Abogados de Partnership & Shareholder Disputes
950 abogados de Partnership & Shareholder Disputes encontrados. Filtre por estado y ciudad.

Robbins Law Group

Johnson Legal

Drucker Legal

Lyon Law Office

Gary Weeks, Attorney at Law

Hanahan Injury Lawyers

Einhorn & Associates

Einhorn Trial Lawyers

The Meziere Firm

Indest & Partners

Bellas Trial Lawyers

Svoboda Injury Lawyers

Walker & Partners

Baker Trial Lawyers

Young Law Group

Goolsby & Associates
Partnership and Shareholder Disputes Lawyers in the United States
Business relationships break down. When partners or shareholders disagree about money, control, or direction, the fallout can threaten the entire company. A lawyer who handles these disputes protects your financial interest and fights for a fair resolution — whether through negotiation or litigation.
What Partnership and Shareholder Disputes Cover
Partnership disputes arise when co-owners clash over profit distribution, management authority, or alleged misconduct. These cases often involve accusations of self-dealing, unauthorized transactions, or breaches of the partnership agreement.
Shareholder disputes typically involve conflicts between majority and minority owners. Minority shareholders may face squeeze-out tactics, dilution of their ownership, or exclusion from decision-making. Majority shareholders sometimes accuse minority owners of blocking legitimate business moves.
Other common issues include disputes over company valuation during a buyout, mismanagement claims, diversion of business opportunities, and disagreements about dissolving the business entirely.
When to Hire a Partnership or Shareholder Disputes Lawyer
- A partner or co-owner is misusing company funds or making unauthorized financial decisions
- You're being frozen out of management decisions or denied access to company books and records
- Majority shareholders are diluting your ownership stake or refusing to distribute profits
- You need to force a business dissolution or negotiate a buyout of your interest
- A co-owner has breached a partnership agreement, operating agreement, or shareholder contract
How the Dispute Resolution Process Works
Most cases begin with a demand letter outlining the grievances and proposed resolution. Many partnership and shareholder agreements contain mandatory mediation or arbitration clauses, which must be followed before filing a lawsuit.
If informal resolution fails, litigation follows. The complaining party may seek injunctive relief to prevent further harm while the case proceeds. According to the American Bar Association, roughly 95% of business disputes settle before trial — but the strength of your legal position determines what kind of settlement you get.
Some cases result in court-ordered dissolution, where a judge forces the sale of the business and divides the proceeds.
How Financial Outcomes Are Determined
- Fair market valuation of the business determines what a departing partner or shareholder should receive for their ownership interest
- Lost profits and diverted revenue are calculated based on financial records showing what the injured party should have earned
- Courts may apply a minority discount or lack-of-marketability discount to ownership stakes, reducing payout amounts by 15-35% in many cases
- Breach of fiduciary duty claims can result in disgorgement — forcing the wrongdoer to return all improperly gained profits
- Punitive damages may apply in cases involving fraud or intentional misconduct by a partner or shareholder
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I force my business partner to buy me out?
That depends on your partnership or operating agreement. Some agreements include buyout provisions triggered by specific events like deadlock or misconduct. Without such provisions, you may need to petition the court for judicial dissolution, which effectively forces a sale or buyout.
What does "breach of fiduciary duty" mean in a business dispute?
Partners and corporate officers owe each other a fiduciary duty — a legal obligation to act honestly and in the company's best interest. A breach occurs when someone puts personal gain above that obligation. Common examples include secretly competing with the business, hiding financial information, or funneling company money to personal accounts.

