CREDIT CORNER
Limited Liability Companies
-- The Best of All Worlds?
- Alderman & Alderman
A limited liability company (LLC) is a business structure
that combines some of the best features of sole proprietorships, partnerships
and corporations. LLC owners like their
counterparts for partnerships or sole proprietorships, reports profits or losses
on their personal income tax returns.
Like a corporation, however, the owners of an LLC have "limited
liability", that is, they are shielded from personal liability for debts
and claims arising from the business.
Limited Liability
The limited liability for LLC
owners’ is not absolute. Owners still
can be held liable if they (1) personally and directly injure someone; (2)
personally guarantee a load or business debt on which the LLC defaults; (3)
fail to deposit taxes withheld from employees' wages; (4) intentionally commit
a fraudulent or illegal act that harms the company or someone else; (5) treat
the LLC as an extension of their personal affairs rather than as a separate
legal entity. The last exception to limited
liability is the most significant. It
carries the potential for complete removal of all protections for individual
owners. If the line between LLC
business and personal business becomes too blurred, a court could find that a
true LLC doesn't exist, leaving the owners personally liable for their actions.
Ownership
Most states allow a single
individual to be the sole owner of an LLC.
An LLC makes the most sense in circumstances where there is a concern
about personal exposure to lawsuits stemming from operation of the business. Most laws prohibit establishment of an LLC
is in the banking, trust, and insurance fields.
Unlike corporations, LLCs can carry
on their business without holding regular ownership or management
meetings. Of course, formal meetings
backed up by written minutes still may be advisable to document important
decisions, such as a change in membership or a major expenditure.
Formation
Setting up an LLC is relatively
simple. Articles of organization must
be filed with the appropriate state office, usually the Secretary of State. The articles of organization include the
name and principal office for the LLC, the names and address of its owners, and
the name and address of the person or company that agrees to accept legal
papers on behalf of the LLC.
Even if it is not legally required,
the owners should prepare an operating agreement that spells out the owners'
rights and responsibilities. The
absence of an operating agreement will mean that state statutes will govern the
operation of the LLC by default. An
operating agreement acts as a guide for resolving common issues that an LLC
will face, and thereby helps to avert misunderstandings between the
owners. It also underscores the
authenticity of the LLC itself, which can be helpful when a judge is deciding
whether the owners are protected from personal liability.
A standard operating agreement
includes the members' percentage interests in the business; the members' rights
and responsibilities; the members' voting power; allocation of profits and
losses; how the LLC will be managed; rules for holding meetings and taking
votes; and "buy-sell" provisions that control what happens when a
member wants to sell his interest, becomes disabled, or dies. Although it is frequently overlooked when an
LLC is created, a buy-sell agreement is important as a sort of "premarital
agreement" among the owners. The
buy-sell provisions can clarify and ease the transition when the inevitable
changes come the members of the LLC.
Taxes
Since an LLC is not considered
separate from its owners for tax purposes, the LLC pays no income taxes itself.
Like a partnership or sole proprietorship, an LLC is a "pass-through
entity." Each owner pays taxes on
a share of profits, or deducts a share of losses, on a personal tax
return. The IRS regards each member as
a self-employed business owner, not an employee of the LLC. There is not tax withholding, and owners
must estimate taxes owed for the year, then make quarterly payments to the IRS.
Conversion
By converting to the LLC business
structure, sole proprietors and partnerships can gain the protection afforded
to LLC owners without changing the way their business income is taxed. Conversion usually can be accomplished
either by filling out a simple form or filing regular articles of
organization. Federal and state
employer identification numbers will have to be transferred to the name of the
new LLC, as will such items as sales tax permits, business licenses, and
professional licenses and permits.
The process for creating an LLC is
streamlined and free of highly technical considerations. However, there is an important place for
professional advice concerning such matters as choosing an LLC over other
business structures, preparing or reviewing the operating agreement, and
setting up accounting systems.