California’s Unanimous Consent Trap: The Operating Agreement Mistake That Can Paralyze Your LLC

The Hedge | Brutal Honesty Over Hype Since 2008

Most entrepreneurs who form an LLC treat the operating agreement as paperwork — something to sign and forget. In California, that approach is a trap. The California Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act (RULLCA) imposes default rules that govern your LLC’s operations unless your operating agreement expressly overrides them. One of those default rules — the unanimous consent requirement — can paralyze your company at exactly the moment you need to move fast.

What the Unanimous Consent Rule Requires

Under RULLCA, unless the operating agreement provides otherwise, the following actions require unanimous consent of all LLC members: selling, leasing, or disposing of all or substantially all LLC property outside the ordinary course of business; merging the LLC; converting to a different entity type; amending the articles of organization; amending the operating agreement; admitting new members; dissolving the LLC.

“Unanimous” means every single member regardless of ownership percentage. A 1% member has equal veto power over these decisions as the 99% member, unless your operating agreement explicitly provides otherwise. In a two-person LLC where co-founders disagree about whether to sell the company, accept a strategic investor, or bring in a new partner, the minority member can block every one of those actions indefinitely.

Real Scenarios Where This Becomes a Crisis

The acquisition offer: Your LLC receives an offer at a valuation all but one member finds attractive. The dissenting member — a co-founder with 5% — refuses to approve the sale. The deal dies. The asset sale pivot: You need to sell the primary asset to fund a pivot. One investor-member at 8% objects. Transaction blocked indefinitely. New member admission: You want to bring in a strategic partner quickly for a time-sensitive opportunity. Any existing member can object — and their objection is dispositive.

The Fix

A well-drafted operating agreement can override RULLCA’s unanimous consent requirements for most decisions, substituting majority vote, supermajority vote, or manager approval. Common overrides: manager-managed structures delegating decisions to a management committee, majority vote for asset dispositions below a threshold, supermajority (66.7% or 75%) for fundamental transactions, explicit member admission provisions. The cost of a proper California operating agreement — $1,500 to $3,000 — is trivial compared to a blocked acquisition. If you already have an existing LLC with a generic template, get it reviewed now, while all members still agree on everything. Once interests diverge, you may not be able to pass the amendment needed to fix it.

The Hedge has been cutting through financial and business noise since 2008. Brutal honesty over hype — always.

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Author: timothymccandless

I have spent most of my professional life helping people who were being taken advantage of by systems they did not fully understand. As an attorney, I represented consumers against predatory lending practices and worked in elder law protecting seniors from fraud. My family lost $239,145 to identity theft, which became the foundation for my seniorgard.onlime and deepened my commitment to financial education. Since 2008, I have maintained a blog at timothymccandless.wordpress.com providing free financial education. Not behind a paywall. Free, because financial literacy should not cost money. I trade with real money using the exact strategy described in this book. My current positions: Pfizer at $16,480 deployed generating $77,900 per year net. Verizon at $29,260 deployed generating $51,000 per year net. Combined: 293% annualized pace. These are my only active positions. Not cherry-picked.

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