Abogados de Business Dissolution
1402 abogados de Business Dissolution encontrados. Filtre por estado y ciudad.

Evans Legal

David Ferguson, Attorney at Law

David H. Erickson, Attorney at Law

Law Offices of David J. O'Connell

Winthers Law Group

Winthers Trial Lawyers

David Karnes, Attorney at Law

Karnes & Associates

Ma Injury Lawyers

Lampley Law Office

David M. Pillers, Attorney at Law

Serafin Trial Lawyers

David Meyer, Attorney at Law

Eron & Associates

Law Offices of David R. Mugridge

Shevitz Legal
Business Dissolution Lawyers in the United States
Closing a business is rarely as simple as locking the doors. Whether you're shutting down a partnership, LLC, or corporation, the process involves legal obligations that can follow you for years if handled incorrectly. A business dissolution lawyer helps owners wind down operations while protecting their personal and financial interests.
What Business Dissolution Law Covers
Business dissolution refers to the formal process of ending a business entity's legal existence. This includes settling debts with creditors, distributing remaining assets among owners, filing dissolution paperwork with the state, and canceling licenses and permits.
Dissolution law also covers disputes between partners or members who disagree about whether or how to close. In some cases, a court may order judicial dissolution when owners reach an impasse or when one party has engaged in fraud or mismanagement. Tax obligations, employee terminations, and contract wind-downs all fall under this practice area.
When to Hire a Business Dissolution Lawyer
- Partners or co-owners disagree on whether to dissolve or how to divide assets
- The business carries significant debts, outstanding contracts, or pending litigation
- You need to determine whether voluntary dissolution or bankruptcy is the better path
- State filing requirements and tax clearance procedures are unclear for your entity type
- A minority owner is seeking judicial dissolution against the wishes of the majority
How the Dissolution Process Works
The process begins with a formal vote or agreement among owners, following the procedures outlined in the operating agreement, partnership agreement, or corporate bylaws. If no governing document exists, state default rules apply.
After the vote, the business enters a winding-up period. During this phase, the company stops taking on new business, notifies creditors, settles outstanding obligations, and liquidates assets. According to the American Bar Association, disputes during wind-up extend the average dissolution timeline from a few months to over a year.
Once all obligations are satisfied, the company files articles of dissolution with the appropriate state agency and obtains tax clearances. Skipping these steps can leave owners personally liable for future tax assessments or creditor claims.
How Financial Outcomes Are Determined
- Asset valuation — business assets are appraised at fair market value, including real property, inventory, intellectual property, and accounts receivable
- Creditor claims are prioritized and paid before any distribution to owners, following a legally mandated order of priority
- Remaining assets are distributed according to each owner's percentage interest or capital account balance as defined in the governing documents
- Owners who contributed more capital or took on personal guarantees may receive adjustments in the final distribution
- If assets are insufficient to cover debts, owners of certain entity types may face personal liability depending on their corporate protections and conduct
Frequently Asked Questions
Can one partner force a business dissolution?
In many states, a partner or member can petition the court for judicial dissolution under specific circumstances — such as deadlock, fraud, or oppressive conduct by other owners. The court weighs the facts before ordering a dissolution. The governing agreement may also grant individual owners the right to trigger dissolution unilaterally.
What happens to business debts when a company dissolves?
The business must pay or settle all known debts during the winding-up period. Creditors typically have a set window — often 90 to 120 days after receiving notice — to file claims. Debts that go unpaid can sometimes be pursued against individual owners, particularly if the business failed to follow proper dissolution procedures.

