txironwill
Junior Member
Texas
In the case of an S-Corp, owned by two partners, one at 51% and one at 49% - the partner at 49% has completely abandoned the corporation. He did not finish projects on which he was working, causing irreparable harm to the company, losing the main client. The other partner offered to have the corp buy his shares back and release him from all liability with the company, however, the guy won't respond to phone calls, emails or certified letters. He was also asked to sign the paperwork to shut the corp down if he would not sell, and he won't respond to that request either. Basically, he has gone completely dark. Currently, he is working out of the country on a contract, completely separate from the corp in question.
What can be done about this? Can he be forced out? We'd prefer NOT to shut the corp down and start over, as we are trying to salvage what we can, there is a new partner who will buy the shares from the corp. We aren't sure what the next steps should be.
Any thoughts?
In the case of an S-Corp, owned by two partners, one at 51% and one at 49% - the partner at 49% has completely abandoned the corporation. He did not finish projects on which he was working, causing irreparable harm to the company, losing the main client. The other partner offered to have the corp buy his shares back and release him from all liability with the company, however, the guy won't respond to phone calls, emails or certified letters. He was also asked to sign the paperwork to shut the corp down if he would not sell, and he won't respond to that request either. Basically, he has gone completely dark. Currently, he is working out of the country on a contract, completely separate from the corp in question.
What can be done about this? Can he be forced out? We'd prefer NOT to shut the corp down and start over, as we are trying to salvage what we can, there is a new partner who will buy the shares from the corp. We aren't sure what the next steps should be.
Any thoughts?