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Every California LLC has an operating agreement — or should have one. In practice, many California LLCs operate under agreements that were downloaded from the internet, copied from a friend’s company, or provided by a document preparation service that doesn’t practice law. These agreements create the appearance of structure while often failing to provide the protections their owners believe they’re receiving. California’s RULLCA default rules fill every gap in your operating agreement with provisions you may not want — and may not know about until the gap becomes a crisis.
What a California Operating Agreement Must Do
A properly drafted California operating agreement accomplishes several critical functions: it defines the ownership percentages and economic rights of each member; it establishes the management structure (member-managed versus manager-managed) and decision-making authority; it overrides RULLCA default rules that don’t reflect the parties’ actual intentions; it establishes transfer restrictions and rights of first refusal; it creates buy-sell mechanisms for when members want to exit or are forced to exit; it defines the circumstances and procedures for dissolution; and it establishes how disputes between members are resolved.
Most generic templates address some of these functions partially. Few address all of them adequately for a California LLC operating under RULLCA. The gaps that generic templates most commonly leave unaddressed are precisely the provisions that matter most when things go wrong: buyout valuation methodologies, deadlock resolution, transfer restrictions, and the override of RULLCA’s unanimous consent defaults.
The Deadlock Problem
50/50 LLCs — two-member companies where each member owns exactly half — are among the most common startup structures and among the most dangerous without a properly drafted operating agreement. When two 50% members disagree about a fundamental business decision, RULLCA’s default rules provide no mechanism for resolution. Neither member can be outvoted. Neither can unilaterally take the contested action. The LLC is deadlocked, and the statutory mechanism for resolving a deadlocked California LLC — judicial dissolution — is expensive, time-consuming, and usually destroys the value of the business in the process.
A properly drafted operating agreement for a 50/50 LLC addresses deadlock explicitly: perhaps through a coin-flip buyout mechanism, a third-party arbitration process, a baseball arbitration for valuation disputes, or a shotgun provision where either party can name a buyout price and the other party must choose to buy or sell at that price. None of these mechanisms appear in generic templates. All of them require a lawyer who understands both California LLC law and dispute resolution mechanics to draft properly.
Transfer Restrictions: Protecting Against Unwanted Partners
Most small business owners don’t want their co-founder’s ex-spouse, estranged sibling, or creditor to become their business partner. Without transfer restrictions in the operating agreement, membership interests may be transferable — including through divorce proceedings, probate, or judgment creditor enforcement. California’s RULLCA allows for strong transfer restrictions but doesn’t impose them by default. If your operating agreement is silent on transfer restrictions, you may have less protection against unwanted ownership transfers than you realize.
The investment in a properly drafted California operating agreement — $1,500 to $3,000 from a competent California business attorney — is among the highest-return legal expenditures available to a small business owner. The cost of a bad operating agreement, discovered when you need it to work, is orders of magnitude higher.
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