Question Submitted by: Ashley Plyushko, Executive Director, Oklahoma Accountancy Board

2025 OK AG 16
CourtOklahoma Attorney General Reports
DecidedDecember 4, 2025
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 OK AG 16 (Question Submitted by: Ashley Plyushko, Executive Director, Oklahoma Accountancy Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oklahoma Attorney General Reports primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Question Submitted by: Ashley Plyushko, Executive Director, Oklahoma Accountancy Board, 2025 OK AG 16 (Okla. Super. Ct. 2025).

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OSCN Found Document:Question Submitted by: Ashley Plyushko, Executive Director, Oklahoma Accountancy Board

Question Submitted by: Ashley Plyushko, Executive Director, Oklahoma Accountancy Board
2025 OK AG 16
Decided: 12/04/2025
OKLAHOMA ATTORNEY GENERAL OPINIONS


Cite as: 2025 OK AG 16, __ P.3d __


ATTORNEY GENERAL OPINION

¶0 This office has received your request for an Attorney General Opinion in which you ask, in effect, the following question:

Is an out-of-state accounting firm formed as a professional corporation that is owned by an Employee Stock Ownership Plan eligible to:
(1) qualify to do business in Oklahoma pursuant to the Oklahoma Professional Entity Act, 18 O.S.2021 & Supp.2024, §§ 801 -- 819, and
(2) register and receive a permit to practice public accounting from the Oklahoma Accountancy Board pursuant to the Oklahoma Accountancy Act, 59 O.S.2021 & Supp.2024, §§ 15.1 -- 15.38?

I.

SUMMARY

¶1 Generally speaking, the Professional Entity Act requires that all shareholders of a professional corporation doing business in Oklahoma be licensed in the profession for which the corporation was formed. 18 O.S.Supp.2024, § 80959 O.S.Supp.2023, § 15

II.

BACKGROUND

¶2 Your request involves the following scenario: an out-of-state accounting firm that holds a permit to provide services in Oklahoma issued by the Oklahoma Accountancy Board ("Board") converted from a limited liability partnership to a professional corporation organized under the laws of its home state. Forty-two percent (42%) of the shares in the new entity are held by its ESOP.

¶3 An ESOP is an employee benefit plan that gives employees an ownership stake in their employer. The mechanics of forming an ESOP can be complex, but at its most basic, a company forms an ESOP through the creation of a trust, which holds company stock that is either contributed directly by the company or purchased with funds contributed by the company. The value of stock is apportioned among dedicated employee accounts, typically in proportion to an employee's pay and longevity at the company. When the employee leaves the company, the company stock that corresponds to that employee's account is re-purchased by the company and the employee receives the equivalent cash payout. See generally ELIZABETH A. MYERS & JOHN J. TOPOLESKI, CONG. RSCH. SERV., IF13104, EMPLOYEE STOCK OWNERSHIP PLANS (ESOPS): AN OVERVIEW (2025). As with any other trust, an ESOP trust is overseen by trustees--the legal owners of the trust assets--who have a fiduciary duty to manage its assets in the best interest of the participating employees. See, e.g., Brundle v. Wilmington Tr., N.A., 241 F.Supp.3d 610, 614 (E.D. Va. 2017) (describing creation of a sample ESOP); see also Petersen v. Comm'r of Internal Revenue, 148 T.C. 463, 473-75 (U.S. Tax Ct. 2017), aff'd, 924 F.3d 1111 (10th Cir. 2019) (describing the formation and characteristics of an ESOP trust).

¶4 You have advised that the ESOP relevant to your question is overseen by five trustees, each of whom is a certified public accountant ("CPA"). The firm now seeks to renew its permit to provide professional accounting services in Oklahoma. You have asked whether the firm's change of entity type and new ownership structure affect the firm's eligibility to (1) do business in Oklahoma under the Oklahoma Professional Entity Act, 18 O.S.2021 & Supp.2024, §§ 801 -- 819, and (2) register and receive a renewal permit to provide accounting services in Oklahoma under the Oklahoma Accountancy Act, 59 O.S.2021 & Supp.2024, §§ 15.1 -- 15.38.

III.

DISCUSSION

¶5 This Opinion proceeds in two parts. First, it concludes that an out-of-state professional corporation structured as described above may qualify to do business in Oklahoma under the Professional Entity Act, assuming it complies with the statutory requirements. Next, the Opinion concludes that this duly-qualified professional corporation, operating as an accounting firm, may also register and receive a permit to practice accounting services in Oklahoma, again assuming it satisfies the statutory requirements.

A. The Professional Entity Act.

¶6 Enacted in 1961 as the Professional Corporation Act, the Professional Entity Act ("PEA") enables licensed professionals--for example, physicians, attorneys, or accountants--to engage in their practice through a limited liability business entity. See 18 O.S.2021, § 802See Sanders v. Turn Key Health Clinics, 2025 OK 19566 P.3d 591 This historical limitation was rooted in the view that "human personal qualifications for such professions cannot be possessed by a corporation." 1A William M. Fletcher, FLETCHER CYCLOPEDIA OF THE LAW OF CORPORATIONS, § 97 (Sept. 2024 Update). Over time, however, states including Oklahoma began to adopt professional entity statutes to allow practitioners to take advantage of the benefits of the corporate form, while maintaining guardrails to safeguard the personal--and often confidential--relationship between professional and client. See 19 C.J.S. Corporations § 653 (Dec. 2024 update); see also Christian v. Shideler, 1963 OK 129382 P.2d 129

¶7 The process of forming an Oklahoma professional entity, or qualifying an out-of-state professional entity, 18 O.S.2021, § 80218 O.S.Supp.2024, § 804see also Sanders, 2025 OK 19see 18 O.S.Supp.2024, § 804 the corporation may provide services in Oklahoma only through licensed practitioners, id. § 811; and the corporation's stated business purpose must be limited to providing one type of professional service or related service, id. §§ 804, 806.

¶8 Finally, the PEA, like equivalent statutes in other states, places limitations on who may hold ownership interests in a professional entity. See Model Bus. Corp. Act, Prof. Corp. Supp. § 22, Official Comment (1984). These ownership restrictions are set forth in title 18, section 809, another provision that was amended in 2024. See supra footnote 2. Before the 2024 amendment, the PEA prohibited unlicensed individuals from holding any ownership interest in a professional entity. 18 O.S.2021, § 809domestic professional entities, but not for foreign professional entities: "An owner of a qualified foreign professional entity need not be duly licensed if he or she is not rendering professional services in this state." 18 O.S.Supp.2024, § 809 (emphasis added). Id.

¶9 Distilled to its simplest terms, this leaves us with three separate rules for ownership of professional entities in Oklahoma:

(1) For domestic professional entities, only individuals who are licensed or otherwise permitted to practice the relevant profession in Oklahoma may hold an ownership interest;
(2) For qualified foreign professional entities, unlicensed individuals may hold ownership interests only if such persons are not rendering professional services in Oklahoma; and
(3) For any professional corporation

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