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Lexibal > Commercial Law Notes > Partnership Act, 1932
Commercial Law Notes

Partnership Act, 1932

Last updated: 2025/07/30 at 6:48 PM
Last updated: July 30, 2025 4 Min Read
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Partnership Act, 1932
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Introduction

Contents
Definition of PartnershipTypes of PartnersTypes of PartnershipRights of PartnersDuties of PartnersRelations of Partners with Third PartiesRegistration of FirmDissolution of FirmDifferences: Partnership Firm vs CompanyMind Map (Text Format)

The Indian Partnership Act, 1932 governs partnerships in India. It defines the relationship between persons who have agreed to share the profits of a business carried on by all or any of them acting for all.


Definition of Partnership

As per Section 4 of the Act:
“Partnership is the relation between persons who have agreed to share the profits of a business carried on by all or any of them acting for all.”

Key Elements:

  • Agreement between two or more persons
  • Sharing of profits
  • Mutual agency (business conducted by all or any one of them acting for all)

Types of Partners

  • Active Partner: Takes active part in business.
  • Sleeping Partner: Invests capital but does not take part in day-to-day operations.
  • Nominal Partner: Lends their name to the firm but does not contribute or participate.
  • Partner by Estoppel: Not a real partner but behaves in a way that third parties assume them to be a partner.
  • Minor Partner: Admitted to the benefits of partnership with consent of all partners.

Types of Partnership

  • Partnership at Will: No fixed duration; can be dissolved anytime.
  • Particular Partnership: Formed for a specific venture or time period.

Rights of Partners

  • To take part in business
  • To share profits
  • To access books of account
  • To be indemnified for expenses
  • To receive interest on capital (if agreed)

Duties of Partners

  • To act honestly and in good faith
  • To render true accounts
  • To not make secret profits
  • To attend diligently
  • To use firm’s property for firm’s business only

Relations of Partners with Third Parties

  • Every partner is an agent of the firm and other partners
  • Acts of partners bind the firm (in the ordinary course of business)
  • Firm is liable for wrongful acts of a partner done in the course of business

Registration of Firm

  • Not compulsory, but unregistered firms face limitations:
    • Cannot sue other partners or third parties
    • Cannot claim set-off in suits
  • Registration is done by filing a statement with the Registrar of Firms

Dissolution of Firm

  • By Agreement
  • Compulsory Dissolution (e.g., all partners become insolvent)
  • On Contingencies (e.g., expiry of term, completion of venture)
  • By Notice (in case of partnership at will)
  • By Court (due to misconduct, incapacity, etc.)

Differences: Partnership Firm vs Company

BasisPartnership FirmCompany
RegistrationOptionalMandatory
Legal EntityNot a separate entitySeparate legal entity
LiabilityUnlimitedLimited
Governing LawPartnership Act, 1932Companies Act, 2013

Mind Map (Text Format)

Partnership Act, 1932

→ Definition
  ↳ Relationship of persons sharing profit
  ↳ Mutual agency

→ Types of Partners
  ↳ Active
  ↳ Sleeping
  ↳ Nominal
  ↳ Estoppel
  ↳ Minor

→ Types of Partnership
  ↳ At Will
  ↳ Particular

→ Rights & Duties
  ↳ Access to books, share profits, be indemnified
  ↳ Act in good faith, no secret profit

→ Partner & Third Parties
  ↳ Partner = agent
  ↳ Firm liable for partner’s acts

→ Registration
  ↳ Not compulsory
  ↳ Unregistered firm = limited rights

→ Dissolution
  ↳ Agreement, Notice, Court Order, Insolvency

→ Firm vs Company
  ↳ Optional vs Mandatory Registration
  ↳ No separate entity vs Separate legal entity

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