Your Business Partner Took Money or Signed a Deal Without You: What Now?
Your Business Partner Took Money or Signed a Deal Without You: What Now?

Starting a business with a partner often begins with trust. You build together, divide responsibilities, and focus on growth.
But when one partner starts taking money, signing contracts, or making major decisions without the other’s approval, that trust can break down fast. What starts as confusion can quickly turn into a serious legal and financial problem.
If this is happening in your business, the right response depends on the facts, your company’s governing documents, and how the business has actually been operating. But one thing is clear: waiting too long can make the situation worse.
Not Every Bad Surprise Is Automatically Illegal
When a business owner discovers that a partner withdrew funds or signed an agreement without discussing it first, the immediate reaction is often outrage. Sometimes that reaction is justified. Sometimes the situation is more complicated.
The legal issue is not just whether you agreed. It may also involve questions like:
- Did your partner actually have authority under the operating agreement, bylaws, or shareholder agreement?
- Did they appear to have authority to the other party?
- Was the payment a legitimate distribution, reimbursement, salary, or business expense?
- Has the business been operating informally in a way that blurred the rules?
In other words, the problem may be misconduct, poor documentation, bad governance, or some combination of all three. That distinction matters because it affects what can be done next.
Common Examples of Partner Overreach
These disputes often involve one or more of the following:
- A partner withdraws company funds without prior approval
- A partner signs a vendor, lease, loan, or service contract the other owner never agreed to
- A partner pays themselves extra compensation or takes distributions unevenly
- A partner uses company funds for personal expenses
- A partner hires or fires employees unilaterally
- A partner commits the business to obligations that create risk for everyone else
Sometimes this happens suddenly. Other times, it starts small and grows because no one addresses it early.
Why This Happens So Often
Many owner disputes are not caused by one dramatic event. They grow out of weak structure.
Some of the most common underlying problems are:
- No clear written agreement, or one that is too vague
- No approval thresholds for major spending or contracts
- Too much control concentrated in one person
- Shared accounts with no real oversight
- “50/50” ownership with no tie-breaker or dispute procedure
- Informal habits that replaced the actual rules
Business owners often assume they will work things out as they go. That may work for a while until money gets tight, roles change, or trust starts to slip.
What You Should Do First
If you believe your business partner has taken money or bound the business to something without proper approval, the first priority is to get control of the facts.
That usually means:
- Gathering bank records, accounting records, contracts, emails, and text messages
- Reviewing the operating agreement, bylaws, shareholder agreement, resolutions, and any side agreements
- Identifying exactly what was taken, signed, or promised
- Determining whether the issue is ongoing or if immediate action is needed to prevent further damage
This is not the time to guess, assume, or escalate emotionally. A rushed confrontation without a clear understanding of the documents and the paper trail can make the situation harder to resolve.
Why Acting Quickly Matters
These situations can get more expensive the longer they sit.
Delays can lead to:
- More money leaving the business
- Additional contracts being signed
- Damage to vendor, lender, or customer relationships
- Loss of access to records or accounts
- A more entrenched dispute that becomes harder to unwind
Even if the relationship can still be salvaged, the business may need immediate guardrails to prevent the problem from spreading.
How We Help When This Starts Happening
When an owner dispute begins, the goal is not just to react. It is to stabilize the situation, assess your leverage, and identify the smartest path forward.
That may include:
- Reviewing your governing documents and business records
- Explaining what authority each owner actually has
- Evaluating whether the company is bound by a contract
- Advising on steps to protect accounts, records, and operations
- Sending a demand letter or formal notice
- Negotiating restrictions, repayment, revised controls, or a buyout
- Preparing for litigation or dissolution if that becomes necessary
Every dispute is different. In some cases, the best outcome is restoring order and keeping the business together. In others, the right answer is creating a path for separation before more damage is done.
How We Help Prevent This in the First Place
Many of these problems can be reduced—or avoided entirely—with better planning on the front end.
We help business owners put structure in place by addressing issues like:
- Who can sign contracts, and up to what amount
- When owner approval is required
- Who has access to accounts and financial records
- How compensation, reimbursements, and distributions are handled
- What happens if owners disagree
- How a partner can be bought out or removed if necessary
Good documents do more than sit in a file. They help prevent confusion, reduce opportunities for abuse, and give you a roadmap if something goes wrong.
The Right Move Is Usually Not to Wait
If your business partner has taken money, signed a deal, or made major decisions without your approval, do not assume it will sort itself out.
You may have options. You may also have urgent risks that need to be addressed before they get worse.
The sooner you understand your rights, the business’s obligations, and the practical paths available, the better positioned you are to protect the company and make informed decisions.
If you are dealing with a partner dispute, or want to strengthen your business documents before one starts, we help business owners put the right protections in place and respond strategically when problems arise.


