LawWiki
HomeCodesSearchGlossaryAPIAbout
LawWiki

Plain English summaries of California law with zero-hallucination AI. Every summary is verified against official source text.

Product

  • Search
  • Codes
  • About

Legal

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Disclaimer

© 2026 LawWiki. All rights reserved.

HomeCorporations CodeGENERAL PROVISIONSCh. 5Art. 5§ 16504 Partner Interest Charging Orders

§ 16504 Partner Interest Charging Orders

Corporations Code·California
AI Summary·Official Text·Key Terms·Related Statutes·References
AI SummaryVerified

§ 16504 Partner Interest Charging Orders

This law lets a creditor put a lien on a partner’s share of a partnership to collect a money judgment, and tells how that share can be sold, foreclosed, or bought back.

Key Takeaways

  • •A court can place a charging order (a lien) on a partner’s transferable partnership interest to satisfy a judgment.
  • •The lien can be foreclosed and the interest sold; the buyer gets the same rights as a new partner.
  • •Before foreclosure, the partner or other partners can redeem the interest using cash or partnership property, with required consent.
  • •Exemption laws still protect a partner’s interest if they qualify for exemptions.
  • •This is the only way a judgment creditor can reach a partner’s partnership interest.

Example

Emily owes $50,000 after a court judgment. The creditor asks the court to place a charging order on Emily’s 30% share in her small bakery partnership. The court does so, making the share a lien that can be sold to pay the debt.

The court can lock Emily’s partnership interest, let it be sold at a foreclosure sale, or let Emily or the other partners buy it back before a sale. The creditor can only get money from that share, not from the bakery’s other assets.

AI-generated — May contain errors. Not legal advice. Always verify source.

Official Source
View on CA.gov

§ 16504 Partner Interest Charging Orders

(a) On application by a judgment creditor of a partner or of a partner’s transferee, a court having jurisdiction may charge the transferable interest of the judgment debtor to satisfy the judgment. The court may appoint a receiver of the share of the distributions due or to become due to the judgment debtor in respect of the partnership and make all other orders, directions, accounts, and inquiries the judgment debtor might have made or that the circumstances of the case may require. (b) A charging order constitutes a lien on the judgment debtor’s transferable interest in the partnership. The court may order a foreclosure of the interest subject to the charging order at any time. The purchaser at the foreclosure sale has the rights of a transferee. (c) At any time before foreclosure, an interest charged may be redeemed in any of the following manners: (1) By the judgment debtor. (2) With property other than partnership property, by one or more of the other partners. (3) With partnership property, by one or more of the other partners with the consent of all of the partners whose interests are not so charged. (d) This chapter does not deprive a partner of a right under exemption laws with respect to the partner’s interest in the partnership. (e) This section provides the exclusive remedy by which a judgment creditor of a partner or partner’s transferee may satisfy a judgment out of the judgment debtor’s transferable interest in the partnership. (Added by Stats. 1996, Ch. 1003, Sec. 2. Effective January 1, 1997.)

Last verified: January 10, 2026

Key Terms

transferable interestcharging orderjudgment creditorforeclosureredeemed

Related Statutes

  • § 15907.03 Partner Interest Charging Orders
  • § 16502 Partner Profit Distribution Rights
  • § 16503 Partner Interest Transfer Rights
  • § 16501 Partner Property Ownership Limits
  • § 18270 Creditor Claims Against Association Members

References

  • Official text at leginfo.legislature.ca.gov
  • California Legislature. Corporations Code. Section 16504.
View Official Source