Oklahoma Code § 18-1090.5

Title 18. Corporations: Conversion of domestic corporation to an entity
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CONVERSION OF DOMESTIC CORPORATION TO AN ENTITY
A.  A domestic corporation may, upon the authorization of such
conversion in accordance with this section, convert to an entity.
As used in this section, the term “entity” means a domestic or
foreign partnership, whether general or limited, and including a
limited liability partnership and a limited liability limited
partnership, a foreign corporation including a public benefit
corporation, a domestic or foreign limited liability company
including a public benefit limited liability company, and any
unincorporated nonprofit or for-profit association, trust or
enterprise having members or having outstanding shares of stock or
other evidences of financial, beneficial or membership interest
therein, whether formed by agreement or under statutory authority or
otherwise and whether formed or organized under the laws of this
state or the laws of any other jurisdiction.
B.  The board of directors of the corporation which desires to
convert under this section shall adopt a resolution approving such
conversion, specifying the type of entity into which the corporation

shall be converted and recommending the approval of the conversion
by the shareholders of the corporation.  The resolution shall be
submitted to the shareholders of the corporation at an annual or
special meeting.  Due notice of the time and purpose of the meeting
shall be mailed to each holder of shares, whether voting or
nonvoting, of the corporation at the address of the shareholder as
it appears on the records of the corporation, at least twenty (20)
days prior to the date of the meeting.  At the meeting, the
resolution shall be considered and a vote taken for its adoption or
rejection.  If a majority of the outstanding shares of stock of the
corporation entitled to vote shall vote for the adoption of the
resolution, the conversion shall be authorized provided that, if the
corporation is converting to a partnership having one or more
general partners, then in addition to such approval, authorization
of the conversion shall require approval of each shareholder of the
corporation who will become a general partner of such partnership as
a result of the conversion.
C.  If the corporation has converted in accordance with this
section and the governing act of the domestic entity to which the
corporation is converting does not provide for the filing of a
conversion notice with the Secretary of State or the corporation is
converting to a foreign entity, the corporation shall file with the
Secretary of State a certificate of conversion executed in
accordance with Section 1007 of this title which certifies:
1.  The name of the corporation and, if it has been changed, the
name under which it was originally incorporated;
2.  The date of filing of its original certificate of
incorporation with the Secretary of State;
3.  The name of the entity to which the corporation shall be
converted, its jurisdiction of formation if a foreign entity, and
the type of entity;
4.  That the conversion has been approved in accordance with the
provisions of this section;
5.  The future effective date or time of the conversion to an
entity, which shall be a date or time certain not later than ninety
(90) days after the filing, if it is not to be effective upon the
filing of the certificate of conversion;
6.  The agreement of the foreign entity that it may be served
with process in this state in any action, suit or proceeding for
enforcement of any obligation of the foreign entity arising while it
was a domestic corporation and for enforcement of any obligation of
such other entity arising from the conversion including any suit or
other proceeding to enforce the right of any shareholders as
determined in appraisal proceedings under Section 1091 of this
title, and that it irrevocably appoints the Secretary of State as
its agent to accept service of process in any such action, suit or
proceeding;

7.  The address to which a copy of the process referred to in
this subsection shall be mailed by the Secretary of State.  In the
event of such service upon the Secretary of State in accordance with
the provisions of Section 2004 of Title 12 of the Oklahoma Statutes,
the Secretary of State shall immediately notify such corporation
that has converted out of this state by letter, certified mail,
return receipt requested, directed to the corporation at the address
specified unless the corporation shall have designated in writing to
the Secretary of State a different address for this purpose, in
which case it shall be mailed to the last address so designated.
The notice shall include a copy of the process and any other papers
served on the Secretary of State pursuant to the provisions of this
subsection.  It shall be the duty of the plaintiff in the event of
such service to serve process and any other papers in duplicate, to
notify the Secretary of State that service is being effected
pursuant to the provisions of this subsection, and to pay the
Secretary of State the fee provided for in paragraph 7 of subsection
A of Section 1142 of this title, which fee shall be taxed as part of
the costs in the proceeding.  The Secretary of State shall maintain
an alphabetical record of any such service setting forth the name of
the plaintiff and the defendant, the title, docket number, and
nature of the proceeding in which process has been served upon the
Secretary of State, the fact that service has been effected pursuant
to the provisions of this subsection, the return date thereof, and
the date service was made.  The Secretary of State shall not be
required to retain such information longer than five (5) years from
receipt of the service of process by the Secretary of State; and
8.  If the entity to which the corporation is converting was
required to make a filing with the Secretary of State as a condition
of its formation, the type and date of such filing.
D.  Upon the filing of a conversion notice with the Secretary of
State, whether under subsection C of this section or under the
governing act of the domestic entity to which the corporation is
converting, the filing of any formation document required by the
governing act of the domestic entity to which the corporation is
converting, and payment to the Secretary of State of all prescribed
fees, the corporation shall cease to exist as a domestic corporation
at the time the certificate of conversion becomes effective in
accordance with Section 1007 of this title.  A copy of the
certificate of conversion issued by the Secretary of State shall be
prima facie evidence of the conversion by the corporation.
E.  The conversion of a corporation under this section and the
resulting cessation of its existence as a domestic corporation shall
not be deemed to affect any obligations or liabilities of the
corporation incurred before such conversion or the personal
liability of any person incurred before the conversion, nor shall it

be deemed to affect the choice of law applicable to the corporation
with respect to matters arising before the conversion.
F.  Unless otherwise provided in a resolution of conversion
adopted in accordance with this section, the converting corporation
shall not be required to wind up its affairs or pay its liabilities
and distribute its assets, and the conversion shall not constitute a
dissolution of such corporation.
G.  In a conversion of a domestic corporation to an entity under
this section, shares of stock of the converting domestic corporation
may be exchanged for or converted into cash, property, rights or
securities of, or memberships or membership, economic or ownership
interests in, the entity to which the domestic corporation is being
converted or, in addition to or in lieu thereof, may be exchanged
for or converted into cash, property, shares of stock, rights or
securities of, or interests in, another corporation or entity or may
be canceled.
H.  When a corporation has converted to an entity under this
section, the entity shall be deemed to be the same entity as the
corporation.  All of the rights, privileges and powers of the
corporation that has converted, and all property, real, personal and
mixed, and all debts due to the corporation, as well as all other
things and causes of action belonging to the corporation, shall
remain vested in the entity to which the corporation has converted
and shall be the property of the entity, and the title to any real
property vested by deed or otherwise in the corporation shall not
revert or be in any way impaired by reason of the conversion; but
all rights of creditors and all liens upon any property of the
corporation shall be preserved unimpaired, and all debts,
liabilities and duties of the corporation that has converted shall
remain attached to the entity to which the corporation has
converted, and may be enforced against it to the same extent as if
the debts, liabilities and duties had originally been incurred or
contracted by it in its capacity as the entity.  The rights,
privileges, powers and interest in property of the corporation that
has converted, as well as the debts, liabilities and duties of the
corporation, shall not be deemed, as a consequence of the
conversion, to have been transferred to the entity to which the
corporation has converted for any purpose of the laws of this state.
I.  No vote of shareholders of a corporation shall be necessary
to authorize a conversion if no shares of the stock of the
corporation shall have been issued before the adoption by the board
of directors of the resolution approving the conversion.
J.  Nothing in this section shall be deemed to authorize the
conversion of a charitable nonstock corporation into another entity,
if the charitable status of such charitable nonstock corporation
would thereby be lost or impaired.

Added by Laws 2001, c. 405, § 27, eff. Nov. 1, 2001.  Amended by
Laws 2004, c. 255, § 28, eff. Nov. 1, 2004; Laws 2008, c. 253, § 13;
Laws 2019, c. 88, § 24, eff. Nov. 1, 2019; Laws 2021, c. 51, § 16,
eff. Nov. 1, 2021; Laws 2024, c. 120, § 32, eff. Nov. 1, 2024.
NOTE:  Laws 2008, c. 382, § 315, which changed the effective date of
Laws 2008, c. 253, §§ 1-47 to Jan. 1, 2010, was held
unconstitutional by the Oklahoma Supreme Court in the case of
Weddington v. Henry, 202 P.3d 143, 2008 OK 102 (2009).

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