated limited partnership without the consent of any limited
partner.
The partners may vary the operation of this provision.
New section 72 Change in status of partnersA general
partner may become a limited partner and a limited partner may become a general
partner. This section provides that a limited partner, who was a general partner
before, remains liable for any liability of the incorporated limited partnership
that arose at the time the partner was a general partner. The liability is to
the extent that the partnership is unable to satisfy or to the greater extent
provided in the partnership agreement.
This section also provides that a
general partner is not liable for any liability of an incorporated limited
partnership that arose while the partner was a limited partner.
New
section 73 Liability in respect of conduct or acts or omissions outside the
ACT New section 73 provides that the limitation on liability of a
limited partner in an incorporated limited partnership extends in respect of
conduct or acts or omissions outside the ACT.
New section 74
Incorporated limited partnerships formed under corresponding
lawsThis section sets out the liability of a partner for a liability
incurred by a recognised incorporated limited partnership that was formed under
a corresponding law of a State, Territory, foreign country or another
jurisdiction. The Minister may declare a law to be a corresponding law.
The Minister may declare a law of a foreign country to be a
corresponding law only if that law provides for the limitation of certain
partners in certain partnerships.
This section does not affect any rule
of law under which recognition is or may be given to a limitation of a liability
of a partner in a partnership.
New section 75 Effect of s 73 and s 74
This section clarifies that there is no implication from section 73
or 74 that a limited partner is liable (or but for that section would be liable)
in connection with the conduct of a partnership’s business or acts or
omissions outside the ACT in circumstances where that partner would not be
liable for them within the ACT.
Division 6.6 Winding up of
incorporated limited partnershipNew section 76 Meaning of
assets for div 6.6 For the purpose of the winding up of an
incorporated limited partnership, this section defines the meaning of
“assets”.
Assets of an incorporated limited partnership means
the assets remaining after satisfaction of the partnership’s liabilities
and the costs, charges and expenses of the winding up.
New section 77
Voluntary winding up This section enables an incorporated limited
partnership to be wound up voluntarily in two ways, that is
(a) in
accordance with the partnership agreement, if it sets out the terms on which the
partnership may be voluntarily wound up; or
(b) subject to the partnership
agreement, if the limited partners resolve to
wind up the
partnership by special resolution.
Assets must be dealt with in
accordance with the partnership agreement. Where the partnership agreement does
not provide for it, they must be distributed among the partners in shares that
are proportionate to their respective contributions of capital or property to
the partnership.
A person aggrieved by the operation of this provision
may apply to the Supreme Court and the Court may make any order relating to the
disposal of the assets that it considers appropriate.
New section
78 Winding up on commissioner’s certificateThis section
enables the commissioner for fair trading, by written notice, to require an
incorporated limited partnership to show good cause why it should not be wound
up if the commissioner considers that any of the following has
occurred:
(a) the partnership has stopped carrying on business, or
(b)
where the partnership has been incorporated on the basis that the partnership is
or is intended to be:
(i) registered as a VCLP or an AFOF
under the
Venture Capital Act 2002 (Cwlth), part 2 (Registration of
venture capital limited partnerships and Australian venture capital funds of
funds), or
(ii) a venture capital management partnership under the
Income
Tax Assessment Act 1936 (Cwlth), section 94D (3)
(Corporate
limited partnerships), and
the partnership has
stopped being, or has not within the period of two years after its incorporation
become, respectively a VCLP, an AFOF or a venture capital management
partnership, or
(c) none of the partners is a limited partner,
or
(d) incorporation of the partnership has been obtained by mistake or
fraud, or
(e) the partnership exists for an illegal purpose.
The
commissioner for fair trading may, if he or she is satisfied that the
incorporated limited partnership should be required to be wound up, issue a
certificate that the incorporated limited partnership be wound up. The
commissioner issues the certificate only if he or she is satisfied that good
cause has not been shown why the partnership should not be wound up. The
certificate is a notifiable instrument.
A written notice must be given to
the incorporated limited partnership about the issue of the certificate. The
commissioner records this fact in the register.
A notice under this
section must be served on the incorporated limited partnership at its registered
office. If service cannot reasonably be made, the notice must be published in a
newspaper circulating generally in the ACT.
New section 79 Review of
certificateThis section enables an application to the Supreme Court
to be made for a review of a decision of the commissioner for fair trading to
issue a certificate under section 78. The Supreme Court may affirm the decision
under review, or set aside the decision under review and cancel the
certificate.
The commissioner may also cancel the certificate under
section 78(2) at any time after a review application is made to the Supreme
Court.
New section 80 Procedure for winding up on certificate
New section 80 provides that a winding up of an incorporated limited
partnership on which a certificate under section 78 is issued must begin within
28 days of the notification of the certificate or of the decision of the Supreme
Court under section 79 to affirm the commissioner’s decision to issue the
certificate.
The commissioner may appoint a liquidator. A general
partner in the incorporated limited partnership may be a liquidator. The
liquidator must publish a notice of his or her appointment in a newspaper, and
must give the security prescribed in the regulations (if any). The commissioner
may appoint a person to fill the position of liquidator if it becomes vacant.
This section also provides that the reasonable costs of a winding up are
payable out of the property of the incorporated limited
partnership.
New section 81 Distribution of assets on winding
up required on commissioner’s certificate In relation to the
winding up of an incorporated limited partnership on the commissioner’s
certificate, this section provides the following
matters:
§ The assets must be dealt with in
accordance with the partnership agreement, if the agreement provides for
it.
§ In any
other case, the assets are distributed among the partners in shares
proportionate to their respective contributions of capital or property to the
partnership.
§ A person aggrieved by the operation of
this section may apply to the Supreme Court and the Court may make any order
that it considers appropriate for the disposal of the assets.
New
section 82 Displacement and application of Corporations legislation
etcThis section declares the winding up of an incorporated limited
partnership to be an excluded matter for the purposes of the Corporations Act,
section 5F in relation to the Corporations Act, part 5.7 (Winding up of bodies
other than companies) and applies that part with specified modifications to an
incorporated limited partnership as if it were a Part 5.7 body.
This
section also enables the Australian Securities and Investments Commission to
exercise a function under part 5.7 pursuant to an agreement under the
Australian Securities and Investments Commission Act 2001 (Cwlth). Where
a function is not given to that commission, the commissioner of fair trading may
exercise that function.
New section 83 Commissioner to be told about
winding up This section requires an incorporated limited partnership
to lodge with the commissioner for fair trading a notice of the beginning of the
winding up of the partnership and a notice of the finish of the winding up.
Non-compliance is a strict liability offence. The commissioner records the
receipt of a notice in the register.
A general partner has defence for a
failure to comply with the requirement under this provision if the partner did
not know of the failure and has taken reasonable precautions and exercised due
diligence to avoid the failure.
New section 84 Cancellation of
incorporation New section 84 requires the commissioner for fair
trading to, by written notice, cancel the incorporation of an incorporated
limited partnership once it is wound up. The notice is a notifiable instrument.
The commissioner is also required to record the cancellation of incorporation in
the register. An incorporated limited partnership ceases to exist with the
cancellation of its incorporation.
Division
6.7 MiscellaneousNew section 85 Execution of
documents This section enables an
incorporated limited partnership to execute a document
§ without
using a common seal if the document is signed by a general partner; or
§ as a deed
if the document is expressed to be executed as a deed and is executed with the
use of a common seal or without using a common seal if the document is signed by
a general partner.
This section does not limit the ways that an
incorporated limited partnership may execute a document (including a
deed).
Note: The Evidence Act 1995 (Cwlth), section 150 (1) (Seals
and signatures) provides for certain presumptions to be made about seals and
duly sealed documents. See also this Act, s 54 (2) on seals of incorporated
limited partnerships.
New section 86 Entitlement to make assumptions
This section refers to assumptions provided in section 87 and
provides that
§ a person is entitled to make those
assumptions in relation to dealings with an incorporated limited
partnership,
§ the partnership is not entitled to assert
in a proceeding that those assumptions are
incorrect,
§ a person is entitled make the above
assumptions in relation to dealings with someone else who has, or purports to
have, acquired title to property from an incorporated limited
partnership,
§ that other person and the incorporated
limited partnership are not entitled to assert in a proceeding that those
assumptions are incorrect,
§ the assumptions may be made even if a
partner or agent of an incorporated limited partnership acts fraudulently, or
forges a document, and
§ a person is not entitled to make an
assumption under section 87 if the person knew or suspected that the assumption
was incorrect.
New section 87 Assumptions that may be made under s 86
This section provides for assumptions a person may make. Examples
of such assumptions are that the partnership agreement of the incorporated
limited partnership has been complied with, that the general partners in, and
agents of, the incorporated limited partnership properly exercise their
functions, that a document has been properly executed by the incorporated
limited partnership if the document appears to have been signed in accordance
with section 85 (Execution of documents), and that a document has been properly
executed by an incorporated limited partnership if its common seal appears to
have been properly affixed to the document.
New section 88
Identification of incorporated limited partnerships
New section 88
requires any document issued on behalf of an incorporated limited partnership in
connection with the conduct of the partnership's business to contain in legible
letters the term "An Incorporated Limited Partnership” (or
‘L.P.’ or ‘LP’ as an abbreviation) at the end of the
partnership’s firm name. Non-compliance is a strict liability
offence.
New Section 89 Display of certificate of
registration
This section requires that the certificate of
registration of an incorporated limited partnership is to be displayed at all
times in a conspicuous position at the registered office of the partnership.
Non-compliance is a strict liability offence.
The reference to
document in this section includes any letter, notice, publication,
written offer, contract, order for goods or services, invoice, bill of exchange,
promissory note, cheque, negotiable instrument, endorsement, letter of credit,
receipt and statement of account.
New section 90 Registered office
New section 89 provides that an incorporated limited partnership must
keep its registered office in the ACT. Non-compliance is a strict liability
offence committed by each general partner. The regulations may prescribe the
hours when the registered office is to be open to the public.
New
section 91 Certain documents to be given to commissioner
This
section requires an incorporated limited partnership that was incorporated on
the basis that it intended to apply for registration of the partnership as a
VCLP or AFOF under the Venture Capital Act 2002 (Cwlth), part 2
(Registration of venture capital limited partnerships and Australian venture
capital funds of funds) to lodge with the commissioner for fair trading a copy
of a document proving its status as a VCLP or AFOF. The document must be lodged
within one month after the registration.
This section also requires an
incorporated limited partnership that was incorporated on the basis that it
intended to meet the requirements for recognition as a venture capital
management partnership under the Income Tax Assessment Act 1936 (Cwlth),
section 94D (3) (Corporate limited partnerships) to lodge with the commissioner
for fair trading a statement that it is such a venture capital management
partnership. This statement must be lodged within one month after becoming the
venture capital management partnership.
Where the registration of an
incorporated limited partnership as a VCLP or AFOF is revoked, or an
incorporated limited partnership ceases to be a venture capital management
partnership, the incorporated limited partnership must, within seven days after
the day the revocation took effect or it ceased to be that venture capital
management partnership, lodge with the commissioner for fair trading a notice of
the revocation or cessation, stating the date it took effect.
If an
incorporated limited partnership ceases to carry on business, the incorporated
limited partnership must, as soon as practicable, lodge with the commissioner
for fair trading a notice of the cessation, stating the date it took
effect.
A notice under this section must contain the information
required by the regulations.
Each general partner in the incorporated
limited partnership commits a strict liability offence if in breach for
noncompliance with a requirement under this section.
New section
92 Service on incorporated limited partnership
This section provides
for serving documents on an incorporated limited partnership.
New
section 93 Entry in register constitutes notice
This section provides
that an entry in the register of information about an incorporated limited
partnership, including an entry stating the effect of any notice received by the
commissioner for fair trading, is sufficient notice of the information or of the
effect of the notice to all people who deal with the partnership.
New
section 94 Duty to give information
This section enables the
commissioner for fair trading to require an incorporated limited partnership to
provide information. The information must be given to the commissioner within
28 days of the notice or any additional time allowed by the commissioner.
Non-compliance is a strict liability offence committed by each general partner.
A general partner has a defence is the partner did not know of the
non-compliance and took reasonable precautions and exercised due diligence to
avoid it.
A defendant in a prosecution for the offence under this section
has a defence if the defendant proves that it was not within the power of the
incorporated limited partnership to give the commissioner the
information.
New section 95 Secrecy
New section 95 applies
to the commissioner for fair trading or anyone employed or engaged to administer
part 6. A person to whom this section applies must not, otherwise than in
relation to the exercise of a function under law, record, divulge or communicate
protected information.
This restriction does not apply to divulging or
communicating protected information with the consent of the person from whom it
is obtained or to a law enforcement authority. Protected information need not
be divulged or communicated to a court or a document containing such information
does need to be produced to a court, unless it is necessary to do so for this
Act or any other Act.
In this section protected information
means information obtained under part 6 by a person to whom this section applies
because of the exercise of a function under this part.
New section
96 Offences by partnerships
This section applies where a general
partner in an incorporated limited partnership commits an offence under part 6,
and the general partner is a partnership (whether or not an external
partnership).
The reference to the general partner is a reference to each
partner in the partnership (or external partnership), or if the partnership (or
external partnership) is one in which any partner has under the law of the place
where it is formed limited liability for the liabilities of the partnership,
each partner in the partnership whose liability is not limited.
New
section 97 Delegation by commissioner
This section enables the
commissioner for fair trading to delegate his or her functions under this part
to a public servant.
New section 98 Relationship with Corporations
legislation
This section provides for the regulations to declare a
matter under this Act to be an excluded matter for the Corporations Act, section
5F (Corporations legislation does not apply to matters declared by State or
Territory law to be an excluded matter).
The declaration may be in
relation to
(a) the whole of the Corporations legislation to which the
Corporations Act,
part 1.1A (Interaction between Corporations Legislation
and State and
Territory laws) applies; or
(b) a stated provision of
that legislation; or
(c) that legislation other than a stated provision;
or
(d) that legislation otherwise than to a stated
extent.
Note Section 5F of the Corporations Act provides
that if a State or Territory law declares a matter to be an excluded matter for
the purposes of that section in relation to all or part of the Corporations
legislation of the Commonwealth, then the provisions that are the subject of the
declaration will not apply in relation to that matter in the State or Territory
concerned.
Part 7 Miscellaneous
New section
99 Determination of fees
Section 99 enables the Minister to determine
fees for the Act. A determination is a disallowable instrument.
New
section 100 Approved forms
This section enables the commissioner for
fair trading to approve forms for this Act. An approved form is a notifiable
instrument.
New section 101 Regulation-making power
Section 101 enables the Executive to make regulations for this
Act.
The regulations may deal with the keeping of records by an
incorporated limited partnership and information or copies of records or
documents required to be given to the commissioner for fair trading by an
incorporated limited partnership.
The regulations may also
§ exempt,
or provide for the exemption, of any person, matter or thing from any stated
provision of this Act,
§ make provision about a matter by applying,
adopting or incorporating (with or without change) a standard, or a provision of
a standard, as in force at a particular time or from time to time,
or
§ may
create offences for contraventions of the regulations with the maximum
penalties of not more than 10 penalty units for each offence.
Dictionary
The dictionary provides for the definitions of
words used in the Act.
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