Terms Used In 18 Guam Code Ann. § 25607

  • Assets: (1) The property comprising the estate of a deceased person, or (2) the property in a trust account.
  • Contract: A legal written agreement that becomes binding when signed.
  • Partnership: A voluntary contract between two or more persons to pool some or all of their assets into a business, with the agreement that there will be a proportional sharing of profits and losses.
(1) After dissolution a partner can bind the partnership except as provided in paragraph (3):

(a) By any act appropriate for winding up partnership affairs or completing transactions unfinished at dissolution;

(b) By any transaction which would bind the partnership if dissolution had not taken place; provided, the other party to the transaction:

(i) had extended credit to the partnership prior to the dissolution and had no knowledge or notice of the dissolution; or

(ii) Though he had not so extended credit, had nevertheless known of the partnership prior to dissolution, and, having no knowledge or notice of the dissolution, the fact of dissolution had not been publicly posted in the place, or in each place if more than one, at which the partnership business was regularly carried on.

(2) The liability of a partner under paragraph (1b) shall be satisfied out of partnership assets alone when such partner had been prior to dissolution:

(a) Unknown as a partner to the person with whom the contract is made; and

(b) So far unknown and inactive in partnership affairs that the business reputation of the partnership could not be said to have been in any degree due to his connection with it.

(3) The partnership is in no case bound by any act of a partner after dissolution:

(a) Where the partnership is dissolved because it is unlawful to carry on the business, unless the act is appropriate for winding up partnership affairs; or

(b) Where the partner has become bankrupt; or

COL070307
18 Guam Code Ann. BUSINESS STRUCTURE & FUNCTION
CH. 25 PARTNERSHIPS IN GENERAL

(c) Where the partner has no authority to wind up partnership affairs; except by a transaction with one who

(i) had extended credit to the partnership prior to the dissolution and had no knowledge or notice of is want of authority; or

(ii) Had not extended credit to the partnership prior to dissolution, and, having no knowledge or notice of his want of authority, the fact of his want of authority had not been published in the manner provided for publishing the fact of dissolution in paragraph (1)(b)(ii).

(4) Nothing in this section shall affect the liability under § 25308 of any person who after dissolution represents himself or consents to another representing him as a partner in a partnership engaged in carrying on business.

SOURCE: CC § 2429.

COURT DECISIONS: Delfin v. Liss, 365 F.2d 74 (1966).