CONSTRUCTION OF POWER RELATING TO BUSINESS OPERATING TRANSACTIONS
In a statutory power of attorney, the language granting power with respect to business operating transactions empowers the agent to:
1. Operate, buy, sell, enlarge, reduce, and terminate a business interest;
2. To the extent that an agent is permitted by law to act for a principal and subject to the terms of the partnership agreement, to:
3. Exercise in person or by proxy, or enforce by litigation or otherwise, a right, power, privilege, or option the principal has or claims to have as the holder of a bond, share, or other instrument of similar character and defend, submit to arbitration, settle, or compromise litigation to which the principal is a party because of a bond, share, or similar instrument;
4. With respect to a business owned solely by the principal:
5. Put additional capital into a business in which the principal has an interest;
6. Join in a plan of reorganization, consolidation, or merger of the business;
7. Sell or liquidate a business or part of it at the time and upon the terms the agent considers desirable;
8. Establish the value of a business under a buy-out agreement to which the principal is a party;
9. Prepare, sign, file, and deliver reports, compilations of information, returns, or other papers with respect to a business which are required by a governmental agency or instrumentality or which the agent considers desirable, and make related payments; and
10. Pay, compromise, or contest taxes or assessments and do any other act which the agent considers desirable to protect the principal from illegal or unnecessary taxation, fines, penalties, or assessments with respect to a business, including attempts to recover, in any manner permitted by law, money paid before or after the execution of the power of attorney.
Added by Laws 1998, c. 420, § 11, eff. Nov. 1, 1998.