While
France,
Luxembourg,
Norway, the
Czech Republic and
Sweden also grant some degree of legal personality to business partnerships, other countries such as
Belgium,
Germany,
Italy,
Switzerland and
Poland do not allow partnerships to acquire a separate legal personality, but permit partnerships the rights to sue and be sued, to hold property, and to postpone a creditor's
lawsuit against the partners until he or she has exhausted all
remedies against the partnership assets. In
Bangladesh, the relevant law for regulating partnership is the Partnership Act 1932. A partnership is defined as the relation between persons who have agreed to share the profits of a business carried on by all or any of them acting for all. The law does not require written partnership agreement between the partners to form a partnership. A partnership does not also required to be registered, however an unregistered partnership has a number of limitation regarding enforcing its rights in any court. In
England and Wales, a partnership does not have separate legal personality. Although the English & Welsh
Law Commission proposed to amend the law to create separate personality for all general partnerships, the British government decided not to implement the proposals relating to general partnerships. The
Limited Liability Partnerships Act 2000 confers separate personality on limited liability partnerships—separating them almost entirely from general partnerships and limited partnerships, despite the naming similarities. In
Scotland partnerships do have some degree of legal personality.
Japanese law provides for Civil Code , which have no legal personality, and Commercial Code , which have full corporate personhood but otherwise function similarly to partnerships. In December 2002 the
Netherlands proposed to replace their general partnership, which does not have legal personality, with a public partnership which allows the partners to opt for legal personality. In the
United States, section 201 of the Revised
Uniform Partnership Act (RUPA) of 1997 provides that "A partnership is an entity distinct from its partners." This is one of the more significant departures of RUPA from the 1917 Uniform Partnership Act, which does not recognize separate legal personality for partnerships; however, the degree to which this theory was actually respected varied by jurisdiction and over time. The two main consequences of allowing separate personality are that one partnership will be able to become a partner in another partnership in the same way that a registered company can, and a partnership will not be bound by the doctrine of
ultra vires but will have unlimited legal capacity like any other
natural person. == See also ==