| Introduction: LLCs as Close Corporations | ![]() |
Limited Liability Companies (LLCs) have become the entity of choice for small Minnesota businesses.
New LLC Business filings in Minnesota:
- 2025 (partial year through August): 44,501
- 2023: 62,188
- 2022: 55,501
- 2015, 31,000+
- In the US there are over 21.6 million LLCs.
They combine flexible management, pass-through taxation, and limited liability protection. But when ownership is concentrated among a few individuals, Minnesota LLCs face the same risks as close corporations: conflicts, freeze-outs, and member oppression.
If you’re a minority member in a Minnesota LLC, you need to know your rights — and how to enforce them when majority members act unfairly.
The Legal Framework: Minnesota Revised Uniform LLC Act (Chapter 322C)
In 2015, Minnesota adopted the Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act (RULLCA), codified at Minn. Stat. Ch. 322C. It governs rights and obligations of LLC members and managers.
Key features include:
- Contractual Flexibility: The Operating Agreement controls most governance issues.
- Fiduciary Duties: Members and managers must act in good faith and with loyalty.
- Judicial Remedies: Courts can intervene when actions are oppressive, fraudulent, or harmful.
Core Rights of Minnesota LLC Members
- Financial Rights
- Right to Distributions: When declared, distributions must be assigned based on ownership interests.
- Protection from Improper Withholding: Denying distributions while majority members pay themselves excessive salaries may be oppression.
- Access to Records
Under Minn. Stat. § 322C.0410, members have the right to access:
- Financial statements.
- Tax returns.
- Operating agreements and amendments.
- Minutes and records of decisions.
Failure to provide records can trigger statutory penalties and court action.
- Voting & Governance
- Members typically vote on significant company matters unless the operating agreement provides otherwise.
- Voting rights may include admitting new members, changing the operating agreement, mergers, or dissolutions.
- Fiduciary Protections
Managers and members in control owe duties of loyalty and care under Minn. Stat. § 322C.0409, including:
- Acting honestly and in good faith.
- Avoiding self-dealing.
- Disclosing conflicts of interest.
Common Disputes in Minnesota Close LLCs
Freeze-Outs
Tactics mirror close corporation freeze-outs:
- Terminating minority members’ employment.
- Cutting distributions while keeping profits for insiders.
- Blocking access to company records.
Misuse of Company Assets
Examples include majority members taking corporate opportunities, commingling funds, or running personal expenses through the LLC.
Valuation Battles
When a member exits voluntarily or involuntarily, disputes arise over the fair value of their interest. Unlike corporations, LLCs often lack detailed buy-sell agreements — leading to courtroom fights.
Remedies Available to LLC Members
- Judicial Dissolution
Under Minn. Stat. § 322C.0701, courts can dissolve an LLC if:
- Managers or members act oppressively, fraudulently, or illegally.
- It’s not reasonably practicable to continue the business.
- Buyout at Fair Value
Courts may order majority members or the LLC itself to buy the oppressed member’s interest at fair value.
- Injunctive Relief & Accounting
Courts can issue injunctions stopping misconduct and require a full accounting of company finances.
- Damages
Members harmed by breaches of fiduciary duty may recover monetary damages.
The Operating Agreement: Your First Line of Defense
An LLC’s Operating Agreement is its most important governance document. It should address:
- Exit Strategies & Buy-Sell Provisions: How ownership changes hands.
- Valuation Methods: Formula, appraisal, or court-determined.
- Voting Rights & Deadlock Provisions: Prevents paralysis.
- Employment Rights: Protects member-employees from termination without cause.
Without a strong agreement, members are left at the mercy of statutory defaults — and often in litigation.
Proactive Protection for Minority Members
- Insist on Written Operating Agreements — never rely on oral understandings.
- Negotiate Buyout Triggers — death, disability, retirement, deadlock, misconduct.
- Request Regular Financial Reporting — don’t wait until conflict arises.
- Engage Valuation Experts Early — establish benchmarks before disputes.
FAQs
Q: Do LLC members in Minnesota have the same protections as corporate shareholders?
Yes, but protections arise mainly from operating agreements and Chapter 322C remedies rather than Chapter 302A See Freeze-Outs in Minnesota Close Corporations: What Minority Owners Must Know.
Q: Can I be frozen out of an LLC if I’m not a manager?
Yes — non-managing members are especially vulnerable. But courts can protect your economic rights.
Q: What happens if our operating agreement is silent on buyouts?
Courts can impose fair-value buyouts under dissolution statutes, but the process is costlier and riskier than a well-drafted agreement.
Conclusion: Protect Your Membership Interest
Minority members of Minnesota LLCs face the same vulnerabilities as close corporation shareholders — but the remedies and protections flow through Chapter 322C and your Operating Agreement. Without proactive protections, you risk losing both income and influence.
If you suspect a freeze-out or breach of duty in your LLC, contact MKT Law. We fight for Minnesota business owners to preserve their investments and protect their rights.
