Answer FileBusiness Litigation
Can I sue a business owner personally in California?
Usually the corporation or LLC alone is liable for its obligations — members and shareholders are shielded (Corporations Code section 17703.04) — but owners answer personally on a signed guaranty, for their own torts or fraud, and under the alter ego doctrine when the entity is a shell used to work an injustice.
The default is separation: a corporation or LLC is its own legal person, and its debts are not its owners' (for LLCs, Corporations Code section 17703.04). Three routes pierce that separation. First, a personal guaranty — landlords and lenders routinely require one, and it makes the owner a direct contract party. Second, personal conduct: an owner who commits fraud or another tort is liable for it regardless of the entity, because incorporation shields status, not conduct. Third, alter ego: courts disregard the entity when there is such unity of interest that separateness has ceased — commingled funds, undercapitalization, the entity as a mere conduit for personal dealings — and honoring the form would sanction a fraud or promote injustice. Section 17703.04(b) applies the doctrine to LLCs, though failure to hold member meetings is not itself a factor. Alter ego can be pleaded in the case or raised after judgment, where courts may amend a judgment to add the controlling individual as a debtor.
Authority: Cal. Corp. Code § 17703.04
Legal information, not legal advice.
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