Overview
A shareholder agreement is one of the most important legal documents for a corporation with more than one owner. It helps define how the business is managed, how decisions are made, what happens if a shareholder wants to leave, and how disputes are handled before they become bigger problems. For many business owners, the issue is not whether they need one, but whether the agreement actually protects the business relationship in a practical way.
LM Law & CPA LLP helps shareholders and business owners approach this process with confidence. We review the facts carefully, explain what matters most, and help clients prepare agreements that are easier to understand and easier to manage. That can include voting rights, ownership transfers, buyout terms, decision-making rules, and restrictions that protect both the business and the people involved.
Shareholder issues often become more complicated when ownership is uneven, responsibilities are unclear, or one person controls a larger portion of the voting power. We help reduce that confusion by focusing on the key details, organizing the important terms, and guiding clients through each stage in a practical way. Whether you are starting a company with partners or updating an existing structure, we aim to make the path more straightforward and less stressful.
Who This Service Is For
This service is for corporations with multiple shareholders, startup founders, family businesses, investors, and business owners who want to clarify ownership and control.
It is also useful for clients who are bringing in a new partner, protecting a minority ownership position, planning for future buyouts, or trying to prevent disputes before they start. Some clients already know they need a shareholder agreement but want help drafting it properly. Others are still comparing options and want guidance before they move forward. In either case, the process becomes easier when the ownership strategy is clear from the start.
What We Help With
We help clients with shareholder agreement drafting, agreement review, ownership protection, voting provisions, transfer restrictions, buyout terms, and dispute planning.
We also help clients understand what information should be included in the file and what can create confusion if it is missing or inconsistent. A strong shareholder agreement is often one where ownership rights, decision-making powers, transfer rules, and exit terms all work together as one clear story. When needed, we also help clients review unanimous shareholder agreements and related corporate governance issues.
If the business already has shareholders or if the facts have changed, we help review the next step and build a more practical path forward. For many businesses, the goal is not just to document ownership, but to create a structure that protects the company over time.