RCG
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Business Entity Recovery · No Upfront Cost

LLC and Business Asset Recovery

Dissolved LLCs, inactive corporations, and former business entities often leave funds behind in court systems and state databases. Former officers and members may still be entitled to recover them.

Dissolved Does Not
Mean Gone.

Former LLC Members
Corporate Officers
Partnership Principals
Business Heirs and Successors

When a business entity is dissolved, administratively revoked, or simply stops operating, any assets held in that entity's name do not automatically transfer to the owners. Surplus funds from property sales, unclaimed business accounts, and other recoverable assets often sit in court systems or state databases long after the entity closes.

Former officers, members, and principals typically retain the right to claim these funds — but doing so requires establishing legal standing, documenting the entity structure, and filing through the correct process. Most people do not know this option exists or how to pursue it.

RCG handles business asset recovery through licensed attorneys who understand entity law and the specific documentation required to file these claims successfully.

01

Dissolved or Inactive LLC

When a business entity is dissolved, assets held in the company name do not automatically transfer to the owners. Surplus funds, unclaimed property, and court deposits tied to dissolved entities are recoverable by former members or officers.

02

Property Sold Under a Business Name

Foreclosure surplus and tax deed overages generated from properties held in an LLC, corporation, or partnership name belong to that entity. When the entity is dissolved, the right to claim passes to the former principals.

03

Dormant Business Bank Accounts

Business checking accounts, savings accounts, and merchant accounts that become dormant are escheated to the state under unclaimed property laws, just like personal accounts.

04

Uncashed Business Checks and Refunds

Vendor refunds, utility deposits, insurance payouts, and other amounts issued to a business entity that were never collected are held by state agencies and can be claimed by the rightful principals.

01

We Identify the Asset

We search court records and state databases under the business name, any registered variations, and associated officer or member names to identify funds or surplus tied to the entity.

02

We Verify Entity Status

Our team pulls state registration records to confirm the entity structure, dissolution status, and the identity of authorized principals who may have standing to file a claim.

03

Attorneys Prepare and File

Licensed attorneys prepare the claim documentation, establish standing for the filing party, and submit the claim to the appropriate court or state agency.

04

Recovery Is Disbursed

Approved funds are disbursed to the authorized former officer, member, or principal. Our fee is taken only from the recovered amount after successful disbursement.

Did Your Business Leave Funds Behind?

We search court records and state databases under your business entity name at no cost. If recoverable funds exist, we handle the entire process through licensed attorneys.

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