By Eric Geringswald | CSC Non-U.S. LLCs Must Now Disclose Beneficial Ownership in New York The New York LLC Transparency Act (NY LLCTA) requires non-U.S. limited liability companies registered to do...
A recent Supreme Court decision offers a timely reminder that grievance procedures, documentation practices and legal access operations can all play a larger role when PLRA exhaustion is challenged. ...
By Eric Geringswald | CSC Track How Courts Interpret Delaware Business Entity Law New court decisions provide practitioners with valuable insight. Business attorneys know statutes are only part of...
By Eric Geringswald | CSC Key Legislative Changes in Connecticut The 2025 legislative session of the Connecticut General Assembly introduced several changes affecting the business community. Updates...
By Nancy A. D. Hancock | CSC, Pullman & Comley Analysis of Selected 2025 Changes in Connecticut Law Governing Business Entities Connecticut did not enact a 2025 public act that directly amended...
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By Eric Geringswald | CSC
Five cases concerning the latest legal developments regarding the statute of limitations for piercing the corporate veil, an LLC member’s right to inspect corporate records, liability of corporate officers for torts committed by a corporation, possession of LLC property following bankruptcy, and the fiduciary duties managing officers and directors owe the creditors of an insolvent company are included in the 2025 edition of CSC’s Georgia Laws Governing Business Entities Annotated.
These full-text cases, along with the latest case notes added since the 2024 edition, are a critical resource to help legal practitioners follow how the courts have interpreted Georgia’s business entity laws. The Table of New Annotations lists case notes that have been added since last year, and new notes are marked with gray bars in the body of the text for fast identification.
This Georgia deskbook features the full text of Title 14 (Corporations, Partnerships and Associations), as well as selected sections from related titles covering securities, trademarks, arbitration, and corporate taxation. All statutory content is current with changes made during the 2025 Georgia legislative session. This year’s changes to the law are listed in the Table of Sections Affected for quick reference.
Readers can access more than 50 business forms for incorporation/formation, qualification, mergers, dissolution, and name reservation for all Georgia entity types via the LexisNexis® Store download center. A listing of the forms can be found in the book’s appendix. An up-to-date fee schedule provides a snapshot of fees for Georgia filings with the Secretary of State’s office.
The book’s expansive index, sequential pagination, and page tabs make finding the information quicker and easier, while larger pages and a clean typeface enhance readability. As with CSC’s other annotated statutory collections, Georgia Laws Governing Business Entities Annotated is also available as an eBook and is part of the LexisNexis® Digital Library.
Subscribers to the eBook versions of CSC’s legal publications through the Digital Library can keep notes in the books to reference passages quickly and add their own insights and experiences. Those notes can be migrated across editions.
These features, together with the up-to-date annotated business entity statutes for the state, make this publication a valuable resource for the legal and business communities in Georgia and the surrounding region.
To learn more about the 2025 edition of Georgia Laws Governing Business Entities Annotated, call 800-533-1637 or visit us online at www.lexisnexis.com/csc.
This title, along with many others, is available on the LexisNexis Digital Library.