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Tag Archive for: business formation

Do You Really Need an Operating Agreement for Your Maryland LLC?

July 25, 2025/in Business and Corporate Law/by Nguyen Roche Sutton

(Short answer: Yes. Long answer: Still yes, and here’s why.)

Filing an LLC in Maryland is Easy

A few clicks on the State Department of Assessments and Taxation (SDAT) website, a filing fee, and suddenly you’re in business. The Maryland “Maryland Business Express” portal has made the technical process of formation remarkably streamlined. You choose a name, appoint a resident agent, pay the $100 filing fee (plus the expedited processing fee if you’re in a hurry), and the state issues your Articles of Organization.

But here’s where many entrepreneurs cut corners. In the rush to get a tax ID number and open a bank account, they skip the most critical internal document: the Operating Agreement. The logic usually falls into one of three traps:

  • “It’s just me, I don’t need a contract with myself.”
  • “We trust each other; we’ve been friends for twenty years.”
  • “It’s not required by the state, so why spend the time or money?”

And it is true: Maryland law does not require you to file or even create an operating agreement when forming your LLC. You can legally exist without one. But not having one? That’s a risk. A massive, foundational risk that can jeopardize your personal assets and the future of your company.

What Maryland Law Actually Says

To understand why this document is vital, you have to look at the statutory framework. Under Md. Code, Corps. & Ass’ns § 4A-402, LLC members may enter into an operating agreement “to regulate the affairs of the limited liability company and the conduct of its business.”

The key word here is “may.” Maryland is a “contractarian” state, meaning the law gives business owners wide latitude to set their own rules. You are not required to file this agreement with the SDAT or any other government agency. It is a private, internal document. However, once it is signed by the members, it becomes a legally binding contract.

If there is no agreement? The law defaults to the Maryland Limited Liability Company Act. This Act serves as a “gap-filler.” If your internal rules aren’t written down, the state provides a one-size-fits-all rulebook. The problem is that a “one-size-fits-all” rulebook rarely fits the nuances of a modern startup, a family business, or a real estate holding company. By failing to draft an agreement, you are effectively telling the Maryland legislature, “I’ll just let your generic rules govern my life’s work.”

What Happens If You Skip the Operating Agreement

When you rely on Maryland’s default rules, you lose control over the most important aspects of your business. If you don’t have a customized agreement, the state’s default provisions apply, which usually result in the following:

  1. Equal Ownership and Voting Power: Under Maryland’s default rules, if the paperwork doesn’t specify otherwise, members are often treated as having equal interests. Even if you contributed 90% of the startup capital and your partner contributed 10%, without a written agreement, a court may default to equal control in certain deadlock situations.
  2. No Plan for the “Four Ds”: What happens during Departure, Death, Disability, or Divorce? Maryland law provides very little guidance on how to handle a member who suddenly leaves or passes away. Without an agreement, the deceased member’s interest might pass to their spouse or children—people you never intended to be your business partners.
  3. Pro Rata Profits and Losses: Maryland law generally assumes profits and losses are divided based on the value of the contributions made by each member. However, “value” is subjective. If you provided “sweat equity” (labor) and your partner provided cash, determining the split without a written formula is a recipe for a courtroom battle.
  4. No Formal Dispute Resolution: If you and your partner disagree on a major expansion or a loan, and you don’t have a tie-breaking mechanism in an operating agreement, your only real recourse in Maryland is to sue for judicial dissolution—effectively killing the company to settle the argument.

Why Even Single-Member LLCs Should Have One

If you are the sole owner of your LLC, you might think an operating agreement is a redundant exercise in talking to yourself. In reality, it is perhaps more important for a solo founder than for a multi-member group.

  1. Strengthening the “Liability Shield” The primary reason you formed an LLC was to protect your personal assets (your home, car, and savings) from business debts. However, creditors can attempt to “pierce the corporate veil.” They argue that the LLC is just an “alter ego” of the owner and not a separate entity. If you don’t have an operating agreement, you aren’t following “corporate formalities.” A signed agreement is “Exhibit A” in proving that your LLC is a distinct legal person.
  2. Institutional Requirements Try opening a commercial high-yield savings account or applying for a Small Business Administration (SBA) loan in Maryland without an operating agreement. Most sophisticated lenders and banks will demand to see the document to verify who has the authority to sign contracts and bind the LLC to a debt.
  3. Succession Planning If you become incapacitated or die, who takes over the business? Without an operating agreement, your family may have to go through a lengthy probate process just to gain the authority to pay your employees or close out your contracts. An agreement allows you to name a successor manager instantly.

What You Should Include in a Maryland Operating Agreement

A robust Maryland Operating Agreement should be tailored to your specific industry, but these eight sections are non-negotiable:

  1. Member Information and Ownership

Don’t just list names. Define exactly what “ownership” means. Is it represented by “units” (like shares) or a simple “percentage”? You must also document Capital Contributions. If you put in $10,000 and your partner contributed a truck and a laptop, the agreement should state the agreed-upon value of those items.

  1. Management Structure

Will your LLC be Member-Managed (everyone has a say in daily operations) or Manager-Managed (you appoint a specific person or committee to run things)? This is crucial for Maryland businesses. You need to clearly define who can sign a check, who can hire an employee, and who can lease office space in Baltimore or Bethesda.

  1. Voting Rights and Rules

Not every decision should require a 100% consensus. Your agreement should specify which actions need a simple majority (51%), which need a supermajority (66% or 75%), and which (like selling the company) require a unanimous vote.

  1. Profit and Loss Allocation

How do you get paid? Are you reinvesting all profits back into the company for the first three years? Are “tax distributions” mandatory so members can pay the IRS on their share of the LLC’s income? Maryland is a “pass-through” entity state, so these tax clauses are vital for avoiding personal financial crises at tax time.

  1. Adding or Removing Members

Successful businesses grow. Your agreement needs a roadmap for how to bring in a new partner. Conversely, it needs “expulsion” clauses. If a member loses their professional license or is convicted of a felony, you need a legal way to remove them from the company without destroying the business.

  1. Transfers, Death, and Succession

This is the “Buy-Sell” portion of the agreement. If a member wants to sell their share, do the other members have a Right of First Refusal? This prevents a member from selling their interest to a competitor or an unwanted third party.

  1. Dissolution and Winding Up

Every business ends eventually—either through a sale, a merger, or a closing. You need to define the “triggering events” for dissolution and, more importantly, the order in which people get paid. Usually, creditors are first, followed by members recouping their initial investments, and finally, the remaining assets.

  1. Dispute Resolution

Litigation in Maryland Circuit Courts is expensive and public. Many LLCs choose to include a clause requiring mandatory mediation or private arbitration in a specific county (e.g., “All disputes shall be settled by arbitration in Anne Arundel County”). You should also include an “Attorney’s Fees” provision, stating that the losing party pays the winner’s legal costs.

Common Mistakes in Operating Agreements for LLCs

Even when business owners do create an agreement, they often fall into avoidable traps:

  • The “Internet Special”: Downloading a template designed for California or Delaware. Maryland has its own specific statutes and tax considerations. A “foreign” template might include clauses that are unenforceable in Maryland courts.
  • The “Dusty Shelf” Syndrome: Writing an agreement in 2018 and never looking at it again. As your business pivots from a side hustle to a full-time enterprise, the agreement must be updated to reflect your new reality.
  • The “Handshake Hybrid”: Having a written agreement but then making “side deals” via email or text. In Maryland, if your agreement says all amendments must be in writing and signed, those email threads might not hold up in court.
  • Articles Mismatch: Ensuring your Operating Agreement doesn’t contradict your Articles of Organization. If your Articles say the LLC is member-managed but your agreement says it’s manager-managed, you have a “cloud” on your title of authority.

What to Do Now?

If you already formed your Maryland LLC but haven’t created an operating agreement, don’t panic. It is never too late to adopt one. If you already have one, it’s likely time for a check-up.

  1. Gather the Facts: Sit down and document exactly how much money and time everyone has put in.
  2. The “Crucial Conversations”: Talk to your partners about the “What Ifs.” What if the business loses money? What if someone wants to move to Florida? These conversations are much easier to have when the business is doing well than when it’s in a crisis.
  3. Formalize It: Draft a document that complies with the Maryland LLC Act but adds the layers of protection your specific business needs.
  4. Execute and Store: Every member must sign it. Keep the original in a safe place (or a secure digital vault) and ensure it is listed in your “Company Records.”

Final Thoughts

Your LLC might be legally formed in the eyes of the SDAT, but it isn’t legally protected in the eyes of a judge unless you treat it like a real business. An operating agreement isn’t just “more paperwork” or a bureaucratic hurdle. It is the foundation of your professional life. It is the insurance policy that protects your friendships, your family’s assets, and your hard-earned reputation.

In Maryland, the state gives you the freedom to write your own rules. Don’t waste that freedom by staying silent. Because in the world of business, “we’ll figure it out later” isn’t a strategy.

It’s a lawsuit waiting to happen.

https://www.nguyenroche.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/images_blog_operating-agreement.jpg 667 1000 Nguyen Roche Sutton https://www.nguyenroche.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/logo.png Nguyen Roche Sutton2025-07-25 17:05:292026-03-04 08:05:42Do You Really Need an Operating Agreement for Your Maryland LLC?

Overview of Corporate Law Practice in Maryland

May 21, 2025/in Business and Corporate Law/by Nguyen Roche Sutton

Maryland occupies a unique and highly strategic position in the American legal landscape. Situated at the crossroads of the Mid-Atlantic, nestled between the federal powerhouse of Washington, D.C., and the financial hubs of the Northeast, the state has developed a sophisticated and robust corporate law framework. Practice in this jurisdiction is defined by the Maryland General Corporation Law (MGCL), a body of statutes that balances modern flexibility with predictable, well-settled judicial precedents.

For practitioners and business owners alike, Maryland is often viewed as a “sophisticated alternative” to Delaware. While Delaware remains the primary choice for many national entities, Maryland has carved out a dominant niche, particularly for Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) and closed-end investment funds. Understanding Maryland corporate law requires navigating the interplay between state statutes, federal regulations, and the specific administrative requirements of the Maryland State Department of Assessments and Taxation (SDAT)

Business Formation and Entity Selection

The foundation of any corporate law practice is the initial choice of entity. In Maryland, this decision is governed by the MGCL for corporations and the Maryland Limited Liability Company Act for LLCs.

The Role of the SDAT

Unlike many states where the Secretary of State handles corporate filings, Maryland centralizes these functions within the State Department of Assessments and Taxation (SDAT). Attorneys must be adept at navigating the SDAT’s nuances, from filing Articles of Incorporation to ensuring that entities maintain “Good Standing.” A lapse in status can lead to the forfeiture of a corporation’s charter, potentially exposing officers and directors to personal liability—a catastrophic outcome that corporate counsel works tirelessly to prevent.

Corporations vs. LLCs in Maryland

  • Corporations: Often chosen for businesses seeking to go public or those in the tech sector looking for venture capital. Maryland law allows for “Close Corporations,” which eliminate many of the formalities (like boards of directors) required of larger entities.
  • LLCs: The “contractual” nature of Maryland LLCs provides immense flexibility. Maryland courts generally respect the “freedom of contract” in operating agreements, allowing members to tailor management structures and profit distributions with minimal statutory interference.
  1. The Maryland General Corporation Law (MGCL) and REITs

One cannot discuss Maryland corporate practice without highlighting the state’s dominance in the REIT sector. It is estimated that a vast majority of publicly traded REITs in the United States are Maryland corporations.

Why Maryland for REITs?

Maryland’s legislature has been proactive in amending the MGCL to suit the needs of the real estate industry. Key features include:

  • Unsolicited Takeover Act (MUTA): This allows Maryland corporations to adopt certain “poison pill” or defensive measures (like staggered boards) without shareholder approval, providing a level of protection against hostile takeovers that is often superior to other states.
  • Distributions: Maryland law provides flexible standards for making distributions to shareholders, which is critical for REITs that must distribute at least $90\%$ of their taxable income to maintain their tax status.
  1. Corporate Governance and Fiduciary Duties

Corporate governance is the “internal law” of the business. Maryland attorneys advise boards of directors on their primary duties: the Duty of Care and the Duty of Loyalty.

The Standard of Care

In Maryland, the standard for director conduct is codified in MGCL § 2-405.1. A director must perform their duties in good faith, in a manner they reasonably believe to be in the best interests of the corporation, and with the care that an ordinarily prudent person in a like position would use under similar circumstances.

The Business Judgment Rule

Maryland courts strongly adhere to the Business Judgment Rule, a presumption that in making a business decision, the directors acted on an informed basis, in good faith, and in the honest belief that the action taken was in the best interests of the company. Corporate counsel plays a vital role in documenting the “deliberative process” of the board to ensure that this protection is maintained in the event of litigation.

Mergers and Acquisitions (M&A)

M&A practice in Maryland is a high-stakes arena involving the consolidation of companies through various legal mechanisms.

Transactional Structures

Maryland attorneys assist in:

  • Statutory Mergers: Where one entity is absorbed into another.
  • Asset Purchases: Where the buyer selects specific assets and liabilities, avoiding the “successor liability” often found in mergers.
  • Stock Purchases: Where the equity of the target is purchased directly.

Appraisal Rights

Under Maryland law, shareholders who dissent from a merger may be entitled to “Appraisal Rights”—the right to receive the “fair value” of their shares in cash as determined by a court. Navigating these rights requires a deep understanding of both the MGCL and valuation methodologies.

  1. Securities and Regulatory Compliance

Maryland’s proximity to the SEC in Washington, D.C., means that securities compliance is a cornerstone of corporate practice.

The Maryland Securities Act

While federal law (the Securities Act of 1933 and the Exchange Act of 1934) governs national offerings, Maryland’s “Blue Sky” laws apply to securities transactions within the state. The Maryland Division of Securities oversees these regulations. Corporate lawyers assist startups in navigating private placements (exemptions from registration), ensuring that they do not inadvertently run afoul of anti-fraud provisions or registration requirements when raising capital from “angel investors” or “friends and family.”

  1. Contract Drafting and the Commercial Lifecycle

Beyond foundational documents, corporate law firms act as “outside general counsel” for their clients, managing the myriad contracts required for daily operations.

Critical Provisions in Maryland Contracts

  • Choice of Law and Forum Selection: Given Maryland’s stable legal climate, many businesses insist on Maryland law governing their disputes.
  • Indemnification: Crafting robust indemnification clauses is essential for risk management, particularly in high-growth sectors like biotechnology (prevalent in the I-270 corridor).
  • Restrictive Covenants: Maryland has recently seen significant legislative shifts regarding non-compete agreements. Practice now involves carefully navigating the Maryland Non-Compete and Conflict of Interest Act, which restricts non-competes for lower-wage workers.
  1. Employment and Labor Relations

In Maryland, corporate law and employment law are inextricably linked. The state is known for being relatively employee-friendly compared to some of its neighbors.

Compliance Challenges

Corporate attorneys must guide clients through:

  • The Maryland Healthy Working Families Act: Which mandates paid sick leave.
  • Wage and Hour Laws: Maryland’s minimum wage and overtime laws often exceed federal requirements.
  • The Maryland Fair Employment Practices Act (FEPA): Prohibiting discrimination and harassment.

Firms specializing in corporate law often maintain a dedicated employment group to handle the drafting of executive compensation packages, severance agreements, and the implementation of workplace policies that mitigate the risk of “wrongful termination” suits.

Corporate Litigation and Dispute Resolution

When internal or external conflicts arise, corporate attorneys pivot to advocacy.

The Business and Technology Case Management Program (BTCMP)

One of Maryland’s greatest assets for businesses is the BTCMP. This is a specialized track within the Circuit Courts designed specifically for complex business disputes. It provides:

  • Specialized Judges: Cases are heard by judges with extensive experience in commercial law.
  • Efficiency: Accelerated discovery schedules and a focus on early mediation.

Practice in the BTCMP involves shareholder derivative suits, breaches of fiduciary duty, and “business divorces” (the dissolution of closely held companies).

Intellectual Property (IP) and Technology

Maryland is a global hub for the Life Sciences and Cybersecurity industries, thanks to institutions like Johns Hopkins University and federal agencies like the NIH and NSA.

IP Strategy in Corporate Law

Corporate attorneys in Maryland do more than just file for patents or trademarks; they integrate IP into the corporate strategy. This includes:

  • Licensing Agreements: Monetizing technology while protecting ownership.
  • Trade Secret Protection: Implementing NDAs and internal security protocols to protect proprietary “know-how.”
  • Due Diligence: In an M&A context, ensuring that the target company actually owns the IP it claims to possess.

Bankruptcy, Insolvency, and Restructuring

The lifecycle of a corporation sometimes includes financial distress. Maryland corporate lawyers represent both debtors and creditors in these proceedings.

Alternatives to Bankruptcy

Before heading to federal bankruptcy court, Maryland attorneys often explore:

  • Assignments for the Benefit of Creditors (ABC): A state-level liquidation process that can be faster and less expensive than a federal Chapter 7 bankruptcy.
  • Workouts: Negotiating directly with lenders to restructure debt obligations outside of court.

Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) Trends

Modern practice in Maryland is increasingly influenced by ESG considerations. Investors and stakeholders are now demanding that corporations account for their environmental impact and social footprint. Maryland has seen a rise in “Benefit Corporations” (B-Corps)—a legal entity type that allows directors to prioritize social and environmental goals alongside profit maximization.

The Future of Maryland Corporate Practice

Looking ahead, the practice of corporate law in Maryland is being reshaped by several factors:

  • Remote Work and Nexus: As more companies embrace remote work, Maryland attorneys are navigating complex questions regarding where a corporation is “doing business” and the resulting tax and regulatory implications.
  • Artificial Intelligence: Legal tech is transforming how due diligence and contract review are performed, allowing Maryland firms to handle massive transactions with greater speed and accuracy.
  • Interstate Competition: As other states (like Nevada or Texas) attempt to challenge Delaware and Maryland’s dominance in corporate law, the Maryland legislature continues to refine the MGCL to maintain the state’s competitive edge.
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