home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
High Voltage Shareware
/
high1.zip
/
high1
/
DIR23
/
SBA93_3B.ZIP
/
F406.SBE
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1993-07-01
|
12KB
|
276 lines
@222 CHAP 2
┌────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│Limited Liability Companies--A New Fourth Choice│
└────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
The age-old choice of entity in starting a business has al-
ways been a threefold one (except for such oddities as the
"Massachusetts business trust"): sole proprietorship, part-
nership, or corporation. But now there is a new kind of
business entity, which has recently arrived on the scene:
the "limited liability company." A growing number of state
legislatures around the U.S. have enacted laws in recent
years that permit the formation of these new legal entities.
@CODE: AL AZ AR CO DE FL GA ID IL IN IA KS LA MD MI MN MT NV ND OK RI SD TX UT VA WV WY
@STATE is one of the states that has enacted an "LLC"
law.
@CODE:OF
What, you may wonder, is this new entity?
- Is it a corporation? No, not exactly.
- Is it a partnership? Yes, sort of.
- Is it a sole proprietorship? No, not quite.
A number state legislatures around the U.S. in recent years
have recently created a new type of entity called a "limit-
ed liability company" (or LLC). These new entities, which
closely resemble (and are taxed the same as) partnerships,
offer limited liability, like corporations. While it has
long been possible for a partnership to offer limited lia-
bility to the LIMITED partners, a limited partnership must
always have at least one GENERAL partner, who is fully
liable for the debts of the business.
The new "limited liability companies" have, in effect, done
away with the need to have unlimited liability for any of
the owners of what is, in essence, a partnership form of
business organization.
In 1988, in Revenue Ruling 88-76, the IRS concluded that a
Wyoming limited liability company could be classified as a
partnership for Federal income tax purposes (which is fav-
orable, from the taxpayer's standpoint, in many cases),
based on the following rationale:
. No member has any personal liability for
debts of the company; therefore the company
has limited liability. (Like a corporation)
. The interests of the members are assignable
only upon written consent of all of the
remaining members. (Like a partnership;
however, the Ruling recognized that mere
assignees are entitled to receive profits
and other compensation.)
. The company is dissolved in situations which
are very similar to the dissolution of a
limited partnership. (Like a partnership)
. The company has centralized management.
(Like a corporation)
Under IRS criteria, any entity that has no more than two
of the four above features of a corporation is not consid-
ered to be a corporation. Thus because of the absence of
"continuity of life" and "free transferability" of interests
in the LLC entity, the Wyoming limited liability company
was held to be a partnership for tax purposes.
Florida has also recently adopted a Limited Liability Com-
pany Act, which is virtually identical to that of Wyoming.
However, for income tax purposes, Florida taxes LLC's as
though they were corporations.
In addition, in 1990, Colorado enacted legal provisions
that permit the formation of "limited liability companies,"
which are not subject to income tax and are to be treated,
for state tax purposes, as partnerships, but which have
limited liability.
The Colorado limited liability companies would also appear
to meet the IRS tests for taxability as a partnership.
Other states that have enacted "limited liability company"
laws in recent years include Kansas, Nevada, Texas,
Virginia, West Virginia, and Utah. Iowa has just recently
adopted a limited liability company law, effective July 1,
1992; Louisiana, effective July 9, 1992; Oklahoma has enac-
ted limited liability company provisions, effective as of
September 1, 1992; Rhode Island, effective September 19,
1992; Arizona, effective September 30, 1992; Maryland and
Delaware have done so, both effective as of October 1, 1992;
Minnesota, effective January 1, 1993; and Illinois has also
passed LLC legislation that will go into effect on January
1, 1994. Several other states have just adopted LLC pro-
visions in 1993.
In addition, the states of Tennessee and Indiana have
enacted laws that recognize out-of-state LLC's and allow
them to conduct business in the state, but neither of these
states has, as yet, provided for LLC's to be formed under
its own laws. California's Franchise Tax Board has also
announced that it will follow the IRS tax treatment of
LLC's formed in other states (generally, treating them as
partnerships, rather than corporations, for tax purposes).
LLC legislation is pending in Hawaii, Indiana, Missouri,
Nebraska, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, and Tennessee.
It is under consideration in California as well, but due
to California's budget difficulties and the expected loss
of $600 million in state tax revenues if LLC legislation
is passed, California legislators are a bit hesitant about
jumping on the LLC bandwagon at this point.
@CODE: SD MT ND ID GA AR AL IN
@STATE has recently (1993) adopted LLC legislation.
@CODE:OF
@CODE: MI
Michigan has enacted an LLC law, which goes into effect on
June 1, 1993.
@CODE:OF
@CODE: AL MT
The @STATE LLC law goes into effect on October 1, 1993.
@CODE:OF
@CODE: SD ND ID IN
The @STATE LLC law goes into effect on July 1, 1993.
@CODE:OF
@CODE: GA
The Georgia LLC law becomes effective March 1, 1994.
@CODE:OF
@CODE: AR
The Arkansas LLC law became effective April 12, 1993.
@CODE:OF
Major benefits of LLC's over the traditional business enti-
ties available up till now include the following:
. Unlike a general partnership, owners of an LLC have
limited liability; and, unlike limited partners in
a limited partnership, they do not lose their limited
liability if they actively participate in management.
. Like a regular corporation (a C corporation), an LLC
provides limited liability to its owners, but taxable
income or losses of the business will generally pass
through to the owners (but may not always necessarily
be deductible, due to the "at-risk" and "passive loss"
limitations of the tax law).
. An LLC is more like an S corporation, in that it pro-
vides for a pass-through of taxable income or losses,
as well as limited liability, but can qualify in many
situations where an S corporation cannot, since an
S corporation cannot:
. have more than 35 shareholders;
. have nonresident alien shareholders;
. have corporations or partnerships as shareholders;
. own 80% or more of the stock of another corpora-
tion;
. have more than one class of stock (or otherwise
have disproportionate distributions); or
. have too much of certain kinds of "net passive
income."
. Also, LLC owners may be able to claim tax losses in
excess of their investment, such as on certain lever-
aged real estate investments, which would not ordinar-
ily be possible in the case of an S corporation or
even a limited partnership.
On the other hand, most of the LLC statutes have certain
built-in disadvantages, as compared to S corporations or
other corporations, such as the fact that LLC's must usual-
ly provide in their articles of organization that the en-
tity will terminate in not more than 30 years, and the fact
that an LLC must have more than one owner, unlike corpora-
tions.
@CODE: AL AZ AR CO DE FL GA ID IL IN IA KS LA MD MN MT NV ND OK RI SD TX UT VA WV WY
Perhaps the major drawback of an LLC formed in @STATE
at present, however, is the uncertainty as to how it
will be treated in other states that have not yet adopted
LLC laws or recognized the LLC concept.
Thus, if your LLC carries on business in another state,
the other state you are doing business in may not recog-
nize the limited liability feature of such an entity,
which could be disastrous to the owners if your "limited
liability" company were to go broke and the owners were
treated like partners in a partnership (that is, fully
liable) in the other state, rather than being accorded
limited liability.
Secondly, other states may not necessarily recognize your
LLC formed outside their state as a partnership-like entity
for tax purposes. This could also result in some serious
tax traps, particularly if distributions by your LLC were
taxed by such a state as corporate dividends, after it
first subjected the LLC's earnings to a corporate-level
state income tax.
@CODE:OF
@CODE: FL
In fact, Florida itself treats LLC's as corporations for
purposes of the Florida corporate income tax law, even
though a Florida LLC is treated as a partnership for federal
income tax purposes. (There is no individual income tax in
Florida, so the income of an LLC would entirely escape state
taxation if Florida did not tax its income at the entity
level, which probably explains why the state of Florida
chose not to follow the federal tax treatment in this case.)
@CODE:OF
Even so, LLC's seem to have many advantages that almost
guarantee a boom in their popularity in coming years.
This may be the first you have heard of Limited Liability
Companies, but it certainly won't be the last. Remember,
you heard it here first....
@CODE: AK CA CT DC HI KY ME MA MS MO NB NH NJ NM NY NC OH OR PA SC VT WA WS
@CODE:NF
This new entity may have possibilities for companies doing
business outside the handful of states that have enacted
limited liability company legislation so far. Just as com-
panies in many parts of the country may choose to incor-
porate in Delaware, or Nevada, or other states other than
where they actually do business, it may also be possible
in other states to "incorporate" under the Wyoming (or
Florida, Colorado, etc.) limited liability company provi-
sions. However, since this is a newly developing area of
the law, you would be well advised to consult a competent
business attorney to determine whether your firm will be
able to take advantage of such an out-of-state entity's
special benefits under the laws of @STATE.
One potentially serious problem is that if you create an LLC
under the "limited liability company" laws of, say, Wyoming,
and carry on business in another state, the other state you
are doing business in may not recognize the limited liabil-
ity feature of such an entity, which could be disastrous to
the owners if your "limited liability" company were to go
broke and the owners were treated like partners in a part-
nership (that is, fully liable) in the other state.
Secondly, other states may not necessarily recognize your
LLC formed outside the state as a partnership-like entity
for tax purposes. This could also result in some serious
tax traps, particularly if distributions by an LLC were
taxed by such a state as corporate dividends, after it
first subjected the LLC's earnings to a corporate-level
state income tax.
Thus, this entity may be best now only for firms that do
business only within the state that authorizes the creation
of the limited liability company, such as, for instance,
Wyoming, for a company formed under the Wyoming limited
liability company law, or in other states, like those lis-
ted above, that recognize the LLC concept.