Public Act 099-0637
 
HB4361 EnrolledLRB099 15485 KTG 39774 b

    AN ACT concerning business.
 
    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:
 
    Section 5. The Limited Liability Company Act is amended by
changing Sections 1-5, 1-30, 1-40, 5-5, 5-45, 5-47, 5-50, 10-1,
10-15, 13-5, 15-1, 15-3, 15-5, 15-7, 20-1, 20-5, 25-35, 30-5,
30-10, 30-20, 35-1, 35-3, 35-4, 35-7, 35-15, 35-20, 35-45,
35-55, 37-5, 37-10, 37-15, 37-20, 37-25, 37-30, 37-40, 50-1,
50-10, and 55-1, by changing the headings of Articles 30 and
37, and by adding Sections 1-6, 1-46, 1-65, 13-15, 13-20,
30-25, 35-37, 37-16, 37-17, 37-21, 37-31, 37-32, 37-33, 37-34,
37-36, and 55-3 as follows:
 
    (805 ILCS 180/1-5)
    Sec. 1-5. Definitions. As used in this Act, unless the
context otherwise requires:
    "Anniversary" means that day every year exactly one or more
years after: (i) the date the articles of organization filed
under Section 5-5 of this Act were filed by the Office of the
Secretary of State, in the case of a limited liability company;
or (ii) the date the application for admission to transact
business filed under Section 45-5 of this Act was filed by the
Office of the Secretary of State, in the case of a foreign
limited liability company.
    "Anniversary month" means the month in which the
anniversary of the limited liability company occurs.
    "Articles of organization" means the articles of
organization filed by the Secretary of State for the purpose of
forming a limited liability company as specified in Article 5
and all amendments thereto, whether evidenced by articles of
amendment, articles of merger, or a statement of correction
affecting the articles.
    "Assumed limited liability company name" means any limited
liability company name other than the true limited liability
company name, except that the identification by a limited
liability company of its business with a trademark or service
mark of which it is the owner or licensed user shall not
constitute the use of an assumed name under this Act.
    "Bankruptcy" means bankruptcy under the Federal Bankruptcy
Code of 1978, Title 11, Chapter 7 of the United States Code, as
amended from time to time, or any successor statute.
    "Business" includes every trade, occupation, profession,
and other lawful purpose, whether or not carried on for profit.
    "Company" means a limited liability company.
    "Contribution" means any cash, property, or services
rendered, or other benefit, or a promissory note or other
binding obligation to contribute cash or property, or to
perform services, or provide any other benefit, that a person
contributes to the limited liability company in that person's
capacity as a member or in order to become a member.
    "Court" includes every court and judge having jurisdiction
in a case.
    "Debtor in bankruptcy" means a person who is the subject of
an order for relief under Title 11 of the United States Code, a
comparable order under a successor statute of general
application, or a comparable order under federal, state, or
foreign law governing insolvency.
    "Distribution" means a transfer of money, property, or
other benefit from a limited liability company to a member in
the member's capacity as a member or to a transferee of the
member's distributional interest.
    "Distributional interest" means all of a member's right to
receive interest in distributions of by the limited liability
company's assets, but no other rights or interests of a member
company.
    "Entity" means a person other than an individual.
    "Federal employer identification number" means either (i)
the federal employer identification number assigned by the
Internal Revenue Service to the limited liability company or
foreign limited liability company or (ii) in the case of a
limited liability company or foreign limited liability company
not required to have a federal employer identification number,
any other number that may be assigned by the Internal Revenue
Service for purposes of identification.
    "Foreign limited liability company" means an
unincorporated entity organized under laws other than the laws
of this State that afford limited liability to its owners
comparable to the liability under Section 10-10 and is not
required to register to transact business under any law of this
State other than this Act.
    "Insolvent" means that a limited liability company is
unable to pay its debts as they become due in the usual course
of its business.
    "Legal representative" means, without limitation, an
executor, administrator, guardian, personal representative and
agent, including an appointee under a power of attorney.
    "Limited liability company" means a limited liability
company organized under this Act.
    "L3C" or "low-profit limited liability company" means a
for-profit limited liability company which satisfies the
requirements of Section 1-26 of this Act and does not have as a
significant purpose the production of income or the
appreciation of property.
    "Manager" means a person, whether or not a member of a
manager-managed company, who is vested with authority in an
operating agreement as provided in under Section 15-1 13-5.
    "Manager-managed company" means a limited liability
company that vests authority in a manager or managers in an
operating agreement as provided in Section 15-1 which is so
designated in its articles of organization.
    "Member" means a person who becomes a member of the limited
liability company upon formation of the company or in the
manner and at the time provided in the operating agreement or,
if the operating agreement does not so provide, in the manner
and at the time provided in this Act.
    "Member-managed company" means a limited liability company
other than a manager-managed company.
    "Membership interest" means all of a member's rights in the
limited liability company, including the member's right to
receive distributions of the limited liability company's
assets.
    "Operating agreement" means the agreement under Section
15-5, whether or not referred to as an operating agreement and
whether oral, in a record, implied, or in any combination
thereof, of all of the members of a limited liability company,
including a sole member, concerning the relations among the
members, managers, and limited liability company. The term
"operating agreement" includes amendments to the agreement.
    "Organizer" means one of the signers of the original
articles of organization.
    "Person" means an individual, partnership, domestic or
foreign limited partnership, limited liability company or
foreign limited liability company, trust, estate, association,
corporation, governmental body, or other juridical being.
    "Record" means information that is inscribed on a tangible
medium or that is stored in an electronic or other medium and
is retrievable in perceivable form.
    "Registered office" means that office maintained by the
limited liability company in this State, the address, including
street, number, city and county, of which is on file in the
office of the Secretary of State, at which, any process,
notice, or demand required or permitted by law may be served
upon the registered agent of the limited liability company.
    "Registered agent" means a person who is an agent for
service of process on the limited liability company who is
appointed by the limited liability company and whose address is
the registered office of the limited liability company.
    "Restated articles of organization" means the articles of
organization restated as provided in Section 5-30.
    "Sign" means, with the present intent to authenticate or
adopt a record:
        (1) to execute or adopt a tangible symbol; or
        (2) to attach to or logically associate with the record
    an electronic symbol, sound, or process.
    "State" means a state, territory, or possession of the
United States, the District of Columbia, or the Commonwealth of
Puerto Rico.
    "Transfer" includes an assignment, conveyance, deed, bill
of sale, lease, mortgage, security interest, encumbrance, and
gift.
(Source: P.A. 96-126, eff. 1-1-10; 97-839, eff. 7-20-12.)
 
    (805 ILCS 180/1-6 new)
    Sec. 1-6. Electronic records. Any requirement in this Act
that there be a writing or that any document, instrument, or
agreement be written or in ink is subject to the provisions of
the Electronic Commerce Security Act.
 
    (805 ILCS 180/1-30)
    Sec. 1-30. Powers. Each limited liability company
organized and existing under this Act may do all of the
following:
    (1) Sue and be sued, complain and defend, and participate
in administrative or other proceedings, in its name.
    (2) Have a seal, which may be altered at pleasure, and use
the same by causing it, or a facsimile thereof, to be impressed
or affixed or in any other manner reproduced, provided that the
affixing of a seal to an instrument shall not give the
instrument additional force or effect, or change the
construction thereof, and the use of a seal is not mandatory.
    (3) Purchase, take, receive, lease as lessee, take by gift,
legacy, or otherwise acquire, own, hold, use, and otherwise
deal in and with any real or personal property, or any interest
therein, wherever situated.
    (4) Sell, convey, mortgage, pledge, lease as lessor, and
otherwise dispose of all or any part of its property and
assets.
    (5) Lend money to and otherwise assist its members and
employees.
    (6) Purchase, take, receive, subscribe for or otherwise
acquire, own, hold, vote, use, employ, sell, mortgage, loan,
pledge, or otherwise dispose of, and otherwise use and deal in
and with, shares or other interests in or obligations of other
limited liability companies, domestic or foreign corporations,
associations, general or limited partnerships, or individuals.
    (7) Incur liabilities, borrow money for its proper purposes
at any rate of interest the limited liability company may
determine without regard to the restrictions of any usury law
of this State, issue notes, bonds, and other obligations,
secure any of its obligations by mortgage or pledge or deed of
trust of all or any part of its property, franchises, and
income, and make contracts, including contracts of guaranty and
suretyship.
    (8) Invest its surplus funds from time to time, lend money
for its proper purposes, and take and hold real and personal
property as security for the payment of funds so loaned or
invested.
    (9) Conduct its business, carry on its operations, have
offices within and without this State, and exercise in any
other state, territory, district, or possession of the United
States or in any foreign country the powers granted by this
Act.
    (10) Designate Elect managers and appoint officers and
other agents of the limited liability company, define their
duties, and fix their compensation.
    (11) Enter into or amend an operating agreement, not
inconsistent with the laws of this State, for the
administration and regulation of the affairs of the limited
liability company.
    (12) Make donations for the public welfare or for
charitable, scientific, religious, or educational purposes,
lend money to the government, and transact any lawful business
in aid of the United States.
    (13) Establish deferred compensation plans, pension plans,
profit-sharing plans, bonus plans, option plans, and other
incentive plans for its managers and employees and make the
payments provided for therein.
    (14) Become a promoter, partner, member, associate, or
manager of any general partnership, limited partnership, joint
venture or similar association, any other limited liability
company, or other enterprise.
    (15) Have and exercise all powers necessary or convenient
to effect any or all of the purposes for which the limited
liability company is organized.
(Source: P.A. 90-424, eff. 1-1-98.)
 
    (805 ILCS 180/1-40)
    Sec. 1-40. Records to be kept.
    (a) Each limited liability company shall keep at the
principal place of business of the company named in the
articles of organization or other reasonable locations
specified in the operating agreement all of the following:
        (1) A list of the full name and last known address of
    each member setting forth the amount of cash each member
    has contributed, a description and statement of the agreed
    value of the other property or services each member has
    contributed or has agreed to contribute in the future, and
    the date on which each became a member.
        (2) A copy of the articles of organization, as amended
    or restated, together with executed copies of any powers of
    attorney under which any articles, application, or
    certificate has been executed.
        (3) Copies of the limited liability company's federal,
    State, and local income tax returns and reports, if any,
    for the 3 most recent years.
        (4) Copies of any then effective written operating
    agreement and any amendments thereto and of any financial
    statements of the limited liability company for the 3 most
    recent years.
    (b) Records kept under this Section may be inspected and
copied at the request and expense of any member or legal
representative of a deceased member or member under legal
disability during ordinary business hours.
    (c) The rights under subsection (b) of this Section also
extend to a transferee of a distributional interest, but only
for a proper purpose. In order to exercise this right, a
transferee must make written demand upon the limited liability
company, stating with particularity the records sought to be
inspected and the purpose of the demand.
    (d) Within 10 days after receiving a demand pursuant to
subsection (c):
        (1) the company shall provide the information demanded
    or, in a record, a description of the information the
    company will provide, stating a reasonable time within
    which it will be provided and the place where it will be
    provided; and
        (2) if the company declines to provide any demanded
    information, the company shall state its reasons for
    declining to the transferee in a record.
    A transferee may exercise the rights under this subsection
through a legal representative.
(Source: P.A. 90-424, eff. 1-1-98.)
 
    (805 ILCS 180/1-46 new)
    Sec. 1-46. Applicability of statute of frauds. An operating
agreement is enforceable whether or not there is a writing
signed or record authenticated by a party against whom
enforcement is sought, even if the agreement is not capable of
performance within one year of its making.
 
    (805 ILCS 180/1-65 new)
    Sec. 1-65. Governing law. The law of this State governs:
        (1) the internal affairs and organization of a limited
    liability company;
        (2) the liability of a member as member and a manager
    as manager for the debts, obligations, or other liabilities
    of a limited liability company;
        (3) the internal affairs and establishment of a series
    of a limited liability company;
        (4) the liability of a member or a manager associated
    with a series for the debts, obligations, or other
    liabilities of the series; and
        (5) the liability of a series for the debts,
    obligations, or other liabilities of the limited liability
    company that established the series or for another series
    established by the limited liability company, and the
    liability of the limited liability company for the debts,
    obligations, or other liabilities of a series established
    by the limited liability company.
 
    (805 ILCS 180/5-5)
    Sec. 5-5. Articles of organization.
    (a) The articles of organization shall set forth all of the
following:
        (1) The name of the limited liability company and the
    address of its principal place of business which may, but
    need not be a place of business in this State.
        (2) The purposes for which the limited liability
    company is organized, which may be stated to be, or to
    include, the transaction of any or all lawful businesses
    for which limited liability companies may be organized
    under this Act.
        (3) The name of its registered agent and the address of
    its registered office.
        (4) A confirmation that If the limited liability
    company complies with the requirement in subsection (b) of
    Section 5-1 that the company has one or more members at the
    time of filing or, if the filing is to be effective on a
    later date, that the company will have one or more members
    on the date the filing is to be effective is to be managed
    by a manager or managers, the names and business addresses
    of the initial manager or managers.
        (5) The name and business address of all of the
    managers and any member having the authority of a manager
    If management of the limited liability company is to be
    vested in the members under Section 15-1, then the names
    and addresses of the initial member or members.
        (5.5) The duration of the limited liability company,
    which shall be perpetual unless otherwise stated.
        (6) (Blank).
        (7) The name and address of each organizer.
        (8) Any other provision, not inconsistent with law,
    that the members elect to set out in the articles of
    organization for the regulation of the internal affairs of
    the limited liability company, including any provisions
    that, under this Act, are required or permitted to be set
    out in the operating agreement of the limited liability
    company.
    (b) A limited liability company is organized at the time
articles of organization are filed by the Secretary of State or
at any later time, not more than 60 days after the filing of
the articles of organization, specified in the articles of
organization.
    (c) Articles of organization for the organization of a
limited liability company for the purpose of accepting and
executing trusts shall not be filed by the Secretary of State
until there is delivered to him or her a statement executed by
the Secretary of Financial and Professional Regulation or
successor State board, department, or agency having
jurisdiction over the regulation of trust companies that the
organizers of the limited liability company have made
arrangements with the Secretary of Financial and Professional
Regulation or successor State board, department, or agency
having jurisdiction over the regulation of trust companies to
comply with the Corporate Fiduciary Act.
    (d) Articles of organization for the organization of a
limited liability company as a bank or a savings bank must be
filed with the Secretary Department of Financial and
Professional Regulation or successor State board, department,
or agency having jurisdiction over the regulation of banks or
savings banks or, if the bank or savings bank will be organized
under federal law, with the appropriate federal banking
regulator.
(Source: P.A. 98-171, eff. 8-5-13; 99-227, eff. 8-3-15.)
 
    (805 ILCS 180/5-45)
    Sec. 5-45. Forms, execution, acknowledgement and filing.
    (a) All reports required by this Act to be filed in the
Office of the Secretary of State shall be made on forms
prescribed and furnished by the Secretary of State. Forms for
all other documents to be filed in the Office of the Secretary
of State shall be furnished by the Secretary of State upon
request therefor, but the use thereof, unless otherwise
specifically prescribed in this Act, shall not be mandatory.
    (b) Whenever any provision of this Act specifically
requires any document to be executed by the limited liability
company in accordance with this Section, unless otherwise
specifically stated in this Act and subject to any additional
provisions of this Act, the document shall be signed executed,
in ink, as follows:
        (1) The initial articles of organization shall be
    signed by the organizer or organizers.
        (2) A document filed on behalf of a dissolved limited
    liability company that has no members must be signed by the
    person winding up the company's activities under Section
    35-4.
        (3) Any other document must be signed by a person
    authorized by the limited liability company to sign it. All
    other documents shall be signed:
            (A) by a manager and verified by him or her; or
            (B) if there are no managers, then by the members
        or those of them that may be designated by a majority
        vote of the members.
    (c) The name of a person signing the document and the
capacity in which the person signs shall be stated beneath or
opposite the person's signature.
    (d) The execution of any document required by this Act by a
person member or manager constitutes an affirmation under the
penalties of perjury that the facts stated therein are true and
that the person has authority to execute the document.
    (e) When filed in the Office of the Secretary of State, an
authorization, including a power of attorney, to sign a record
must be in writing, then sworn to, verified, or acknowledged.
(Source: P.A. 90-424, eff. 1-1-98.)
 
    (805 ILCS 180/5-47)
    Sec. 5-47. Statement of correction.
    (a) Whenever any instrument authorized to be filed with the
Secretary of State under any provision of this Act has been so
filed and, as of the date of the action therein referred to,
contains any misstatement of fact, typographical error, error
of transcription, or any other error or defect or was
defectively or erroneously executed, such instrument may be
corrected by filing, in accordance with Section 5-45 of this
Act, a statement of correction.
    (b) A statement of correction shall set forth:
        (1) The name of the limited liability company and the
    state or country under the laws of which it is organized.
        (2) The title of the instrument being corrected and the
    date it was filed by the Secretary of State.
        (3) The inaccuracy, error, or defect to be corrected
    and the portion of the instrument in corrected form.
    (c) A statement of correction shall be executed in the same
manner in which the instrument being corrected was required to
be executed.
    (d) The corrected instrument shall be effective as of the
date the original instrument was filed.
    (e) A statement of correction shall not:
        (1) Effect any change or amendment of articles which
    would not in all respects have complied with the
    requirements of this Act at the time of filing the
    instrument being corrected.
        (2) Take the place of any document, statement, or
    report otherwise required to be filed by this Act.
        (3) Affect any right or liability accrued or incurred
    before such filing, except that any right or liability
    accrued or incurred by reason of the error or defect being
    corrected shall be extinguished by such filing if the
    person having such right has not detrimentally relied on
    the original instrument.
        (4) (Blank). Alter the provisions of the articles of
    organization with respect to the limited liability company
    name, purpose, ability to establish series, or the names
    and addresses of the organizers, initial manager or
    managers, and initial member or members.
        (5) (Blank). Alter the provisions of the application
    for admission to transact business as a foreign limited
    liability company with respect to the limited liability
    name or ability to establish series.
        (6) (Blank). Alter the provisions of the application to
    adopt or change an assumed limited liability company name
    with respect to the assumed limited liability company name.
        (7) Alter the wording of any resolution as filed in any
    document with the Secretary of State and which was in fact
    adopted by the members or managers.
(Source: P.A. 95-368, eff. 8-23-07.)
 
    (805 ILCS 180/5-50)
    Sec. 5-50. Amendment or termination dissolution by
judicial act. If a person required by Section 5-45 to execute
an amendment or statement articles of termination dissolution
fails or refuses to do so, any other member and any transferee
of a limited liability company interest, who is adversely
affected by the failure or refusal, may petition a court to
direct the amendment or statement of termination dissolution.
If the court finds that the amendment or statement of
termination dissolution is proper and that any person so
designated has failed or refused to execute the amendment or
statement articles of termination dissolution, it shall order
the Secretary of State to record an appropriate amendment or
statement of termination dissolution.
(Source: P.A. 90-424, eff. 1-1-98.)
 
    (805 ILCS 180/10-1)
    Sec. 10-1. Admission of members.
    (a) A person becomes a member of a limited liability
company:
        (1) upon formation of the company, as provided in an
    agreement between the organizer and the initial member if
    there is only one member, or as provided in an agreement
    among initial members if there is more than one member;
        (2) after the formation of the company,
            (A) as provided in the operating agreement;
            (B) as the result of a transaction effective under
        Article 37;
            (C) with the consent of all the members; or
            (D) if, within 180 consecutive days after the
        company ceases to have any members:
                (i) the last person to have been a member, or
            the legal representative of that person,
            designates a person to become a member; and
                (ii) the designated person consents to become
            a member.
    (b) A person that acquires a distributional interest, but
that does not become a member, has merely the rights of a
transferee under Sections 30-5 and 30-10.
    (c) A person may become a member without acquiring a
distributional interest and without making or being obligated
to make a contribution to the limited liability company. After
the filing of the articles of organization, a person who
acquires a membership interest directly from the limited
liability company or is a transferee of a membership interest
may be admitted as a member with unanimous consent of the
members.
(Source: P.A. 90-424, eff. 1-1-98.)
 
    (805 ILCS 180/10-15)
    Sec. 10-15. Right of members and dissociated members
Member's right to information.
    (a) A company shall furnish information when any member
demands it in a record concerning the company's activities,
financial condition, and other circumstances of the company's
business necessary to the proper exercise of a member's rights
and duties under the operating agreement or this Act or that is
otherwise material to the membership interest of a member,
unless the company knows that the member already knows that
information.
    (b) The following rules apply when a member makes a demand
for information under this Section:
        (1) During regular business hours and at a reasonable
    location and time specified by the company, a member may
    obtain from the company, inspect, and copy information for
    a purpose consistent with subsection (a).
        (2) Within 10 days after receiving a demand pursuant to
    subsection (a):
            (A) the company shall provide the information
        demanded or, in a record, a description of the
        information the company will provide, stating a
        reasonable time within which it will be provided and
        the place where it will be provided; and
            (B) if the company declines to provide any demanded
        information, the company shall state its reasons for
        declining to the member in a record.
    (c) Whenever this Act or an operating agreement provides
for a member to give or withhold consent to a matter, before
the consent is given or withheld, the company shall, without
demand, provide the member with all information that is known
to the company that is material to the member's decision.
    (d) Within 10 days after a demand made in a record received
by the limited liability company, a dissociated member may have
access to information to which the person was entitled while a
member if the information pertains to the period during which
the person was a member, and the person seeks the information
in good faith for a purpose consistent with subsection (a). The
company shall respond to a demand made pursuant to this
subsection in the manner provided in subdivisions (A) and (B)
of paragraph (2) of subsection (b).
    (e) A limited liability company may charge a person that
makes a demand under this Section the reasonable costs of
copying, limited to the costs of labor and material.
    (f) A member or dissociated member may exercise rights
under this Section through an agent or, in the case of an
individual under legal disability, a legal representative. Any
restriction or condition imposed by the operating agreement or
under subsection (h) applies both to the agent or legal
representative and the member or dissociated member.
    (g) The rights under this Section do not extend to a person
as transferee.
    (h) In addition to any restriction or condition stated in
its operating agreement, the limited liability company, as a
matter within the ordinary course of its activities, may impose
reasonable restrictions and conditions on access to and use of
information to be furnished under this Section including, but
not limited to, the designation of information such as trade
secrets or information subject to confidentiality agreements
with third parties as confidential with appropriate
nondisclosure and safeguarding obligations. In a dispute
concerning the reasonableness of a restriction or designation
under this subsection, the company has the burden of proving
reasonableness.
    (i) This Section does not limit or restrict the right to
inspect and copy records as provided in subsection (b) of
Section 1-40. (a) A limited liability company shall provide
members and their agents and attorneys access to its records,
including the records required to be kept under Section 1-40,
at the company's principal place of business or other
reasonable locations specified in the operating agreement. The
company shall provide former members and their agents and
attorneys access for proper purposes to records pertaining to
the period during which they were members. The right of access
provides the opportunity to inspect and copy records during
ordinary business hours. The company may impose a reasonable
charge, limited to the costs of labor and material, for copies
of records furnished.
    (b) A member has the right upon written demand given to the
limited liability company to obtain at the company's expense a
copy of any written operating agreement.
(Source: P.A. 90-424, eff. 1-1-98.)
 
    (805 ILCS 180/13-5)
    Sec. 13-5. No agency power of a member as member. Agency of
members and managers.
    (a) A member is not an agent of a limited liability company
solely by reason of being a member. Subject to subsections (b)
and (c):
    (b) Nothing herein shall be deemed to limit the effect of
law other than this Act, including the law of agency.
    (c) A person's status as a member does not prevent or
restrict law other than this Act from imposing liability on a
limited liability company because of the person's conduct.
        (1) Each member is an agent of the limited liability
    company for the purpose of its business, and an act of a
    member, including the signing of an instrument in the
    company's name, for apparently carrying on, in the ordinary
    course, the company's business or business of the kind
    carried on by the company binds the company, unless the
    member had no authority to act for the company in the
    particular matter and the person with whom the member was
    dealing knew or had notice that the member lacked
    authority.
        (2) An act of a member that is not apparently for
    carrying on, in the ordinary course, the company's business
    or business of the kind carried on by the company binds the
    company only if the act was authorized by the other
    members.
    (b) Subject to subsection (c), in a manager-managed
company:
        (1) A member is not an agent of the company for the
    purpose of its business solely by reason of being a member.
    Each manager is an agent of the company for the purpose of
    its business, and an act of a manager, including the
    signing of an instrument in the company's name, for
    apparently carrying on, in the ordinary course, the
    company's business or business of the kind carried on by
    the company binds the company, unless the manager had no
    authority to act for the company in the particular matter
    and the person with whom the manager was dealing knew or
    had notice that the manager lacked authority.
        (2) An act of a manager which is not apparently for
    carrying on, in the ordinary course, the company's business
    or business of the kind carried on by the company binds the
    company only if the act was authorized under Section 15-1.
    (c) Unless the articles of organization limit their
authority, any member of a member-managed company or manager of
a manager-managed company may sign and deliver any instrument
transferring or affecting the company's interest in real
property. The instrument is conclusive in favor of a person who
gives value without knowledge of the lack of the authority of
the person signing and delivering the instrument.
(Source: P.A. 90-424, eff. 1-1-98.)
 
    (805 ILCS 180/13-15 new)
    Sec. 13-15. Statement of authority.
    (a) A limited liability company may deliver to the
Secretary of State for filing a statement of authority. The
statement:
        (1) must include the name of the company and the
    address of its principal place of business; and
        (2) may state the authority, or limitations on the
    authority, of any member or manager of the company or any
    other person to:
            (A) execute an instrument transferring real
        property held in the name of the company; or
            (B) enter into other transactions on behalf of, or
        otherwise act for or bind, the company.
    (b) To amend or cancel a statement of authority, a limited
liability company must deliver to the Secretary of State for
filing a statement of amendment or cancellation. The statement
must include:
        (1) the name of the limited liability company and the
    address of its principal place of business;
        (2) the date the statement of authority being amended
    or cancelled became effective; and
        (3) the contents of the amendment or a declaration that
    the statement of authority is canceled.
    (c) Except as otherwise provided in subsections (e) and
(f), a limitation on the authority of a member or manager of
the limited liability company contained in a statement of
authority is not by itself evidence of knowledge or notice of
the limitation by any person.
    (d) A grant of authority not pertaining to transfers of
real property and contained in a statement of authority is
conclusive in favor of a person that is not a member and that
gives value in reliance on the grant, except to the extent that
when the person gives value, the person has knowledge to the
contrary.
    (e) A certified copy of a statement of authority that
grants authority to transfer real property held in the name of
the limited liability company and that is recorded in the
office for recording transfers of the real property is
conclusive in favor of a person that is not a member and that
gives value in reliance on the grant without knowledge to the
contrary.
    (f) If a certified copy of a statement of authority
containing a limitation on the authority to transfer real
property held in the name of a limited liability company is
recorded in the office for recording transfers of that real
property, all persons that are not members are deemed to know
of the limitation.
    (g) Unless previously cancelled by a statement of
cancellation, a statement of authority expires as of the date,
if any, specified in the statement of authority.
    (h) If the articles of organization state the authority or
limitations on the authority of any person on behalf of a
company, the authority stated or limited shall not bind any
person who is not a member or manager until that person
receives actual notice in a record from the company that agency
authority is stated or limited in the articles. If the
authority stated or limited in the articles of organization
conflicts with authority stated or limited in a statement of
authority filed with the Secretary of State under this Section
on behalf of the company, the statement of authority is the
effective statement and a person who is not a member or manager
may rely upon the terms of the filed statement of authority
notwithstanding conflicting terms in the articles of
organization.
 
    (805 ILCS 180/13-20 new)
    Sec. 13-20. Statement of denial. A person named in a filed
statement of authority granting that person authority may
deliver to the Secretary of State for filing a statement of
denial that:
        (1) provides the name of the limited liability company
    and the caption of the statement of authority to which the
    statement of denial pertains; and
        (2) denies the grant of authority.
    An effective statement of denial operates as a restrictive
amendment under subsection (b) of Section 13-15 and, if a
certified copy thereof is recorded in the office for recording
transfers of real property in which a prior statement of
authority has been recorded as provided in subsection (e) of
Section 13-15, the statement of denial shall be deemed a
limitation on the statement of authority for purposes of
subsection (f) of Section 13-15.
 
    (805 ILCS 180/15-1)
    Sec. 15-1. Management of limited liability company.
    (a) A limited liability company is a member-managed limited
liability company unless the operating agreement:
        (1) expressly provides that:
            (A) the company is or will be manager-managed;
            (B) the company is or will be managed by managers;
        or
            (C) management of the company is or will be vested
        in managers; or
        (2) includes words of similar import.
    (b) (a) In a member-managed company:
        (1) each member has equal rights in the management and
    conduct of the company's business; and
        (2) except as otherwise provided in subsection (d) (c)
    of this Section, any matter relating to the business of the
    company may be decided by a majority of the members.
    (c) (b) In a manager-managed company:
        (1) each manager has equal rights in the management and
    conduct of the company's business;
        (2) except as otherwise provided in subsection (d) (c)
    of this Section, any matter relating to the business of the
    company may be exclusively decided by the manager or, if
    there is more than one manager, by a majority of the
    managers; and
        (3) a manager:
            (A) must be designated, appointed, elected,
        removed, or replaced by a vote, approval, or consent of
        a majority of the members; and
            (B) holds office until a successor has been elected
        and qualified, unless the manager sooner resigns or is
        removed.
    (d) (c) The only matters of a member or manager-managed
company's business requiring the consent of all of the members
are the following:
        (1) the amendment of the operating agreement under
    Section 15-5;
        (2) an amendment to the articles of organization under
    Article 5;
        (3) the compromise of an obligation to make a
    contribution under Section 20-5;
        (4) the compromise, as among members, of an obligation
    of a member to make a contribution or return money or other
    property paid or distributed in violation of this Act;
        (5) the making of interim distributions under
    subsection (a) of Section 25-1, including the redemption of
    an interest;
        (6) the admission of a new member;
        (7) the use of the company's property to redeem an
    interest subject to a charging order;
        (8) the consent to dissolve the company under
    subdivision (2) of subsection (a) of Section 35-1;
        (9) a waiver of the right to have the company's
    business wound up and the company terminated under Section
    35-3;
        (9) (10) the consent of members to convert, merge with
    another entity or domesticate under Article 37 under
    Section 37-20; and
        (10) (11) the sale, lease, exchange, or other disposal
    of all, or substantially all, of the company's property
    with or without goodwill.
    (e) (d) Action requiring the consent of members or managers
under this Act may be taken without a meeting.
    (f) (e) A member or manager may appoint a proxy to vote or
otherwise act for the member or manager by signing an
appointment instrument, either personally or by the member or
manager's attorney-in-fact.
(Source: P.A. 90-424, eff. 1-1-98.)
 
    (805 ILCS 180/15-3)
    Sec. 15-3. General standards of member and manager's
conduct.
    (a) The fiduciary duties a member owes to a member-managed
company and its other members include the duty of loyalty and
the duty of care referred to in subsections (b) and (c) of this
Section.
    (b) A member's duty of loyalty to a member-managed company
and its other members includes the following:
        (1) to account to the company and to hold as trustee
    for it any property, profit, or benefit derived by the
    member in the conduct or winding up of the company's
    business or derived from a use by the member of the
    company's property, including the appropriation of a
    company's opportunity;
        (2) to act fairly when a member deals with the company
    in the conduct or winding up of the company's business as
    or on behalf of a party having an interest adverse to the
    company; and
        (3) to refrain from competing with the company in the
    conduct of the company's business before the dissolution of
    the company.
    (c) A member's duty of care to a member-managed company and
its other members in the conduct of and winding up of the
company's business is limited to refraining from engaging in
grossly negligent or reckless conduct, intentional misconduct,
or a knowing violation of law.
    (d) A member shall discharge his or her duties to a
member-managed company and its other members under this Act or
under the operating agreement and exercise any rights
consistent with the obligation of good faith and fair dealing.
    (e) A member of a member-managed company does not violate a
duty or obligation under this Act or under the operating
agreement merely because the member's conduct furthers the
member's own interest.
    (f) This Section applies to a person winding up the limited
liability company's business as the personal or legal
representative of the last surviving member as if the person
were a member.
    (g) In a manager-managed company:
        (1) a member who is not also a manager owes no duties
    to the company or to the other members solely by reason of
    being a member;
        (2) a manager is held to the same standards of conduct
    prescribed for members in subsections (b), (c), (d), and
    (e) of this Section;
        (3) a member who exercises some or all of the authority
    of a manager and conduct of the company's business is held
    to the standards of conduct in subsections (b), (c), (d),
    and (e) of this Section to the extent that the member
    exercises the managerial authority vested in a manager by
    this Act; and
        (4) a manager is relieved of liability imposed by law
    for violations of the standards prescribed by subsections
    (b), (c), (d), and (e) to the extent of the managerial
    authority delegated to the members by the operating
    agreement.
(Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07; 96-263, eff. 1-1-10.)
 
    (805 ILCS 180/15-5)
    Sec. 15-5. Operating agreement.
    (a) All members of a limited liability company may enter
into an operating agreement to regulate the affairs of the
company and the conduct of its business and to govern relations
among the members, managers, and company. The operating
agreement may establish that a limited liability company is a
manager-managed limited liability company and the rights and
duties under this Act of a person in the capacity of a manager.
To the extent the operating agreement does not otherwise
provide, this Act governs relations among the members,
managers, and company. Except as provided in subsections
subsection (b), (c), (d), and (e) of this Section, an operating
agreement may modify any provision or provisions of this Act
governing relations among the members, managers, and company.
    (b) The operating agreement may not:
        (1) unreasonably restrict a right to information or
    access to records under Section 1-40 or Section 10-15;
        (2) vary the right to expel a member in an event
    specified in subdivision (6) of Section 35-45;
        (3) vary the requirement to wind up the limited
    liability company's business in a case specified in
    subdivision subdivisions (3) or (4), (5), or (6) of
    subsection (a) of Section 35-1;
        (4) restrict rights of a person, other than a manager,
    member, and transferee of a member's distributional
    interest, under this Act;
        (5) restrict the power of a member to dissociate under
    Section 35-50, although an operating agreement may
    determine whether a dissociation is wrongful under Section
    35-50, and it may eliminate or vary the obligation of the
    limited liability company to purchase the dissociated
    member's distributional interest under Section 35-60;
        (6) (blank); eliminate or reduce a member's fiduciary
    duties, but may;
            (A) identify specific types or categories of
        activities that do not violate these duties, if not
        manifestly unreasonable; and
            (B) specify the number or percentage of members or
        disinterested managers that may authorize or ratify,
        after full disclosure of all materials facts, a
        specific act or transaction that otherwise would
        violate these duties;
        (6.5) eliminate or reduce the obligations or purposes a
    low-profit limited liability company undertakes when
    organized under Section 1-26; or
        (7) eliminate or reduce the obligation of good faith
    and fair dealing under subsection (d) of Section 15-3, but
    the operating agreement may determine the standards by
    which the performance of the member's duties or the
    exercise of the member's rights obligation is to be
    measured; , if the standards are not manifestly
    unreasonable.
        (8) eliminate, vary, or restrict the priority of a
    statement of authority over provisions in the articles of
    organization as provided in subsection (h) of Section
    13-15;
        (9) vary the law applicable under Section 1-65;
        (10) vary the power of the court under Section 5-50; or
        (11) restrict the right to approve a merger,
    conversion, or domestication under Article 37 of a member
    that will have personal liability with respect to a
    surviving, converted, or domesticated organization.
    (c) The operating agreement may:
        (1) restrict or eliminate a fiduciary duty, other than
    the duty of care described in subsection (c) of Section
    15-3, but only to the extent the restriction or elimination
    in the operating agreement is clear and unambiguous;
        (2) identify specific types or categories of
    activities that do not violate any fiduciary duty; and
        (3) alter the duty of care, except to authorize
    intentional misconduct or knowing violation of law.
    (d) The operating agreement may specify the method by which
a specific act or transaction that would otherwise violate the
duty of loyalty may be authorized or ratified by one or more
disinterested and independent persons after full disclosure of
all material facts.
    (e) The operating agreement may alter or eliminate the
right to payment or reimbursement for a member or manager
provided by Section 15-7 and may eliminate or limit a member or
manager's liability to the limited liability company and
members for money damages, except for:
        (1) subject to subsections (c) and (d) of this Section,
    breach of the duties as required in subdivisions (1), (2),
    and (3) of subsection (b) of Section 15-3 and subsection
    (g) of Section 15-3;
        (2) a financial benefit received by the member or
    manager to which the member or manager is not entitled;
        (3) a breach of a duty under Section 25-35;
        (4) intentional infliction of harm on the company or a
    member; or
        (5) an intentional violation of criminal law.
    (f) A limited liability company is bound by and may enforce
the operating agreement, whether or not the company has itself
manifested assent to the operating agreement.
    (g) A person that becomes a member of a limited liability
company is deemed to assent to the operating agreement.
    (h) An operating agreement may be entered into before,
after, or at the time of filing of articles of organization
and, whether entered into before, after, or at the time of the
filing, may be made effective as of the time of formation of
the limited liability company or as of the time or date
provided in the operating agreement.
    (c) In a limited liability company with only one member,
the operating agreement includes any of the following:
        (1) Any writing, without regard to whether the writing
    otherwise constitutes an agreement, as to the company's
    affairs signed by the sole member.
        (2) Any written agreement between the member and the
    company as to the company's affairs.
        (3) Any agreement, which need not be in writing,
    between the member and the company as to a company's
    affairs, provided that the company is managed by a manager
    who is a person other than the member.
(Source: P.A. 96-126, eff. 1-1-10.)
 
    (805 ILCS 180/15-7)
    Sec. 15-7. Member and manager's right to payments and
reimbursement and indemnification.
    (a) A limited liability company shall reimburse a member or
manager for payments made and indemnify a member or manager for
debts, obligations, or other liabilities incurred by the member
or manager in the ordinary course of the member's or manager's
activities on behalf of the company, if, in making the payment
or incurring the debt, obligation, or other liability, the
member or manager complied with the duties stated in Sections
15-3 and 25-35 business of the company or for the preservation
of its business or property.
    (b) A limited liability company shall reimburse a member
for an advance to the company beyond the amount of contribution
the member agreed to make.
    (c) A payment or advance made by a member that gives rise
to an obligation of a limited liability company under
subsection (a) or (b) of this Section constitutes a loan to the
company upon which interest accrues from the date of the
payment or advance.
    (d) A member is not entitled to remuneration for services
performed for a limited liability company, except for
reasonable compensation for services rendered in winding up the
business of the company.
    (e) A limited liability company may purchase and maintain
insurance on behalf of a member or manager of the company
against liability asserted against or incurred by the member or
manager in that capacity or arising from that status even if,
under subsection (e) of Section 15-5, the operating agreement
could not eliminate or limit the person's liability to the
company for the conduct giving rise to the liability.
(Source: P.A. 90-424, eff. 1-1-98.)
 
    (805 ILCS 180/20-1)
    Sec. 20-1. Form of contribution. The contribution of a
member may be in cash, property, services rendered, or other
benefit, or a promissory note or other obligation to contribute
cash or property or to perform services.
(Source: P.A. 87-1062.)
 
    (805 ILCS 180/20-5)
    Sec. 20-5. Member's liability for contributions.
    (a) (Blank).
    (b) (Blank).
    (c) A member's obligation to contribute money, property, or
other benefit to, or to perform services for, a limited
liability company is not excused by the member's death,
disability, dissolution, or any other reason inability to
perform personally. If a member does not make the required
contribution of property or services, the member is obligated
at the option of the company to contribute money equal to the
value of that portion of the required stated contribution which
has not been made. The foregoing option does not limit the
availability of any remedy provided for in the operating
agreement or under law, including specific performance.
    (d) A creditor of a limited liability company who extends
credit or otherwise acts in reliance on an obligation described
in subsection (c), and without notice of any compromise under
subdivision (4) of subsection (d) (c) of Section 15-1, may
enforce the original obligation.
    (e) Subject to Sections 1-43 and 15-5, the operating
agreement may provide that the interest of any member that
fails to make any contribution that the member is required to
make will be subject to specified remedies for, or specified
consequences of, the failure. The specified remedies or
consequences may include, without limitation:
        (1) Loss of voting, approval, or other rights.
        (2) Loss of the member's ability to participate in the
    management or operations of the limited liability company.
        (3) Liquidated damages.
        (4) Diluting, reducing, or eliminating the defaulting
    member's proportionate interest in the company.
        (5) Subordinating the defaulting member's right to
    receive distributions to that of the nondefaulting
    members.
        (6) Permitting the forced sale of the defaulting
    member's interest in the company.
        (7) Permitting one or more nondefaulting members to
    lend the amount necessary to meet the defaulting member's
    commitment.
        (8) Adjusting the interest rates or other rates of
    return, preferred, priority or otherwise, with respect to
    contributions by or capital accounts of the nondefaulting
    members.
        (9) Fixing the value of the defaulting member's
    interest by appraisal or formula and the redemption or sale
    of the defaulting member's interest at that value.
(Source: P.A. 90-424, eff. 1-1-98.)
 
    (805 ILCS 180/25-35)
    Sec. 25-35. Liability for unlawful distributions.
    (a) Except as otherwise provided in subsections (b) and
(c), if a A member of a member-managed company or a member or
manager of a manager-managed company consents who votes for or
assents to a distribution made in violation of Section 25-30,
the articles of organization, or the operating agreement and in
consenting to the distribution fails to comply with Section
15-3, the member or manager is personally liable to the company
for the amount of the distribution that exceeds the amount that
could have been distributed without violating Section 25-30,
the articles of organization, or the operating agreement if it
is established that the member or manager did not perform the
member or manager's duties in compliance with Section 15-3.
    (b) To the extent the operating agreement of a limited
liability company expressly relieves a member of the authority
and responsibility to consent to distributions and imposes that
authority and responsibility on one or more other members, the
liability stated in subsection (a) applies to the other members
and not the member that the operating agreement relieves of
authority and responsibility.
    (c) If the members of a member-managed company or the
members or managers of a manager-managed company consent to a
distribution that violates the articles of organization or the
operating agreement, but does not violate Section 25-30, by a
vote that would have been sufficient to amend the articles of
organization or operating agreement, as the case may be, the
liability stated in subsection (a) does not apply.
    (d) (b) A person that receives a distribution and that
member of a manager-managed company who knew the a distribution
was made in violation of Section 25-30, the articles of
organization, or the operating agreement is personally liable
to the company, but only to the extent that the distribution
received by the person member exceeded the amount that could
have been properly paid under Section 25-30.
    (e) (c) A person member or manager against whom an action
is brought under this Section may implead in the action:
        (1) all other members or managers who consented voted
    for or assented to the distribution in violation of
    subsection (a) of this Section and may compel contribution
    from them; and
        (2) all persons members who received a distribution in
    violation of subsection (d) (b) of this Section and may
    compel contribution from any person receiving such a
    distribution the member in the amount received in violation
    of subsection (d) (b) of this Section.
    (f) (d) A proceeding under this Section is barred unless it
is commenced within 2 years after the distribution.
(Source: P.A. 90-424, eff. 1-1-98.)
 
    (805 ILCS 180/Art. 30 heading)
Article 30. Transfer Assignment of Distributional Membership
Interests

 
    (805 ILCS 180/30-5)
    Sec. 30-5. Transfer of a distributional interest.
    (a) A transfer of a distributional interest in whole or in
part:
        (1) does not by itself cause dissolution and winding up
    of the limited liability company's activities; and
        (2) is subject to Section 30-10.
    (b) A transfer of a distributional interest does not
entitle the transferee to become or to exercise any rights of a
member. A transfer entitles the transferee to receive, to the
extent transferred, only the distributions to which the
transferor would be entitled.
(Source: P.A. 90-424, eff. 1-1-98.)
 
    (805 ILCS 180/30-10)
    Sec. 30-10. Rights of a transferee.
    (a) A transferee of a distributional interest may become a
member of a limited liability company if and to the extent that
the transferor gives the transferee the right in accordance
with authority described in the operating agreement or all
other members consent.
    (b) A transferee who has become a member, to the extent
transferred, has the rights and powers, and is subject to the
restrictions and liabilities, of a member under the operating
agreement of a limited liability company and this Act. A
transferee who becomes a member also is liable for the
transferor member's obligations to make contributions under
Section 20-5 and for obligations under Section 25-35 to return
unlawful distributions, but the transferee is not obligated for
the transferor member's liabilities unknown to the transferee
at the time the transferee becomes a member.
    (c) Whether or not a transferee of a distributional
interest becomes a member under subsection (a) of this Section,
the transferor is not released from liability to the limited
liability company under the operating agreement or this Act.
    (d) A transferee who does not become a member is not
entitled to participate in the management or conduct of the
limited liability company's business, require access to
information concerning the company's transactions, or, except
as provided in subsections (c) and (d) of Section 1-40, inspect
or copy any of the company's records.
    (e) A transferee who does not become a member is entitled
to:
        (1) receive, in accordance with the transfer,
    distributions to which the transferor would otherwise be
    entitled;
        (2) receive, upon dissolution and winding up of the
    limited liability company's business:
            (A) in accordance with the transfer, the net amount
        otherwise distributable to the transferor; and
            (B) a statement of account only from the date of
        the latest statement of account agreed to by all the
        members. ; and
        (3) seek under subdivision (5) of Section 35-1 a
    judicial determination that it is equitable to dissolve and
    wind up the company's business.
    (f) A limited liability company need not give effect to a
transfer until it has notice of the transfer.
(Source: P.A. 97-813, eff. 7-13-12.)
 
    (805 ILCS 180/30-20)
    Sec. 30-20. Rights of creditor.
    (a) On application by a judgment creditor of a member or
transferee, a court may enter a charging order against the
distributional interest of the judgment debtor for the
unsatisfied amount of the judgment. A charging order
constitutes a lien on a judgment debtor's distributional
interest and requires the limited liability company to pay over
to the person to which the charging order was issued any
distribution that would otherwise be paid to the judgment
debtor. A charging order grants no other rights with respect to
the assets or affairs of the company On application by a
judgment creditor of a member of a limited liability company or
of a member's transferee, a court having jurisdiction may
charge the distributional interest of the judgment debtor to
satisfy the judgment. The court may appoint a receiver of the
share of the distributions due or to become due to the judgment
debtor and make all other orders, directions, accounts, and
inquiries the judgment debtor might have made or which the
circumstances may require to give effect to the charging order.
    (b) To the extent necessary to effectuate the collection of
distributions pursuant to a charging order in effect under
subsection (a), the court may:
        (1) appoint a receiver of the distributions subject to
    the charging order, with the power to make all inquiries
    the judgment debtor might have made; and
        (2) make all other orders necessary to give effect to
    the charging order. A charging order constitutes a lien on
    the judgment debtor's distributional interest. The court
    may order a foreclosure of a lien on a distributional
    interest subject to the charging order at any time. A
    purchaser at the foreclosure sale has the rights of a
    transferee.
    (c) At any time the court may foreclose the lien and order
the sale of the distributional interest. The purchaser at the
foreclosure sale obtains only the distributional interest,
does not thereby become a member, and is subject to Section
30-10. At any time before foreclosure, a distributional
interest in a limited liability company that is charged may be
redeemed:
        (1) by the judgment debtor;
        (2) with property other than the company's property, by
    one or more of the other members; or
        (3) with the company's property, but only if permitted
    by the operating agreement.
    (d) At any time before foreclosure under subsection (c),
the member or transferee whose distributional interest is
subject to a charging order under subsection (a) may extinguish
the charging order by satisfying the judgment and filing a
certified copy of the satisfaction with the court that issued
the charging order. This Act does not affect a member's right
under exemption laws with respect to the member's
distributional interest in a limited liability company.
    (e) At any time before foreclosure under subsection (c), a
limited liability company or one or more members whose
distributional interests are not subject to the charging order
may satisfy the judgment and thereby succeed to the rights of
the judgment creditor, including the charging order. This
Section provides the exclusive remedy by which a judgment
creditor of a member or a transferee may satisfy a judgment out
of the judgment debtor's distributional interest in a limited
liability company.
    (f) This Act does not deprive any member or transferee of
the benefit of any exemption laws applicable to the member's or
transferee's distributional interest.
    (g) This Section provides the exclusive remedy by which a
person seeking to enforce a judgment against a member or
transferee may, in the capacity of judgment creditor, satisfy
the judgment from the judgment debtor's distributional
interest. If and to the extent that other law permits a
judgment creditor to obtain a lien against the distributional
interest or other rights of a member or transferee of a member,
the lien shall be treated as a charging order subject to all
the provisions of this Section.
(Source: P.A. 90-424, eff. 1-1-98.)
 
    (805 ILCS 180/30-25 new)
    Sec. 30-25. Power of personal representative of deceased
member. If a member dies, the deceased member's personal
representative or other legal representative may exercise the
rights of a transferee provided in subsection (e) of Section
30-10 and, for the purposes of settling the estate, the rights
of a current member under Section 10-15.
 
    (805 ILCS 180/35-1)
    Sec. 35-1. Events causing dissolution and winding up of
company's business.
    (a) A limited liability company is dissolved, and, unless
continued pursuant to subsection (b) of Section 35-3, its
business must be wound up, upon the occurrence of any of the
following events:
        (1) An event or circumstance that causes the
    dissolution of a company by the express terms of specified
    in the operating agreement.
        (2) The consent of all members Consent of the number or
    percentage of members specified in the operating
    agreement.
        (3) The passage of 180 consecutive days during which
    the company has no members An event that makes it unlawful
    for all or substantially all of the business of the company
    to be continued, but any cure of illegality within 90 days
    after notice to the company of the event is effective
    retroactively to the date of the event for purposes of this
    Section.
        (4) On application by a member or a dissociated member,
    upon entry of a judicial decree that:
            (A) the economic purpose of the company has been or
        is likely to be unreasonably frustrated;
            (B) the another member has engaged in conduct of
        all or substantially all of relating to the company's
        activities is unlawful business that makes it not
        reasonably practicable to carry on the company's
        business with that member;
            (C) it is not otherwise reasonably practicable to
        carry on the company's business in conformity with the
        articles of organization and the operating agreement. ;
        (5) On application by a member or transferee of a (D)
    the company failed to purchase the petitioner's
    distributional interest, upon entry of a judicial decree
    that as required by Section 35-60; or (E) the managers or
    those members in control of the company:
            (A) have acted, are acting, or will act in a manner
        that is illegal, oppressive, or fraudulent; or with
        respect to the petitioner.
            (B) have acted or are acting in a manner that is
        oppressive and was, is, or will be directly harmful to
        the applicant.
        (5) On application by a transferee of a member's
    interest, a judicial determination that it is equitable to
    wind up the company's business.
        (6) Administrative dissolution under Section 35-25.
    (b) In a proceeding under subdivision (4) or (5) of
subsection (a), the court may order a remedy other than
dissolution including, but not limited to, a buyout of the
applicant's membership interest.
(Source: P.A. 90-424, eff. 1-1-98.)
 
    (805 ILCS 180/35-3)
    Sec. 35-3. Limited liability company continues after
dissolution.
    (a) Subject to subsections (b), and (c), and (d) of this
Section, a limited liability company continues after
dissolution only for the purpose of winding up its business.
    (b) At any time after the dissolution of a limited
liability company and before the winding up of its business is
completed, the members, including a dissociated member whose
dissociation caused the dissolution, may unanimously waive the
right to have the company's business wound up and the company
terminated. In that case Any such waiver shall take effect
upon:
        (1) (blank);
        (2) (blank);
        (3) the filing with the Secretary of State by the
    limited liability company of all reports then due and
    theretofore becoming due;
        (4) the payment to the Secretary of State by the
    limited liability company of all fees and penalties then
    due and theretofore becoming due; and
        (5) the filing of articles of revocation of dissolution
    setting forth:
            (A) the name of the limited liability company at
        the time of filing the articles of dissolution;
            (B) if the name is not available for use as
        determined by the Secretary of State at the time of
        filing the articles of revocation of dissolution, the
        name of the limited liability company as changed,
        provided that any change of name is properly effected
        under Section 1-10 and Section 5-25 of this Act;
            (C) the effective date of the dissolution that was
        revoked;
            (D) the date that the revocation of dissolution was
        authorized;
            (E) a statement that the members have unanimously
        waived the right to have the company's business wound
        up and the company terminated; and
            (F) the address, including street and number or
        rural route number, of the registered office of the
        limited liability company upon revocation of
        dissolution and the name of its registered agent at
        that address upon the revocation of dissolution of the
        limited liability company, provided that any change
        from either the registered office or the registered
        agent at the time of dissolution is properly reported
        under Section 1-35 of this Act.
    Upon compliance with the provisions of this subsection, the
Secretary of State shall file the articles of revocation of
dissolution. Upon filing of the articles of revocation of
dissolution:
        (1) (i) the limited liability company resumes carrying
    on its business as if dissolution had never occurred, and
    any liability incurred by the limited liability company or
    a member after the dissolution and before the waiver is
    determined as if the dissolution had never occurred; and
        (2) (ii) the rights of a third party accruing under
    subsection (a) of Section 35-7 or arising out of conduct in
    reliance on the dissolution before the third party knew or
    received a notification of the waiver are not adversely
    affected.
    (c) If there are no members, the legal representative of
the last remaining member may, within one year after the
occurrence of the event that caused the dissociation of the
last remaining member, agree in writing to continue the limited
liability company. In that event, the legal representative or
its nominee or designee will be admitted to the company as a
member and the company will not be dissolved or its business
wound up until the occurrence of a future event of dissolution,
if any.
    (d) This Section does not apply in the case of a
dissolution described in subdivision (4), (5), or (6) of
Section 35-1.
    (c) Unless otherwise provided in the articles of
organization or the operating agreement, the limited liability
company is not dissolved and is not required to be wound up if:
        (1) within 6 months or such period as is provided for
    in the articles of organization or the operating agreement
    after the occurrence of the event that caused the
    dissociation of the last remaining member, the personal
    representative of the last remaining member agrees in
    writing to continue the limited liability company until the
    admission of the personal representative of that member or
    its nominee or designee to the limited liability company as
    a member, effective as of the occurrence of the event that
    caused the dissociation of the last remaining member,
    provided that the articles of organization or the operating
    agreement may provide that the personal representative of
    the last remaining member shall be obligated to agree in
    writing to continue the limited liability company and to
    the admission of the personal representative of that member
    or its nominee or designee to the limited liability company
    as a member, effective as of the occurrence of the event
    that caused the dissociation of the last remaining member;
    or
        (2) a member is admitted to the limited liability
    company in the manner provided for in the articles of
    organization or the operating agreement, effective as of
    the occurrence of the event that caused the dissociation of
    the last remaining member, within 6 months or such other
    period as is provided for in the operating agreement after
    the occurrence of the event that caused the dissociation of
    the last remaining member, pursuant to a provision of the
    articles of organization or the operating agreement that
    specifically provides for the admission of a member to the
    limited liability company after there is no longer a
    remaining member of the limited liability company.
(Source: P.A. 98-720, eff. 7-16-14.)
 
    (805 ILCS 180/35-4)
    Sec. 35-4. Wind Right to wind up of limited liability
company's business.
    (a) After dissolution, a member who has not wrongfully
dissociated may participate in winding up a limited liability
company's business, but on application of any member, member's
legal representative, or transferee, the Circuit Court, for
good cause shown, may order judicial supervision of the winding
up.
    (b) If a dissolved limited liability company has no
members, the A legal representative of the last person to have
been a surviving member may wind up the a limited liability
company's business of the company. If the person does so, the
person has the powers of a sole manager under subsection (b) of
Section 15-1 and is deemed to be a manager for the purposes of
subsection (a) of Section 10-10.
    (c) A person winding up a limited liability company's
business (1) may preserve the company's business or property as
a going concern for a reasonable time, prosecute and defend
actions and proceedings, whether civil, criminal, or
administrative, settle and close the company's business,
dispose of and transfer the company's property, settle disputes
by mediation or arbitration, and perform other acts necessary
or appropriate to winding up and (2) shall discharge the
company's debts, obligations, or other liabilities, settle and
close the company's business and marshal and distribute the
assets of the company pursuant to Section 35-10, settle
disputes by mediation or arbitration, and perform other
necessary acts.
    (d) If the legal representative under subsection (b)
declines or fails to wind up the company's business, a person
may be appointed to do so by the consent of transferees owning
a majority of the rights to receive distributions as
transferees at the time the consent is to be effective. A
person appointed under this subsection:
        (1) has the powers of a sole manager under subsection
    (b) of Section 15-1 and is deemed to be a manager for the
    purposes of subsection (a) of Section 10-10; and
        (2) shall promptly deliver to the Secretary of State
    for filing an amendment to the company's articles of
    organization to:
            (A) state that the company has no members;
            (B) state that the person has been appointed
        pursuant to this subsection to wind up the company; and
            (C) provide the mailing addresses of the person.
    (e) The circuit court may order judicial supervision of the
winding up of a dissolved limited liability company, including
the appointment of a person to wind up the company's business:
        (1) on application of a member, if the applicant
    establishes good cause;
        (2) on the application of a transferee, if:
            (A) the company does not have any members;
            (B) the legal representative of the last person to
        have been a member declines or fails to wind up the
        company's business; and
            (C) within a reasonable time following the
        dissolution a person has not been appointed pursuant to
        subsection (d); or
        (3) in connection with a proceeding under subdivision
    (4) of subsection (a) of Section 35-1.
(Source: P.A. 90-424, eff. 1-1-98.)
 
    (805 ILCS 180/35-7)
    Sec. 35-7. Member or manager's power and liability as agent
after dissolution.
    (a) A limited liability company is bound by a member or
manager's act after dissolution that:
        (1) is appropriate for winding up the company's
    business; or
        (2) would have bound the company under Section 13-5
    before dissolution, if the other party to the transaction
    did not have notice of the dissolution.
    (b) A member or manager who, with knowledge of the
dissolution, subjects a limited liability company to liability
by an act that is not appropriate for winding up the company's
business is liable to the company for any damage caused to the
company arising from the liability.
(Source: P.A. 90-424, eff. 1-1-98.)
 
    (805 ILCS 180/35-15)
    Sec. 35-15. Statement Articles of termination dissolution.
When a all debts, liabilities, and obligations of the limited
liability company has been wound up, a statement of termination
have been paid and discharged or adequate provision has been
made therefor and all of the remaining property and assets of
the limited liability company have been distributed to the
members, articles of dissolution shall be executed in duplicate
in the manner prescribed in Section 5-45 and shall set forth
all of the following:
        (1) The name of the limited liability company; .
        (2) A post office address to which may be mailed a copy
    of any process against the company that may be served upon
    the Secretary of State; and
        (3) A statement that the limited liability company has
    been terminated (2) That all debts, obligations, and
    liabilities of the limited liability company have been paid
    and discharged or that adequate provision has been made
    therefor.
        (3) That all the remaining property and assets of the
    limited liability company have been distributed among its
    members in accordance with their respective rights and
    interests.
        (4) That there are no suits pending against the company
    in any court or that adequate provision has been made for
    the satisfaction of any judgment, order, or decree that may
    be entered against it in any pending suit.
(Source: P.A. 87-1062.)
 
    (805 ILCS 180/35-20)
    Sec. 35-20. Filing of statement articles of termination
dissolution.
    (a) Duplicate originals of the statement articles of
termination dissolution shall be delivered to the Secretary of
State. If the Secretary of State finds that the statement
articles of termination conforms dissolution conform to law, he
or she shall, when all required fees have been paid:
        (1) endorse on each duplicate original the word "Filed"
    and the date of the filing thereof; and
        (2) file one duplicate original in his or her office.
    (b) A duplicate original of the statement articles of
termination dissolution shall be returned to the
representative of the dissolved limited liability company.
Upon the filing of a statement the articles of termination
dissolution, the existence of the company shall terminate, and
its articles of organization shall be deemed cancelled, except
for the purpose of suits, other proceedings, and appropriate
action as provided in this Article. The manager or managers or
member or members at the time of termination, or those that
remain, shall thereafter be trustee for the members and
creditors of the terminated company and, in that capacity,
shall have authority to convey or distribute any company
property discovered after termination and take any other action
that may be necessary on behalf of and in the name of the
terminated company.
(Source: P.A. 90-424, eff. 1-1-98.)
 
    (805 ILCS 180/35-37 new)
    Sec. 35-37. Administrative dissolution; limited liability
company name. The Secretary of State shall not allow another
limited liability company or corporation to use the name of a
domestic limited liability company that has been
administratively dissolved until 3 years have elapsed
following the date of issuance of the notice of dissolution. If
the domestic limited liability company that has been
administratively dissolved is reinstated within 3 years after
the date of issuance of the notice of dissolution, the domestic
limited liability company shall continue under its previous
name unless the limited liability company changes its name upon
reinstatement.
 
    (805 ILCS 180/35-45)
    Sec. 35-45. Events causing member's dissociation. A member
is dissociated from a limited liability company upon the
occurrence of any of the following events:
    (1) The company's having notice of the member's express
will to withdraw upon the date of notice or on a later date
specified by the member.
    (2) An event agreed to in the operating agreement as
causing the member's dissociation.
    (3) Upon transfer of all of a member's distributional
interest, other than a transfer for security purposes or a
court order charging the member's distributional interest that
has not been foreclosed.
    (4) The member's expulsion pursuant to the operating
agreement.
    (5) The member's expulsion by unanimous vote of the other
members if:
        (A) it is unlawful to carry on the company's business
    with the member;
        (B) there has been a transfer of substantially all of
    the member's distributional interest, other than a
    transfer for security purposes or a court order charging
    the member's distributional interest that has not been
    foreclosed;
        (C) within 90 days after the company notifies a
    corporate member that it will be expelled because it has
    filed a certificate of dissolution or the equivalent, its
    charter has been revoked, or its right to conduct business
    has been suspended by the jurisdiction of its
    incorporation, the member fails to obtain a revocation of
    the certificate of dissolution or a reinstatement of its
    charter or its right to conduct business; or
        (D) a partnership or a limited liability company that
    is a member has been dissolved and its business is being
    wound up.
    (6) On application by the company or another member, the
member's expulsion by judicial determination because the
member:
        (A) engaged in wrongful conduct that adversely and
    materially affected the company's business;
        (B) willfully or persistently committed a material
breach of the operating agreement or of a duty owed to the
company or the other members under Section 15-3; or
        (C) engaged in conduct relating to the company's
business that makes it not reasonably practicable to carry on
the business with the member.
    (7) The member's:
        (A) becoming a debtor in bankruptcy;
        (B) executing an assignment for the benefit of
    creditors;
        (C) seeking, consenting to, or acquiescing in the
    appointment of a trustee, receiver, or liquidator of the
    member or of all or substantially all of the member's
    property; or
        (D) failing, within 90 days after the appointment, to
    have vacated or stayed the appointment of a trustee,
    receiver, or liquidator of the member or of all or
    substantially all of the member's property obtained
    without the member's consent or acquiescence, or failing
    within 90 days after the expiration of a stay to have the
    appointment vacated.
    (8) In the case of a member who is an individual:
        (A) the member's death;
        (B) the appointment of a guardian or general
    conservator for the member; or
        (C) a judicial determination that the member has
    otherwise become incapable of performing the member's
    duties under the operating agreement.
    (9) In the case of a member that is a trust or is acting as
a member by virtue of being a trustee of a trust, distribution
of the trust's entire rights to receive distributions from the
company, but not merely by reason of the substitution of a
successor trustee.
    (10) In the case of a member that is an estate or is acting
as a member by virtue of being a personal representative of an
estate, distribution of the estate's entire rights to receive
distributions from the company, but not merely the substitution
of a successor personal representative.
    (11) Termination of the existence of a member if the member
is not an individual, estate, or trust other than a business
trust.
    (12) In the case of a company that participates in a merger
under Article 37, if:
        (A) the company is not the surviving entity; or
        (B) otherwise as a result of the merger, the person
    ceases to be a member.
    (13) The company participates in a conversion under Article
37.
    (14) The company participates in a domestication under
Article 37, if, as a result, the person ceases to be a member.
(Source: P.A. 90-424, eff. 1-1-98.)
 
    (805 ILCS 180/35-55)
    Sec. 35-55. Effect of member's dissociation.
    (a) Upon a member's dissociation the company must cause the
dissociated member's distributional interest to be purchased
under Section 35-60. (b) Upon a member's dissociation from a
limited liability company:
        (1) the member's right to participate in the management
    and conduct of the company's business terminates, except as
    otherwise provided in Section 35-4, and the member ceases
    to be a member and is treated the same as a transferee of a
    member;
        (2) the member's fiduciary duties terminate, except as
    provided in subdivision (3) of this subsection (a) (b); and
        (3) the member's duty of loyalty under subdivisions (1)
    and (2) of subsection (b) of Section 15-3 and duty of care
    under subsection (c) of Section 15-3 continue only with
    regard to matters arising and events occurring before the
    member's dissociation, unless the member participates in
    winding up the company's business pursuant to Section 35-4;
    and .
        (4) subject to Section 30-25 and Article 37, any
    distributional interest owned by the person immediately
    before dissociation in the person's capacity as a member is
    owned by the person solely as a transferee.
    (b) A person's dissociation as a member of a limited
liability company does not of itself discharge the person from
any debt, obligation, or other liability to the company or the
other members which the person incurred while a member.
(Source: P.A. 90-424, eff. 1-1-98.)
 
    (805 ILCS 180/Art. 37 heading)
Article 37. Conversions, domestications, mergers, and series
(Source: P.A. 97-839, eff. 7-20-12.)
 
    (805 ILCS 180/37-5)
    Sec. 37-5. Definitions. In this Article:
    "Constituent limited liability company" means a
constituent organization that is a limited liability company.
    "Constituent organization" means an organization that is
party to a merger.
    "Converted organization" means the organization into which
a converting organization converts pursuant to Sections 37-10
through 37-17.
    "Converting limited liability company" means a converting
organization that is a limited liability company.
    "Converting organization" means an organization that
converts into another organization pursuant to Sections 37-10
through 37-17.
    "Domesticated company" means the company that exists after
a domesticating foreign limited liability company or limited
liability company effects a domestication pursuant to Sections
37-31 through 37-34.
    "Domesticating company" means the company that effects a
domestication pursuant to Sections 37-31 through 37-34.
    "Governing statute" means the statute that governs an
organization's internal affairs.
    "Organization" means a general partnership, including a
limited liability partnership, limited partnership, including
a limited liability limited partnership, limited liability
company, business trust, corporation, or any other person
having a governing statute. The term includes a domestic or
foreign organization regardless of whether organized for
profit.
    "Organizational document" means:
        (1) for a domestic or foreign general partnership, its
    partnership agreement;
        (2) for a limited partnership or foreign limited
    partnership, its certificate of limited partnership and
    partnership agreement;
        (3) for a domestic or foreign limited liability
    company, its certificate or articles of organization and
    operating agreement, or comparable records as provided in
    its governing statute;
        (4) for a business trust, its agreement of trust and
    declaration of trust;
        (5) for a domestic or foreign corporation for profit,
    its articles of incorporation, bylaws, and any agreements
    among its shareholders which are authorized by its
    governing statute, or comparable records as provided in its
    governing statute; and
        (6) for any other organization, the basic records that
    create the organization and determine its internal
    governance and the relations among the persons that own it,
    have an interest in it, or are members of it.
    "Personal liability" means liability for a debt,
obligation, or other liability of an organization which is
imposed on a person that co-owns, has an interest in, or is a
member of the organization:
        (1) by the governing statute solely by reason of the
    person co-owning, having an interest in, or being a member
    of the organization; or
        (2) by the organization's organizational documents
    under a provision of the governing statute authorizing
    those documents to make one or more specified persons
    liable for all or specified debts, obligations, or other
    liabilities of the organization solely by reason of the
    person or persons co-owning, having an interest in, or
    being a member of the organization.
    "Surviving organization" means an organization into which
one or more other organizations are merged, whether the
organization preexisted the merger or was created by the
merger.
    "Corporation" means (i) a corporation under the Business
Corporation Act of 1983, a predecessor law, or comparable law
of another jurisdiction or (ii) a bank or savings bank.
    "General partner" means a partner in a partnership and a
general partner in a limited partnership.
    "Limited partner" means a limited partner in a limited
partnership.
    "Limited partnership" means a limited partnership created
under the Uniform Limited Partnership Act (2001), a predecessor
law, or comparable law of another jurisdiction.
    "Partner" includes a general partner and a limited partner.
    "Partnership" means a general partnership under the
Uniform Partnership Act (1997), a predecessor law, or
comparable law of another jurisdiction.
    "Partnership agreement" means an agreement among the
partners concerning the partnership or limited partnership.
    "Shareholder" means a shareholder in a corporation.
(Source: P.A. 96-328, eff. 8-11-09.)
 
    (805 ILCS 180/37-10)
    Sec. 37-10. Conversion of partnership or limited
partnership to limited liability company.
    (a) An organization other than a limited liability company
or a foreign limited liability company may convert to a limited
liability company, and a limited liability company may convert
to an organization other than a foreign limited liability
company pursuant to this Section, Sections 37-15 through 37-17,
and a plan of conversion, if:
        (1) the other organization's governing statute
    authorizes the conversion;
        (2) the conversion is not prohibited by the law of the
    jurisdiction that enacted the other organization's
    governing statute; and
        (3) the other organization complies with its governing
    statute in effecting the conversion.
    (b) A plan of conversion must be in a record and must
include:
        (1) the name and form of the organization before
    conversion;
        (2) the name and form of the organization after
    conversion;
        (3) the terms and conditions of the conversion,
    including the manner and basis for converting interests in
    the converting organization into any combination of money,
    interests in the converted organization, and other
    consideration; and
        (4) the organizational documents of the converted
    organization that are, or are proposed to be, in a record.
    A partnership or limited partnership may be converted to a
    limited liability company pursuant to this Section if
    conversion to a limited liability company is permitted
    under the law governing the partnership or limited
    partnership.
    (b) The terms and conditions of a conversion of a
partnership or limited partnership to a limited liability
company must be approved by all of the partners or by a number
or percentage of the partners required for conversion in the
partnership agreement.
    (c) An agreement of conversion must set forth the terms and
conditions of the conversion of the interests of partners of a
partnership or of a limited partnership, as the case may be,
into interests in the converted limited liability company or
the cash or other consideration to be paid or delivered as a
result of the conversion of the interests of the partners, or a
combination thereof.
    (d) After a conversion is approved under subsection (b) of
this Section, the partnership or limited partnership shall file
articles of organization in the office of the Secretary of
State that satisfy the requirements of Section 5-5 and contain
all of the following:
        (1) A statement that the partnership or limited
    partnership was converted to a limited liability company
    from a partnership or limited partnership, as the case may
    be.
        (2) Its former name.
        (3) A statement of the number of votes cast by the
    partners entitled to vote for and against the conversion
    and, if the vote is less than unanimous, the number or
    percentage required to approve the conversion under
    subsection (b) of this Section.
        (4) In the case of a limited partnership, a statement
    that the certificate of limited partnership shall be
    canceled as of the date the conversion took effect.
    (e) In the case of a limited partnership, the filing of
articles of organization under subsection (d) of this Section
cancels its certificate of limited partnership as of the date
the conversion took effect.
    (f) A conversion takes effect when the articles of
organization are filed in the office of the Secretary of State
or on a date specified in the articles of organization not
later than 30 days subsequent to the filing of the articles of
organization.
    (g) A general partner who becomes a member of a limited
liability company as a result of a conversion remains liable as
a partner for an obligation incurred by the partnership or
limited partnership before the conversion takes effect.
    (h) A general partner's liability for all obligations of
the limited liability company incurred after the conversion
takes effect is that of a member of the company. A limited
partner who becomes a member as a result of a conversion
remains liable only to the extent the limited partner was
liable for an obligation incurred by the limited partnership
before the conversion takes effect.
(Source: P.A. 90-424, eff. 1-1-98.)
 
    (805 ILCS 180/37-15)
    Sec. 37-15. Effect of conversion; entity unchanged.
    (a) An organization A partnership or limited partnership
that has been converted pursuant to Sections 37-10 through
37-17 under this Article is for all purposes the same entity
that existed before the conversion.
    (b) When a conversion takes effect:
        (1) all property owned by the converting organization
    remains vested in the converted organization partnership
    or limited partnership vests in the limited liability
    company;
        (2) all debts, liabilities, and other obligations, or
    other liabilities of the converting organization
    partnership or limited partnership continue as debts,
    obligations, or other liabilities of the converted
    organization limited liability company;
        (3) an action or proceeding pending by or against the
    converting organization partnership or limited partnership
    may be continued as if the conversion had not occurred;
        (4) except as prohibited by other law other than
    Article 37, all of the rights, privileges, immunities,
    powers, and purposes of the converting organization remain
    vested in the converted organization partnership or
    limited partnership vest in the limited liability company;
    and
        (5) except as otherwise provided in the plan of
    conversion, the terms and conditions of the plan of
    conversion take effect; and
        (6) except as otherwise agreed, the conversion does not
    dissolve a converting limited liability company for the
    purposes of Article 35.
    (c) A converted organization that is a foreign organization
consents to the jurisdiction of the courts of this State to
enforce any debt, obligation, or other liability for which the
converting limited liability company is liable if, before the
conversion, the converting limited liability company was
subject to suit in this State on the debt, obligation, or other
liability. A converted organization that is a foreign
organization and not authorized to transact business in this
State appoints the Secretary of State as its agent for service
of process for purposes of enforcing a debt, obligation, or
other liability under this subsection. Service on the Secretary
of State under this subsection must be made in the same manner
and has the same consequences as in subsections (b) and (c) of
Section 1-50. agreement of conversion under Section 37-10, all
of the partners of the converting partnership continue as
members of the limited liability company.
    (d) A converted organization that is a foreign organization
may not do business in this State until an application for that
authority is filed with the Secretary of State.
(Source: P.A. 90-424, eff. 1-1-98.)
 
    (805 ILCS 180/37-16 new)
    Sec. 37-16. Action on plan of conversion by converting
limited liability company.
    (a) Subject to Section 37-36, a plan of conversion must be
consented to by all the members of a converting limited
liability company.
    (b) Subject to Section 37-36 and any contractual rights,
after a conversion is approved, and at any time before a filing
is made under Section 37-17, a converting limited liability
company may amend the plan or abandon the conversion:
        (1) as provided in the plan; or
        (2) except as otherwise prohibited in the plan, by the
    same consent as was required to approve the plan.
 
    (805 ILCS 180/37-17 new)
    Sec. 37-17. Filings required for conversion; effective
date.
    (a) After a plan of conversion is approved:
        (1) a converting limited liability company shall
    deliver to the Secretary of State for filing articles of
    conversion, which must be executed as provided in Section
    5-45 and must include:
            (A) a statement that the limited liability company
        has been converted into another organization;
            (B) the name and form of the organization and the
        jurisdiction of its governing statute;
            (C) the date the conversion is effective under the
        governing statute of the converted organization;
            (D) a statement that the conversion was approved as
        required by this Act;
            (E) a statement that the conversion was approved as
        required by the governing statute of the converted
        organization; and
            (F) if the converted organization is a foreign
        organization not authorized to transact business in
        this State, the street and mailing addresses of an
        office which the Secretary of State may use for the
        purposes of subsection (c) of Section 37-15; and
        (2) if the converting organization is not a converting
    limited liability company, the converting organization
    shall deliver to the Secretary of State for filing,
    articles of organization, which must include, in addition
    to the information required by Section 5-5:
            (A) a statement that the converted organization
        was converted from another organization;
            (B) the name and form of the converting
        organization and the jurisdiction of its governing
        statute; and
            (C) a statement that the conversion was approved in
        a manner that complied with the converting
        organization's governing statute.
    (b) A conversion becomes effective:
        (1) if the converted organization is a limited
    liability company, when the articles of organization take
    effect; and
        (2) if the converted organization is not a limited
    liability company, as provided by the governing statute of
    the converted organization.
 
    (805 ILCS 180/37-20)
    Sec. 37-20. Merger of entities.
    (a) A Pursuant to a plan of merger approved under
subsection (c) of this Section, a limited liability company may
merge be merged with one or more other constituent
organizations pursuant to this Section, Sections 37-21 through
37-30, and a plan of merger, if:
        (1) the governing statute of each of the other
    organizations authorizes the merger;
        (2) the merger is not prohibited by the law of a
    jurisdiction that enacted any of the governing statutes;
    and
        (3) each of the other organizations complies with its
    governing statute in effecting the merger. or into one or
    more limited liability companies, foreign limited
    liability companies, corporations, foreign corporations,
    partnerships, foreign partnerships, limited partnerships,
    foreign limited partnerships, or other domestic or foreign
    entities if merger with or into a limited liability company
    is permitted under the law governing the domestic or
    foreign entity.
    (b) A plan of merger must be in a record and must include
set forth all of the following:
        (1) the The name and form of each constituent
    organization; entity that is a party to the merger.
        (2) the The name and form of the surviving organization
    and, if the surviving organization is to be created by the
    merger, a statement to that effect; entity into which the
    other entities will merge.
        (3) The type of organization of the surviving entity.
        (3) the (4) The terms and conditions of the merger,
    including the . (5) The manner and basis for converting the
    interests in each constituent organization into any
    combination of money, shares, obligations, or other
    securities of each party to the merger into interests in ,
    shares, obligations, or other securities of the surviving
    organization, and other consideration; entity, or into
    money or other property in whole or in part.
        (4) if the surviving organization is to be created by
    the merger, the surviving organization's organizational
    documents that are proposed to be in a record; and
        (5) if the surviving organization is not to be created
    by the merger, any amendments to be made by the merger to
    the surviving organization's organizational documents that
    are, or are proposed to be, in a record.
        (6) The street address of the surviving entity's
    principal place of business.
    (c) A plan of merger must be approved:
        (1) in the case of a limited liability company that is
    a party to the merger, by all of the members or by a number
    or percentage of members specified in the operating
    agreement;
        (2) in the case of a foreign limited liability company
    that is a party to the merger, by the vote required for
    approval of a merger by the law of the state or foreign
    jurisdiction in which the foreign limited liability
    company is organized;
        (3) in the case of a partnership or domestic limited
    partnership that is a party to the merger, by the vote
    required for approval of a conversion under Section
    37-5(b); and
        (4) in the case of any other entities that are parties
    to the merger, by the vote required for approval of a
    merger by the law of this State or of the state or foreign
    jurisdiction in which the entity is organized and, in the
    absence of such a requirement, by all the owners of
    interests in the entity.
    (d) After a plan of merger is approved and before the
merger takes effect, the plan may be amended or abandoned as
provided in the plan.
    (e) The merger is effective upon the filing of the articles
of merger with the Secretary of State, or a later date as
specified in the articles of merger not later than 30 days
subsequent to the filing of the plan of merger under Section
37-25.
(Source: P.A. 90-424, eff. 1-1-98.)
 
    (805 ILCS 180/37-21 new)
    Sec. 37-21. Action on plan of merger by constituent limited
liability company.
    (a) Subject to Section 37-36, a plan of merger must be
consented to by all the members of a constituent limited
liability company.
    (b) Subject to Section 37-36 and any contractual rights,
after a merger is approved and at any time before articles of
merger are delivered to the Secretary of State for filing under
Section 37-25, a constituent limited liability company may
amend the plan or abandon the merger:
        (1) as provided in the plan; or
        (2) except as otherwise prohibited in the plan, with
    the same consent as was required to approve the plan.
 
    (805 ILCS 180/37-25)
    Sec. 37-25. Articles of merger.
    (a) After each constituent organization has approved a
approval of the plan of merger under Section 37-20, unless the
merger is abandoned under subsection (d) of Section 37-20,
articles of merger must be signed on behalf of:
        (1) each constituent limited liability company as
    provided in Section 5-45; and
        (2) each other constituent organization, as provided
    in its governing statute and other entity that is a party
    to the merger and delivered to the Secretary of State for
    filing.
    (b) Articles of merger under this Section The articles must
include set forth all of the following:
        (1) the The name and form of each constituent
    organization and the jurisdiction of its governing
    statute; formation or organization of each of the limited
    liability companies and other entities that are parties to
    the merger.
        (2) For each limited liability company that is to
    merge, the date its articles of organization were filed
    with the Secretary of State.
        (3) That a plan of merger has been approved and signed
    by each limited liability company and other entity that is
    to merge and, if a corporation is a party to the merger, a
    copy of the plan as approved by the corporation shall be
    attached to the articles.
        (2) the (4) The name and form address of the surviving
    organization, the jurisdiction of its governing statute
    and, if the surviving organization is created by the
    merger, a statement to that effect; limited liability
    company or other surviving entity.
        (3) the (5) The effective date of the merger is
    effective under the governing statute of the surviving
    organization; .
        (4) if the surviving organization is to be created by
    the merger:
            (A) if it will be a limited liability company, the
        company's articles of organization; or
            (B) if it will be an organization other than a
        limited liability company, the organizational document
        that creates the organization that is in a public
        record;
        (5) if the surviving organization preexists the
    merger, any amendments provided for in the plan of merger
    for the organizational document that created the
    organization that are in a public record;
        (6) a statement as to each constituent organization
    that the merger was approved as required by the
    organization's governing statute;
        (7) if the surviving organization is a foreign
    organization not authorized to transact business in this
    State, the street and mailing addresses of an office the
    Secretary of State may use for the purposes of subsection
    (b) of Section 37-30; and
        (8) any additional information required by the
    governing statute of any constituent organization.
    (c) Each constituent limited liability company shall
deliver the articles of merger for filing to the Secretary of
State, together with a copy of that portion of the plan of
merger that contains the name and form of each constituent
organization and the surviving organization.
    (d) A merger becomes effective:
        (1) if the surviving organization is a limited
    liability company, upon the later of:
            (A) the filing of the articles of merger with the
        Secretary of State; or
            (B) subject to Section 5-40, as specified in the
        articles of merger; or
        (2) if the surviving organization is not a limited
    liability company, as provided by the governing statute of
    the surviving organization.
        (6) If a limited liability company is the surviving
    entity, any changes in its articles of organization that
    are necessary by reason of the merger.
        (7) If a party to a merger is a foreign limited
    liability company, the jurisdiction and date of filing of
    its initial articles of organization and the date when its
    application for authority was filed by the Secretary of
    State or, if an application has not been filed, a statement
    to that effect.
        (8) If the surviving entity is not a limited liability
    company, an agreement that the surviving entity may be
    served with process in this State and is subject to
    liability in any action or proceeding for the enforcement
    of any liability or obligation of any limited liability
    company previously subject to suit in this State which is
    to merge, and for the enforcement, as provided in this Act,
    of the right of members of any limited liability company to
    receive payment for their interest against the surviving
    entity.
    (b) If a foreign limited liability company is the surviving
entity of a merger, it may not do business in this State until
an application for that authority is filed with the Secretary
of State.
    (c) The surviving limited liability company or other entity
shall furnish a copy of the plan of merger, on request and
without cost, to any member of any limited liability company or
any person holding an interest in any other entity that is to
merge.
    (d) To the extent the articles of merger are inconsistent
with the limited liability company's articles of organization,
the articles of merger shall operate as an amendment to the
company's articles of organization.
(Source: P.A. 90-424, eff. 1-1-98.)
 
    (805 ILCS 180/37-30)
    Sec. 37-30. Effect of merger.
    (a) When a merger becomes effective takes effect:
        (1) the surviving organization continues or comes into
    existence;
        (2) each constituent organization that merges into the
    surviving organization ceases to exist as a separate
    entity;
        (3) all property owned by each constituent
    organization that ceases to exist vests in the surviving
    organization;
        (4) all debts, obligations, or other liabilities of
    each constituent organization that ceases to exist
    continue as debts, obligations, or other liabilities of the
    surviving organization;
        (5) an action or proceeding pending by or against any
    constituent organization that ceases to exist may be
    continued as if the merger had not occurred;
        (6) except as prohibited by other law, all of the
    rights, privileges, immunities, powers, and purposes of
    each constituent organization that ceases to exist vest in
    the surviving organization;
        (7) except as otherwise provided in the plan of merger,
    the terms and conditions of the plan of merger take effect;
        (8) except as otherwise agreed, if a constituent
    limited liability company ceases to exist, the merger does
    not dissolve the limited liability company for the purposes
    of Article 35;
        (9) if the surviving organization is created by the
    merger:
            (A) if it is a limited liability company, the
        articles of organization become effective; or
            (B) if it is an organization other than a limited
        liability company, the organizational document that
        creates the organization becomes effective; and
        (10) if the surviving organization preexisted the
    merger, any amendments provided for in the articles of
    merger for the organizational document that created the
    organization become effective.
    (b) A surviving organization that is a foreign organization
consents to the jurisdiction of the courts of this State to
enforce any debt, obligation, or other liability owed by a
constituent organization, if before the merger the constituent
organization was subject to suit in this State on the debt,
obligation, or other liability. A surviving organization that
is a foreign organization and not authorized to transact
business in this State appoints the Secretary of State as its
agent for service of process for the purposes of enforcing a
debt, obligation, or other liability under this subsection.
Service on the Secretary of State under this subsection must be
made in the same manner and has the same consequences as in
subsections (b) and (c) of Section 1-50.
    (c) A surviving organization that is a foreign organization
may not do business in this State until an application for that
authority is filed with the Secretary of State.
        (1) the separate existence of each limited liability
    company and other entity that is a party to the merger,
    other than the surviving entity, terminates;
        (2) all property owned by each of the limited liability
    companies and other entities that are party to the merger
    vests in the surviving entity;
        (3) all debts, liabilities, and other obligations of
    each limited liability company and other entity that is
    party to the merger become the obligations of the surviving
    entity;
        (4) an action or proceeding pending by or against a
    limited liability company or other party to a merger may be
    continued as if the merger had not occurred or the
    surviving entity may be substituted as a party to the
    action or proceeding; and
        (5) except as prohibited by other law, all the rights,
    privileges, immunities, powers, and purposes of every
    limited liability company and other entity that is a party
    to a merger vest in the surviving entity.
    (b) The Secretary of State is an agent for service of
process in an action or proceeding against the surviving
foreign entity to enforce an obligation of any party to a
merger if the surviving foreign entity fails to appoint or
maintain an agent designated for service of process in this
State or the agent for service of process cannot with
reasonable diligence be found at the designated office. Service
is effected under this subsection (b) at the earliest of:
        (1) the date the company receives the process, notice,
    or demand;
        (2) the date shown on the return receipt, if signed on
    behalf of the company; or
        (3) 5 days after its deposit in the mail, if mailed
    postpaid and correctly addressed.
    (c) Service under subsection (b) of this Section shall be
made by the person instituting the action by doing all of the
following:
        (1) Serving on the Secretary of State, or on any
    employee having responsibility for administering this Act,
    a copy of the process, notice, or demand, together with any
    papers required by law to be delivered in connection with
    service and paying the fee prescribed by Article 50 of this
    Act.
        (2) Transmitting notice of the service on the Secretary
    of State and a copy of the process, notice, or demand and
    accompanying papers to the surviving entity being served,
    by registered or certified mail at the address set forth in
    the articles of merger.
        (3) Attaching an affidavit of compliance with this
    Section, in substantially the form that the Secretary of
    State may by rule prescribe, to the process, notice, or
    demand.
    (d) Nothing contained in this Section shall limit or affect
the right to serve any process, notice, or demand required or
permitted by law to be served upon a limited liability company
in any other manner now or hereafter permitted by law.
    (e) A member of the surviving limited liability company is
liable for all obligations of a party to the merger for which
the member was personally liable before the merger.
    (f) Unless otherwise agreed, a merger of a limited
liability company that is not the surviving entity in the
merger does not require the limited liability company to wind
up its business under this Act or pay its liabilities and
distribute its assets under this Act.
(Source: P.A. 90-424, eff. 1-1-98.)
 
    (805 ILCS 180/37-31 new)
    Sec. 37-31. Domestication.
    (a) A foreign limited liability company may become a
limited liability company pursuant to this Section, Sections
37-32, 37-33, and 37-34, and a plan of domestication, if:
        (1) the foreign limited liability company's governing
    statute authorizes the domestication;
        (2) the domestication is not prohibited by the law of
    the jurisdiction that enacted the governing statute; and
        (3) the foreign limited liability company complies
    with its governing statute in effecting the domestication.
    (b) A limited liability company may become a foreign
limited liability company pursuant to this Section, Sections
37-32, 37-33, and 37-34, and a plan of domestication, if:
        (1) the foreign limited liability company's governing
    statute authorizes the domestication;
        (2) the domestication is not prohibited by the law of
    the jurisdiction that enacted the governing statute; and
        (3) the foreign limited liability company complies
    with its governing statute in effecting the domestication.
    (c) A plan of domestication must be in a record and must
include:
        (1) the name of the domesticating company before
    domestication and the jurisdiction of its governing
    statute;
        (2) the name of the domesticated company after
    domestication and the jurisdiction of its governing
    statute;
        (3) the terms and conditions of the domestication,
    including the manner and basis for converting interests in
    the domesticating company into any combination of money,
    interests in the domesticated company, and other
    consideration; and
        (4) the organizational documents of the domesticated
    company that are, or are proposed to be, in a record.
 
    (805 ILCS 180/37-32 new)
    Sec. 37-32. Action on plan of domestication by
domesticating limited liability company.
    (a) A plan of domestication must be consented to:
        (1) by all the members, subject to Section 37-36, if
    the domesticating company is a limited liability company;
    and
        (2) as provided in the domesticating company's
    governing statute, if the company is a foreign limited
    liability company.
    (b) Subject to any contractual rights, after a
domestication is approved, and at any time before articles of
domestication are delivered to the Secretary of State for
filing under Section 37-33, a domesticating limited liability
company may amend the plan or abandon the domestication:
        (1) as provided in the plan; or
        (2) except as otherwise prohibited in the plan, by the
    same consent as was required to approve the plan.
 
    (805 ILCS 180/37-33 new)
    Sec. 37-33. Filings required for domestication; effective
date.
    (a) After a plan of domestication is approved, a
domesticating company shall deliver to the Secretary of State
for filing articles of domestication, which must include:
        (1) a statement, as the case may be, that the company
    has been domesticated from or into another jurisdiction;
        (2) the name of the domesticating company and the
    jurisdiction of its governing statute;
        (3) the name of the domesticated company and the
    jurisdiction of its governing statute;
        (4) the date the domestication is effective under the
    governing statute of the domesticated company;
        (5) if the domesticating company was a limited
    liability company, a statement that the domestication was
    approved as required by this Act;
        (6) if the domesticating company was a foreign limited
    liability company, a statement that the domestication was
    approved as required by the governing statute of the other
    jurisdiction;
        (7) if the domesticated company was a foreign limited
    liability company not authorized to transact business in
    this State, the street and mailing addresses of an office
    that the Secretary of State may use for the purposes of
    subsection (b) of Section 37-34; and
        (8) if the domesticated company was a foreign limited
    liability company, the company's articles of organization.
    (b) A domestication becomes effective:
        (1) when the articles of organization take effect, if
    the domesticated company is a limited liability company;
    and
        (2) according to the governing statute of the
    domesticated company, if the domesticated organization is
    a foreign limited liability company.
 
    (805 ILCS 180/37-34 new)
    Sec. 37-34. Effect of domestication.
    (a) When a domestication takes effect:
        (1) the domesticated company is for all purposes the
    company that existed before the domestication;
        (2) all property owned by the domesticating company
    remains vested in the domesticated company;
        (3) all debts, obligations, or other liabilities of the
    domesticating company continue as debts, obligations, or
    other liabilities of the domesticated company;
        (4) an action or proceeding pending by or against a
    domesticating company may be continued as if the
    domestication had not occurred;
        (5) except as prohibited by other law, all of the
    rights, privileges, immunities, powers, and purposes of
    the domesticating company remain vested in the
    domesticated company;
        (6) except as otherwise provided in the plan of
    domestication, the terms and conditions of the plan of
    domestication take effect; and
        (7) except as otherwise agreed, the domestication does
    not dissolve a domesticating limited liability company for
    the purposes of Article 35.
    (b) A domesticated company that is a foreign limited
liability company consents to the jurisdiction of the courts of
this State to enforce any debt, obligation, or other liability
owed by the domesticating company, if, before the
domestication, the domesticating company was subject to suit in
this State on the debt, obligation, or other liability. A
domesticated company that is a foreign limited liability
company and not authorized to transact business in this State
appoints the Secretary of State as its agent for service of
process for purposes of enforcing a debt, obligation, or other
liability under this subsection. Service on the Secretary of
State under this subsection must be made in the same manner and
has the same consequences as in subsections (b) and (c) of
Section 1-50.
    (c) If a limited liability company has adopted and approved
a plan of domestication under Section 37-32 providing for the
company to be domesticated in a foreign jurisdiction, a
statement surrendering the company's articles of organization
must be delivered to the Secretary of State for filing setting
forth:
        (1) the name of the company;
        (2) a statement that the articles of organization are
    being surrendered in connection with the domestication of
    the company in a foreign jurisdiction;
        (3) a statement that the domestication was approved as
    required by this Act; and
        (4) the jurisdiction of formation of the domesticated
    foreign limited liability company.
    (d) A domesticated company that is a foreign limited
liability company may not do business in this State until an
application for that authority is filed with the Secretary of
State.
 
    (805 ILCS 180/37-36 new)
    Sec. 37-36. Restrictions on approval of mergers and
conversions.
    (a) If a member of a merging or converting limited
liability company will have personal liability with respect to
a surviving or converted organization, approval or amendment of
a plan of merger or conversion is ineffective without the
consent of the member, unless:
        (1) the company's operating agreement provides for
    approval of a merger or conversion with the consent of
    fewer than all the members; and
        (2) the member has consented to the provision of the
    operating agreement.
    (b) A member does not give the consent required by
subsection (a) merely by consenting to a provision of the
operating agreement that permits the operating agreement to be
amended with the consent of fewer than all the members.
 
    (805 ILCS 180/37-40)
    Sec. 37-40. Series of members, managers or limited
liability company interests.
    (a) An operating agreement may establish or provide for the
establishment of designated series of members, managers or
limited liability company interests having separate rights,
powers or duties with respect to specified property or
obligations of the limited liability company or profits and
losses associated with specified property or obligations, and
to the extent provided in the operating agreement, any such
series may have a separate business purpose or investment
objective.
    (b) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary set forth in
this Section or under other applicable law, in the event that
an operating agreement creates one or more series, and if
separate and distinct records are maintained for any such
series and the assets associated with any such series are held
(directly or indirectly, including through a nominee or
otherwise) and accounted for separately from the other assets
of the limited liability company, or any other series thereof,
and if the operating agreement so provides, and notice of the
limitation on liabilities of a series as referenced in this
subsection is set forth in the articles of organization of the
limited liability company and if the limited liability company
has filed a certificate of designation for each series which is
to have limited liability under this Section, then the debts,
liabilities and obligations incurred, contracted for or
otherwise existing with respect to a particular series shall be
enforceable against the assets of such series only, and not
against the assets of the limited liability company generally
or any other series thereof, and unless otherwise provided in
the operating agreement, none of the debts, liabilities,
obligations and expenses incurred, contracted for or otherwise
existing with respect to the limited liability company
generally or any other series thereof shall be enforceable
against the assets of such series. The fact that the articles
of organization contain the foregoing notice of the limitation
on liabilities of a series and a certificate of designation for
a series is on file in the Office of the Secretary of State
shall constitute notice of such limitation on liabilities of a
series. A series with limited liability shall be treated as a
separate entity to the extent set forth in the articles of
organization. Each series with limited liability may, in its
own name, contract, hold title to assets, grant security
interests, sue and be sued and otherwise conduct business and
exercise the powers of a limited liability company under this
Act. The limited liability company and any of its series may
elect to consolidate their operations as a single taxpayer to
the extent permitted under applicable law, elect to work
cooperatively, elect to contract jointly or elect to be treated
as a single business for purposes of qualification to do
business in this or any other state. Such elections shall not
affect the limitation of liability set forth in this Section
except to the extent that the series have specifically accepted
joint liability by contract.
    (c) Except in the case of a foreign limited liability
company that has adopted an assumed name pursuant to Section
45-15, the name of the series with limited liability must
commence with the entire name of the limited liability company,
as set forth in its articles of organization incorporation, and
be distinguishable from the names of the other series set forth
in the articles of organization. In the case of a foreign
limited liability company that has adopted an assumed name
pursuant to Section 45-15, the name of the series with limited
liability must commence with the entire name, as set forth in
the foreign limited liability company's assumed name
application, under which the foreign limited liability company
has been admitted to transact business in this State.
    (d) Upon the filing of the certificate of designation with
the Secretary of State setting forth the name of each series
with limited liability, the series' existence shall begin, and
each of the duplicate copies stamped "Filed" and marked with
the filing date shall be conclusive evidence, except as against
the State, that all conditions precedent required to be
performed have been complied with and that the series has been
or shall be legally organized and formed under this Act. If
different from the limited liability company, the certificate
of designation for each series shall list the name and business
address of all names of the members if the series is member
managed or the names of the managers and any member having the
authority of a if the series is manager managed. The name of a
series with limited liability under subsection (b) of this
Section may be changed by filing with the Secretary of State a
certificate of designation identifying the series whose name is
being changed and the new name of such series. If not the same
as the limited liability company, the name and business address
of all names of the members of a member managed series or of
the managers and any member having the authority of a manager
managed series may be changed by filing a new certificate of
designation with the Secretary of State. A series with limited
liability under subsection (b) of this Section may be dissolved
by filing with the Secretary of State a certificate of
designation identifying the series being dissolved or by the
dissolution of the limited liability company as provided in
subsection (m) of this Section. Certificates of designation may
be executed by the limited liability company or any manager,
person or entity designated in the operating agreement for the
limited liability company.
    (e) A series of a limited liability company will be deemed
to be in good standing as long as the limited liability company
is in good standing.
    (f) The registered agent and registered office for the
limited liability company in Illinois shall serve as the agent
and office for service of process in Illinois for each series.
    (g) An operating agreement may provide for classes or
groups of members or managers associated with a series having
such relative rights, powers and duties as the operating
agreement may provide, and may make provision for the future
creation of additional classes or groups of members or managers
associated with the series having such relative rights, powers
and duties as may from time to time be established, including
rights, powers and duties senior to existing classes and groups
of members or managers associated with the series.
    (h) A series may be managed by either the member or members
associated with the series or by a manager or managers chosen
by the members of such series, as provided in the operating
agreement. Unless otherwise provided in an operating
agreement, the management of a series shall be vested in the
members associated with such series.
    (i) An operating agreement may grant to all or certain
identified members or managers or a specified class or group of
the members or managers associated with a series the right to
vote separately or with all or any class or group of the
members or managers associated with the series, on any matter.
An operating agreement may provide that any member or class or
group of members associated with a series shall have no voting
rights.
    (j) Except to the extent modified in this Section, the
provisions of this Act which are generally applicable to
limited liability companies, their managers, members and
transferees shall be applicable to each particular series with
respect to the operation of such series.
    (k) Except as otherwise provided in an operating agreement,
any event under this Act or in an operating agreement that
causes a manager to cease to be a manager with respect to a
series shall not, in itself, cause such manager to cease to be
a manager of the limited liability company or with respect to
any other series thereof.
    (l) Except as otherwise provided in an operating agreement,
any event under this Act or an operating agreement that causes
a member to cease to be associated with a series shall not, in
itself, cause such member to cease to be associated with any
other series or terminate the continued membership of a member
in the limited liability company or cause the termination of
the series, regardless of whether such member was the last
remaining member associated with such series.
    (m) Except to the extent otherwise provided in the
operating agreement, a series may be dissolved and its affairs
wound up without causing the dissolution of the limited
liability company. The dissolution of a series established in
accordance with subsection (b) of this Section shall not affect
the limitation on liabilities of such series provided by
subsection (b) of this Section. A series is terminated and its
affairs shall be wound up upon the dissolution of the limited
liability company under Article 35 of this Act.
    (n) If a limited liability company with the ability to
establish series does not register to do business in a foreign
jurisdiction for itself and certain of its series, a series of
a limited liability company may itself register to do business
as a limited liability company in the foreign jurisdiction in
accordance with the laws of the foreign jurisdiction.
    (o) If a foreign limited liability company, as permitted in
the jurisdiction of its organization, has established a series
having separate rights, powers or duties and has limited the
liabilities of such series so that the debts, liabilities and
obligations incurred, contracted for or otherwise existing
with respect to a particular series are enforceable against the
assets of such series only, and not against the assets of the
limited liability company generally or any other series
thereof, or so that the debts, liabilities, obligations and
expenses incurred, contracted for or otherwise existing with
respect to the limited liability company generally or any other
series thereof are not enforceable against the assets of such
series, then the limited liability company, on behalf of itself
or any of its series, or any of its series on their own behalf
may register to do business in the State in accordance with
Section 45-5 of this Act. The limitation of liability shall be
so stated on the application for admission as a foreign limited
liability company and a certificate of designation shall be
filed for each series being registered to do business in the
State by the limited liability company. Unless otherwise
provided in the operating agreement, the debts, liabilities and
obligations incurred, contracted for or otherwise existing
with respect to a particular series of such a foreign limited
liability company shall be enforceable against the assets of
such series only, and not against the assets of the foreign
limited liability company generally or any other series thereof
and none of the debts, liabilities, obligations and expenses
incurred, contracted for or otherwise existing with respect to
such a foreign limited liability company generally or any other
series thereof shall be enforceable against the assets of such
series.
(Source: P.A. 98-720, eff. 7-16-14.)
 
    (805 ILCS 180/50-1)
    Sec. 50-1. Annual reports.
    (a) Each limited liability company organized under the laws
of this State and each foreign limited liability company
admitted to transact business in this State shall file, within
the time prescribed by this Act, an annual report setting forth
all of the following:
        (1) The name of the limited liability company.
        (2) The address, including street and number or rural
    route number, of its registered office in this State and
    the name of its registered agent at that address.
        (3) The address, including street and number or rural
    route number of its principal place of business.
        (4) The name names and business address addresses of
    all of the its managers and any member having the authority
    of a manager or, if none, the members.
        (5) Additional information that may be necessary or
    appropriate in order to enable the Secretary of State to
    administer this Act and to verify the proper amount of fees
    payable by the limited liability company.
        (6) The annual report shall be made on forms prescribed
    and furnished by the Secretary of State, and the
    information therein, required by paragraphs (1) through
    (4) of subsection (a), both inclusive, shall be given as of
    the date of execution of the annual report. The annual
    report shall be executed by a manager or, if none, a member
    designated by the members pursuant to limited liability
    company action properly taken under Section 15-1.
    (b) The annual report, together with all fees and charges
prescribed by this Act, shall be delivered to the Secretary of
State within 60 days immediately preceding the first day of the
anniversary month. Proof to the satisfaction of the Secretary
of State that, before the first day of the anniversary month of
the limited liability company, the report, together with all
fees and charges as prescribed by this Act, was deposited in
the United States mail in a sealed envelope, properly
addressed, with postage prepaid, shall be deemed a compliance
with this requirement. If the Secretary of State finds that the
report conforms to the requirements of this Act, he or she
shall file it. If the Secretary of State finds that it does not
so conform, he or she shall promptly return it to the limited
liability company for any necessary corrections, in which event
the penalties prescribed for failure to file the report within
the time provided shall not apply if the report is corrected to
conform to the requirements of this Act and returned to the
Secretary of State within 60 days of the original due date of
the report.
(Source: P.A. 90-424, eff. 1-1-98; 91-354, eff. 1-1-00.)
 
    (805 ILCS 180/50-10)
    Sec. 50-10. Fees.
    (a) The Secretary of State shall charge and collect in
accordance with the provisions of this Act and rules
promulgated under its authority all of the following:
        (1) Fees for filing documents.
        (2) Miscellaneous charges.
        (3) Fees for the sale of lists of filings and for
    copies of any documents.
    (b) The Secretary of State shall charge and collect for all
of the following:
        (1) Filing articles of organization (domestic),
    application for admission (foreign), and restated articles
    of organization (domestic), $500. Notwithstanding the
    foregoing, the fee for filing articles of organization
    (domestic), application for admission (foreign), and
    restated articles of organization (domestic) in connection
    with a limited liability company with a series or the
    ability to establish a series pursuant to Section 37-40 of
    this Act is $750.
        (2) Filing amendments (domestic or foreign) articles
    of amendment or an amended application for admission, $150.
        (3) Filing a statement of termination articles of
    dissolution or application for withdrawal, $25 $100.
        (4) Filing an application to reserve a name, $300.
        (5) Filing a notice of cancellation of a reserved name,
    $100.
        (6) Filing a notice of a transfer of a reserved name,
    $100.
        (7) Registration of a name, $300.
        (8) Renewal of registration of a name, $100.
        (9) Filing an application for use of an assumed name
    under Section 1-20 of this Act, $150 for each year or part
    thereof ending in 0 or 5, $120 for each year or part
    thereof ending in 1 or 6, $90 for each year or part thereof
    ending in 2 or 7, $60 for each year or part thereof ending
    in 3 or 8, $30 for each year or part thereof ending in 4 or
    9, and a renewal for each assumed name, $150.
        (10) Filing an application for change or cancellation
    of an assumed name, $100.
        (11) Filing an annual report of a limited liability
    company or foreign limited liability company, $250, if
    filed as required by this Act, plus a penalty if
    delinquent. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the fee for
    filing an annual report of a limited liability company or
    foreign limited liability company with ability to
    establish series is $250 plus $50 for each series for which
    a certificate of designation has been filed pursuant to
    Section 37-40 of this Act and is in effect active on the
    last day of the third month preceding the company's
    anniversary month, plus a penalty if delinquent.
        (12) Filing an application for reinstatement of a
    limited liability company or foreign limited liability
    company $500.
        (13) Filing articles Articles of merger Merger, $100
    plus $50 for each party to the merger in excess of the
    first 2 parties.
        (14) Filing articles of conversion an Agreement of
    Conversion or Statement of Conversion, $100.
        (15) Filing a statement of change of address of
    registered office or change of registered agent, or both,
    or filing a statement of correction, $25.
        (16) Filing a petition for refund, $15.
        (17) Filing a certificate of designation of a limited
    liability company with a series pursuant to Section 37-40
    of this Act, $50.
        (18) Filing articles of domestication, $100.
        (19) Filing, amending, or cancelling a statement of
    authority, $50.
        (20) Filing, amending, or cancelling a statement of
    denial, $10.
        (21) (17) Filing any other document, $100.
        (18) Filing a certificate of designation of a limited
    liability company with the ability to establish series
    pursuant to Section 37-40 of this Act, $50.
    (c) The Secretary of State shall charge and collect all of
the following:
        (1) For furnishing a copy or certified copy of any
    document, instrument, or paper relating to a limited
    liability company or foreign limited liability company, or
    for a certificate, $25.
        (2) For the transfer of information by computer process
    media to any purchaser, fees established by rule.
(Source: P.A. 97-839, eff. 7-20-12.)
 
    (805 ILCS 180/55-1)
    Sec. 55-1. Construction and application.
    (a) This Act shall be so applied and construed to
effectuate its general purpose.
    (b) Subject to subsection (b) of Section 15-5, it is the
policy of this Act to give maximum effect to the principles of
freedom of contract and to the enforceability of operating
agreements.
    (c) Rules that statutes in derogation of the common law are
to be strictly construed shall have no application to this Act.
    (d) Unless the context otherwise requires, as used in this
Act, the singular shall include the plural and the plural shall
include the singular. The use of any gender shall be applicable
to all genders. The captions contained in this Act are for
purposes of convenience only and shall not control or affect
the construction of this Act.
(Source: P.A. 87-1062.)
 
    (805 ILCS 180/55-3 new)
    Sec. 55-3. Relation to Electronic Signatures in Global and
National Commerce Act. This Act modifies, limits, and
supersedes the federal Electronic Signatures in Global and
National Commerce Act, 15 U.S.C. Section 7001 et seq., but does
not modify, limit, or supersede Section 101(c) of that Act, 15
U.S.C. Section 7001(c), or authorize electronic delivery of any
of the notices described in Section 103(b) of that Act, 15
U.S.C. Section 7003(b).
 
    (805 ILCS 180/35-60 rep.)
    (805 ILCS 180/35-65 rep.)
    (805 ILCS 180/35-70 rep.)
    Section 10. The Limited Liability Company Act is amended by
repealing Sections 35-60, 35-65, and 35-70.
 
    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect July 1,
2017.
INDEX
Statutes amended in order of appearance
    805 ILCS 180/1-5
    805 ILCS 180/1-6 new
    805 ILCS 180/1-30
    805 ILCS 180/1-40
    805 ILCS 180/1-46 new
    805 ILCS 180/1-65 new
    805 ILCS 180/5-5
    805 ILCS 180/5-45
    805 ILCS 180/5-47
    805 ILCS 180/5-50
    805 ILCS 180/10-1
    805 ILCS 180/10-15
    805 ILCS 180/13-5
    805 ILCS 180/13-15 new
    805 ILCS 180/13-20 new
    805 ILCS 180/15-1
    805 ILCS 180/15-3
    805 ILCS 180/15-5
    805 ILCS 180/15-7
    805 ILCS 180/20-1
    805 ILCS 180/20-5
    805 ILCS 180/25-35
    805 ILCS 180/Art. 30
    heading
    805 ILCS 180/30-5
    805 ILCS 180/30-10
    805 ILCS 180/30-20
    805 ILCS 180/30-25 new
    805 ILCS 180/35-1
    805 ILCS 180/35-3
    805 ILCS 180/35-4
    805 ILCS 180/35-7
    805 ILCS 180/35-15
    805 ILCS 180/35-20
    805 ILCS 180/35-37 new
    805 ILCS 180/35-45
    805 ILCS 180/35-55
    805 ILCS 180/Art. 37
    heading
    805 ILCS 180/37-5
    805 ILCS 180/37-10
    805 ILCS 180/37-15
    805 ILCS 180/37-16 new
    805 ILCS 180/37-17 new
    805 ILCS 180/37-20
    805 ILCS 180/37-21 new
    805 ILCS 180/37-25
    805 ILCS 180/37-30
    805 ILCS 180/37-31 new
    805 ILCS 180/37-32 new
    805 ILCS 180/37-33 new
    805 ILCS 180/37-34 new
    805 ILCS 180/37-36 new
    805 ILCS 180/37-40
    805 ILCS 180/50-1
    805 ILCS 180/50-10
    805 ILCS 180/55-1
    805 ILCS 180/55-3 new
    805 ILCS 180/35-60 rep.
    805 ILCS 180/35-65 rep.
    805 ILCS 180/35-70 rep.