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sophistication. For this reason, a very broad provision in a | | partnership agreement in effect negating any duty of loyalty, such | | as a provision giving a managing partner complete discretion to | | manage the business with no liability except for acts and omissions | | that constitute willful misconduct, will not likely be enforced. | | See, e.g., Labovitz v. Dolan, 189 Ill. App. 3d 403, 136 Ill. Dec. | | 780, 545 N.E.2d 304 (1989). On the other hand, it is clear that | | the remaining partners can "consent" to a particular conflicting | | interest transaction or other breach of duty, after the fact, | | provided there is full disclosure. |
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| | | RUPA attempts to provide a standard that partners can rely | | upon in drafting exculpatory agreements. It is not necessary | | that the agreement be restricted to a particular transaction. | | That would require bargaining over every transaction or | | opportunity, which would be excessively burdensome. The | | agreement may be drafted in terms of types or categories of | | activities or transactions, but it should be reasonably specific. |
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| | | A provision in a real estate partnership agreement authorizing | | a partner who is a real estate agent to retain commissions on | | partnership property bought and sold by that partner would be an | | example of a "type or category" of activity that is not | | manifestly unreasonable and thus should be enforceable under the | | Act. Likewise, a provision authorizing that partner to buy or | | sell real property for his own account without prior disclosure | | to the other partners or without first offering it to the | | partnership would be enforceable as a valid category of | | partnership activity. |
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| | | Ultimately, the courts must decide the outer limits of | | validity of such agreements, and context may be significant. It | | is intended that the risk of judicial refusal to enforce | | manifestly unreasonable exculpatory clauses will discourage sharp | | practices while accommodating the legitimate needs of the parties | | in structuring their relationship. |
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| | | 5. Subsection (b)(3)(i) permits the partners, in their | | partnership agreement, to identify specific types or categories | | of partnership activities that do not violate the duty of | | loyalty. A modification of the statutory standard must not, | | however, be manifestly unreasonable. This is intended to | | discourage overreaching by a partner with superior bargaining | | power since the courts may refuse to enforce an overly broad | | exculpatory clause. See, e.g., Vlases v. Montgomery Ward & Co., | | 377 F.2d 846, 850 (3d Cir. 1967) (limitation prohibits | | unconscionable agreements); PPG Industries, Inc. v. Shell Oil | | Co., 919 F.2d 17, 19 (5th Cir. 1990) (apply limitation | | deferentially to agreements of sophisticated parties). |
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