Hon. Norman Goodman County Clerk, New York County
This is in response to your letter of March 10, 1978, wherein you ask for an opinion as to whether a limited partnership may have an indefinite duration. Your concern apparently stems from the requirement of the Partnership Law which states that the Certificate of Limited Partnership must contain "The term for which the partnership is to exist." (Partnership Law, §
An indispensable starting point in any discussion of limited partnerships is an understanding of the relationship between Article 8 (Limited Partnership) and the remaining articles of the Partnership Law. Except for inconsistent provisions contained in Article 8, it is clear that the entire Partnership Law is applicable to limited as well as general partnerships (Partnership Law, §
The question becomes one of construction of the statute. The limited partnership is defined as "* * * a partnership formed by two or more persons under the provisions of section ninety-one, having as members one or more general partners and one or more limited partners. * * *" (Partnership Law, §
There can be no question that a general partnership may have an indefinite duration. In the absence of showing any intention as to its duration, a partnership will be deemed one at will (Hardin v Robinson,
One of the general rules of the interpretation of statutes is, that if possible, all parts of the enactment shall be harmonized with each other as well as with the general intent of the whole enactment (see, McKinney's Statutes, § 98). The most reasonable and consistent interpretation of the Partnership Law would reject the view that a limited partnership must have a definite term.
Accordingly, we conclude that the requirement for the statement of a term in the Certificate of Limited Partnership is not a limiting phrase and a limited partnership may have an indefinite term.
