A California General Partnership owns 2 buildings, one held in title by the partnership (value $1.2m), the other held in title by the three equal partners as tenants in common (value $3.3m). Partnership agreement is 35 years old, never updated. The youngest partner was a minor at the time of signing. Partnership agreement assigns book value to withdrawing partner's share. Prior attempts to rewrite agreement and convert to LLCs failed. Partners no longer on speaking terms, and on rare occasions when they have to talk, it's contentious.
Situation: for personal and practical reasons, the youngest partner wants to sell his share of assets and withdraw from the partnership, maximizing the amount he obtains.
Questions:
(1) if the remaining partners do not wish to purchase withdrawing partner's shares, does the withdrawing partner have the right to sell his one-third interest (real estate & partnership accounts) to an outside party, or to force a sale of all assets to obtain liquidation of his share? What would that entail? How much might these actions cost?
(2) if the withdrawing partner is able to sell his real estate assets -- whether to the remaining partners or to an outside party -- can the more valuable property be used for a 1031 tax-deferred exchange (as it is held in the names of the individual partners as tenants in common) assuming other requirements of the 1031 tax-deferred exchange are met? And what about the lesser-valued property held in title by "BlahBlah General Partnership" of which the withdrawing partner is a general partner -- is a 1031 remotely possible?
That's it! Thanks!
All the best,
Louise
Situation: for personal and practical reasons, the youngest partner wants to sell his share of assets and withdraw from the partnership, maximizing the amount he obtains.
Questions:
(1) if the remaining partners do not wish to purchase withdrawing partner's shares, does the withdrawing partner have the right to sell his one-third interest (real estate & partnership accounts) to an outside party, or to force a sale of all assets to obtain liquidation of his share? What would that entail? How much might these actions cost?
(2) if the withdrawing partner is able to sell his real estate assets -- whether to the remaining partners or to an outside party -- can the more valuable property be used for a 1031 tax-deferred exchange (as it is held in the names of the individual partners as tenants in common) assuming other requirements of the 1031 tax-deferred exchange are met? And what about the lesser-valued property held in title by "BlahBlah General Partnership" of which the withdrawing partner is a general partner -- is a 1031 remotely possible?
That's it! Thanks!
All the best,
Louise
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