I.
DISSOLUTION AND WINDING UP
       1. Definition of Terms (Art. 1828)
       Art. 1828: The dissolution of a partnership is the change in
       the relation of the partners caused by any partner ceasing
       to be associated in the carrying on as distinguished from
       the winding up of the business.
       3 STAGES OF TERMINATION OF PARTNERSHIP:
             Dissolution  change in the relation of the partners
              caused by any partner ceasing to be associated in
              the carrying on of the business
             Winding up  the process of settling business affairs
              after dissolution
             Termination  that point in time after all the
              partnership affairs have been wound up
          Art. 1829: On dissolution the partnership is not
          terminated, but continues until the winding up of
          partnership affairs is completed.
       2. Causes of Dissolution (Arts. 1830, 1831)
       Art. 1830: Dissolution is caused:
       (1)Without violation of the agreement between the
          partners:
              (a) by the termination of the definite term or
                  particular undertaking specified in the agreement;
              (b)by the express will of any partner, who must act in
                 good faith, when no definite term or particular
                 undertaking is specified;
              (c) by the express will of all the partners who have
                  not assigned their interests or suffered them to be
                  charged for their separate debts, either before or
                  after the termination of any specified term or
                  particular undertaking;
              (d)by the expulsion of any partner from the business
                 bona fide in accordance with such a power
                 conferred by the agreement between the
                 partners;
       (2)In contravention of the agreement between the
          partners, where the circumstances do not permit a
          dissolution under any other provision of this articles, by
          the express will of any partner at any time,
(3)By any event which makes it unlawful for the business
   of the partnership to be carried on or for the members
   to carry it on in partnership;
(4)When a specific thing, which a partner had promised to
   contribute to the partnership, perishes before the
   delivery; in any case by any loss of the thing, when the
   partner who contributed it having reserved ownership
   thereof, has only transferred to the partnership the use
   or enjoyment of the same; but the partnership shall not
   be dissolved by the loss of the thing when it occurs
   after the partnership has acquired the ownership
   thereof;
(5)By the death of any partner;
(6)By the insolvency of any partner or of the partnership;
(7)By the civil interdiction of any partner;
(8)By decree of court under the following article.
Paragraphs 1-7 refer to extra-judicial dissolution, out of
court. Paragraph 8, in relation to article 1831 cites the
causes for judicial dissolution.
No. 1  No Violation of Agreement
(a) termination of a partnership at will
(b)by the express will of a partner in good faith - if a
   partner is in bad faith, there is still dissolution but the
   partner may be liable for damages
(c) Express will of all partners, except those who assigned
    or whose interests have been charged
(d)Expulsion of one partner in good faith  if bad faith,
   partnership is still dissolved without prejudice to liability
   for damages
No. 2  Violation of the Agreement
-   refers to a partnership with a fixed term and one partner
    withdraws before the end of the period, with or without
    justifiable cause
-   if there is no cause, the withdrawing partner may be
    liable for damages but the partnership will still be
    dissolved
No. 3  Unlawfulness of the Business
-   if the business later on becomes unlawful, it follows that
    the firm will not be allowed to carry on
-   but if the business was unlawful from the very
    beginning, the partnership never existed
No. 4  Loss
(a) if a specific thing promised as contribution is lost
   BEFORE delivery  the firm is dissolved because the
   partner has not given his contribution
(b) if only the use of a specific thing is contributed, and it is
   LOST BEFORE or AFTER delivery to the firm  the naked
   owner reserved ownership, the loss is borne by him so it
   is as if he had not contributed anything
No. 5  Death of any partner
No. 6  Insolvency of any partner or the partnership
-   no need for judicial declaration; it is enough that the
    assets are less than the liabilities
-   the partnership or partners must be solvent and have
    the financial ability to meet the demands of their
    creditors
No. 7  Civil interdiction of any partner
-   this is still death; civil death, results in incapacity to
    enter into dispositions of property inter vivos
Art. 1831: On application by or for a partner the court shall
decree a dissolution whenever:
(1)A partner has been declared insane in any judicial
   proceeding or is shown to be of unsound mind;
(2)A partner becomes in any other way incapable of
   performing his part of the partnership contract;
(3)A partner has been guilty of such conduct as tends to
   affect prejudicially the carrying on of the business;
(4)A partner willfully or persistently commits a breach of
   the partnership agreement, or otherwise so conducts
   himself in matters relating to the partnership business
   that it is not reasonably practicable to carry on the
   business in partnership with him;
(5)The business of the partnership can only be carried on
   at a loss;
(6)Other circumstances render a dissolution equitable;
On the application of the purchaser of a partners interest
under article 1813 or 1814:
(1)After termination of the specified term or particular
   undertaking;
(2)At any time if the partnership was a partnership at will
   when the interest was assigned or when the charging
   order was issued.
-   for judicial dissolution, a final court decree of dissolution
    is required; and in the application for judicial dissolution,
    the existence of the firm must first be proven
WHO CAN SUE FOR DISSOLUTION:
       a partner for any 6 causes given in the first
        paragraph
       purchaser of a partners interest
No. 1  Insanity
-   the presumption is that every person is of sound mind;
    to defeat that presumption, insanity must be proven
-   for purposes of dissolution, the insanity may be
    judicially decreed in a separate proceeding or proven in
    the very same case for dissolution; in both cases, proof
    of insanity is required
-   an insane person has no capacity to contract
No. 2  Incapability to perform part
-   disability of a partner or when one partner enters
    government service prohibiting him from participating in
    the firm or he needs to go abroad for a very long time
No. 3 & 4  Prejudicial conduct or persistent breach
of the agreement
-   when managers fail to hold regular meetings as
    provided for in the agreement, fail to make reform or
    hear grievances, and fail to give proper financial
    reports, an action for dissolution would prosper; the
    same rule applies if accounting is unjustifiably refused
No. 5  Business is at a loss
No. 6  Other circumstances
-   when partners cannot make an important business
    decision because there is an impasse
3. Effects of Dissolution (Art. 1835)
Art. 1832: Except so far as may be necessary to wind up
partnership affairs or to complete transactions begun but
not then finished, dissolution terminates all authority of
any partner to act for the partnership:
(1)With respect to the partner:
        (a) When the dissolution is not by the act, insolvency
            or death of a partner; or
        (b)When the dissolution is by such act, insolvency or
           death of a partner, in cases where article 1833 so
           requires;
(2)With respect to persons not partners, as declared in
   article 1834.
GENERAL RULE: When a firm is dissolved, the partners can
no longer bind the partnership.
EXCEPTIONS:
     Acts necessary to wind up partnership affairs
     Acts necessary to complete transactions begun but
      not yet finished
     Transactions entered into with third persons who are
      in good faith: (1) previous creditors who had no
      knowledge or notice of the dissolution; or (2)
      ordinary creditors who knew of the existence of the
      partnership but the fact of the dissolution was not
      published in a newspaper of general circulation
     When the dissolution is caused by an act and the
      partner acting for the partnership had no knowledge
      of such dissolution
     When the dissolution is caused by the death or
      insolvency and the partner acting for the partnership
      had no knowledge or notice of the death or
      insolvency
  WHEN IS A PARTNERSHIP NOT BOUND TO THIRD
  PERSONS AFTER DISSOLUTION?
         Partnership is dissolved because it is unlawful to
          carry on the business UNLESS it is for winding up
         Partner that acted in the transaction has become
          insolvent
         Partner has no authority to wind up partnership
          affairs, EXCEPT with respect to transactions
          entered into with third persons in good faith
  a. Rights and Liabilities of Partners after
     Dissolution
         Dissolution without violation of the agreement
          (Art. 1837, par. 1):
          - all partners have the right to apply partnership
          properties to the payment of partnership liabilities
          and collect the surplus
      Dissolution in contravention of the agreement
       (Art. 1837, par. 2):
         -   Innocent partners can:
          apply partnership properties to the payment
           of partnership liabilities and collect the
           surplus
          collect indemnification for damages from
           the guilty partner
          continue the business under the same name
          possess partnership property PROVIDED
           they secure the payment by bond or pay to
           the guilty partner the value of his interest
           less damages recoverable, and PROVIDED
           FURTHER that they indemnify him against
           all present or future partnership liabilities
         -   Guilty partners:
          If business is not continued:
               o Apply partnership properties to the
                 payment of partnership liabilities and
                 collect the surplus less damages he
                 must pay the innocent partners
          If business is continued:
               o To be paid the value of his interest
                 less the value of the goodwill of the
                 business, or its payment be secured
                 by a bond
               o To be discharged from all existing
                 liabilities of the partnership
      Rescission because of Fraud or Misrepresentation
       (Art. 1838) -- rights of innocent partners:
          Right of lien or retention
          Right of subrogation
          Right of indemnification for damages
DISCHARGE OF LIABILITY:
Art. 1835: The dissolution of the partnership does not of
itself discharge the existing liability of any partner.
A partner is discharged from any existing liability upon
dissolution of the partnership by an agreement to that
effect between himself, the partnership creditor and the
person or partnership continuing the business; and such
agreement may be inferred from the course of dealing
   between the creditor having knowledge of the
   dissolution and the person or partnership continuing the
   business.
   The individual property of a deceased partner shall be
   liable for all obligations of the partnership incurred
   while he was a partner, but subject to the prior payment
   of his separate debts.
   HOW A PARTNERS LIABILITY DISCHARGED: there must
   be an agreement executed between the partner
   concerned, the other partners and the creditors.
   EXAMPLE: A, B and C are partners. A dies. Are As
   separate properties liable for his share of the
   partnership obligations incurred while he was still a
   partner?
   Yes. But his individual creditors are to be preferred in his
   separate properties.
4. Winding Up (Art. 1836)
Art. 1836: Unless otherwise agreed, the partners who have
not wrongfully dissolved the partnership or the legal
representative of the last surviving partner, not insolvent,
has the right to wind up the partnership affairs, provided,
however, that any partner, his legal representative or his
assignee, upon cause shown, may obtain winding up by
the court.
2 KINDS OF WINDING UP:
      Extrajudicial  by innocent partners or the legal
       representative of the last surviving partner who must
       be solvent
      Judicial
5. Liquidation and Settling of Accounts
ORDER OF ASSETS TO BE APPLIED
 partnership property
 additional contributions made by partners to cover the
  liabilities
ORDER OF LIABILITIES TO BE PAID
 those owing to creditors who are not partners
 those owing to partners who are creditors other than for
  capital or profits
 those owing to partners as regards capital
   those owing to partners as regards profits
ORDER OF CLAIMS AGAINST THE SEPARATE PROPERTY OF
INSOLVENT PARTNER
 those owing to separate creditors
   those owing to partnership creditors
   those owing to partners by way of contribution