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42 Suffolk U. L. Rev. 459 (2008-2009)
Through the Looking Glass: Status Liability and the Single Member and Series LLC Perspective

handle is hein.journals/sufflr42 and id is 471 raw text is: Through the Looking Glass: Status Liability and the Single
Member and Series LLC Perspective
Carter G. Bishopt
Until the release of Revenue Ruling 88-76, only two states adopted limited
liability company legislation, Wyoming in 1977 and Florida in 1982. In 1975,
Alaska rejected adoption of the first limited liability company legislation based
on concerns regarding the tax classification of a limited liability company.
When Revenue Ruling 88-76 resolved those concerns, all fifty states and the
District of Columbia adopted legislation by 1996, only eight years later.
Revenue Ruling 88-76, however, did not resolve whether a single-member
limited liability company should be classified as a sole proprietorship or a
corporation. That matter was not resolved until 1997 with the release of the
check-the-box regulations. Again, within a few years all states had amended
their limited liability company legislation to permit a single-member limited
liability company. Further still, while Delaware adopted series limited liability
company legislation in 1996, the check-the-box regulations did not address the
classification of a series within a limited liability company. Since 1996, only
six other states have followed suit. The 2008 release of Private Letter Ruling
200803004 classifying a series in the same manner as any other business entity
under the check-the-box regulations signals a potential amendment of those
regulations to embrace the series. If so, once again, all remaining states might
be expected to provide for a series.
These enormous events raise important transparency questions regarding
where disregarded entities exist for state law purposes. Stated another way,
what is the state of member status liability in these forms? As this article
explores, the tax classification and state statutory amendments have given rise
to a proliferation of these forms while failing to address fundamental state law
liability concerns that separate owners from the obligations in these forms.
t Professor of Law at Suffolk University Law School, Boston, Massachusetts. The author was a chair and co-
reporter for the drafting and adoption of the Minnesota Limited Liability Company and Limited Liability
Partnership Acts. He was also a National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws reporter for
the Uniform Limited Liability Company Act, the reporter for the Limited Liability Partnership amendments to
the Revised Uniform Partnership Act, and a co-reporter for the Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company
Act.

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