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Choice of Business Entity

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What Are the Seven Basic Choices? Sole Proprietorships -- A Fancy Name for. One Owner ... See Dania Jai-Alai Palace, Inc. v. Sykes, 450 So.2d 1114 (Fla. 1984) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Choice of Business Entity


1
Choice of Business Entity
NSU LAW CENTER
Professor Marilyn Cane
2009
2
Choice of Entity
The Form Of Entity
  • What Are the Seven Basic Choices?
  • When Is It Time To Decide?
  • What Matters in Deciding Which Form?

3
  • What Are the Seven Basic Choices?
  • Sole Proprietorships -- A Fancy Name for One
    Owner
  • Corporations -- C Type
  • Corporations--S Type (Federal Tax Election)
  • Partnerships -- General
  • Partnerships-- Limited
  • Limited Liability Companies (LLCs)
  • Limited Liability Partnerships (LLPs)

4
  • When Is It Time to Decide?
  • The "Follow the Money" Rule
  • When There Are Multiple Owners/Investors
  • When The Business Generates Revenues or Assets

5
  • What Matters in Deciding Which Form?
  • Who Owns (Or Will Own) the Business?
  • What is the Nature of Each Owner's Interest?
  • Who Manages (or Will Manage) the Business?
  • How (and When) Will the Money Flow?
  • "Personal Recourse" (Are You Putting Up The
    House)?
  • What Happens on April 15?

6
  • What Matters in Deciding Which Form?
  • Who Owns (Or Will Own) the Business?
  • One Individual
  • A Few Individuals
  • Lots of Owners
  • Any Corporate Owners (Venture Funding)?
  • The Same Group Over Time, Or Will Owners Vary
    (Transfers Among Owners)?

7
  • What Matters in Deciding Which Form?
  • How (and When) Will the Money Flow?
  • Investment Self, Venture, Private, Public
  • Revenues When in Your Business Plan?
  • Expenses How Fast and How Deep?

8
  • What Matters in Deciding Which Form?
  • "Personal Recourse
  • Are You Putting Up The House?
  • Limited Liability is Commonly a Misnomer

9
  • What happens on April 15?

10
  • Tax Treatment of Entities
  • Corporations The following are taxed as
    corporations under the Federal Income Tax Code
  • State-law Corporations (other than S
    Corporations---S Corporation status is a FEDERAL
    TAX ELECTION having nothing to do with State law)
  • Foreign entities on "Corporation List"
  • Entities that "elect" corporate tax status
    (including partnerships and LLC's) (This is
    uncommon)

11
Tax Treatment of Entities
Effective January 1. 1997, the IRS issued its
final CHECK-THE-BOX regulations
These regulations allow taxpayers to treat most
domestic and foreign unincorporated business
organizations, including LLCs, as partnerships or
corporations on an elective basis.
12
  • Tax Treatment of Entities
  • S Corporations
  • Corporations That Are Eligible For, and Elect,
    "Subchapter S" Status with the IRS
  • Eligibility requirements include
  • 100 or fewer shareholders
  • Shareholders must be individuals (other than
    non-resident aliens), estates or certain trusts
    or tax exempt organizations
  • Only one class of stock (except voting)

13
  • Tax Treatment of Entities
  • Partnerships
  • Domestic partnerships and LLCs (with at least 2
    members)
  • Other non-corporate entities with at least 2
    members that "elect" partnership tax status

14
  • Tax Treatment of Entities
  • Layers of Tax
  • S Corporations Single layer of Federal and State
    income tax (except for certain States)
  • Net income taxed pro rata to shareholders
    (whether or not distributed)
  • S Corporation not itself subject to tax
  • This is known as pass through taxation. The
    entity is passed through and taxed directly to
    the shareholders of an S corp.

15
  • Tax Treatment of Entities
  • Layers of Tax
  • Partnerships Single layer of Federal and State
    income tax
  • Partnership itself not subject to tax
  • Net income taxed to partners (whether or not
    distributed)
  • This is pass through taxation, the partnership
    isnt taxed, the partners are. ( although there
    is a federal tax informational filing by the
    partnership)
  • Partners can choose any sharing ratio for tax
    purposes that has substantial economic effect

16
  • Tax Treatment of Entities
  • Layers Of Tax
  • C Corporations Double layer of Federal and
    State income tax
  • Net income generally taxed to corporation at
    corporate rates AND
  • Distributions, e.g., dividends, generally taxable
    to shareholders
  • All Corporations are deemed C corporations
    unless a federal tax election is made to tax as
    an S Corporation (and it qualifies as a S
    corporation)

17
Taxation of Dividends
  • In 2003, the taxation of dividends for
    individuals changed dramatically. Legislation
    lowered the federal individual tax rate on
    dividends from the top ordinary income tax rate
    of 38.6 at the time to the long-term capital
    gains tax rate of 15. Beginning in 2003 the
    maximum tax rate on qualifying dividends has been
    dropped to 15 for most people. For those in the
    15 or 10 bracket, qualifying dividends will be
    subject to a maximum tax of only 5. 

18
Taxation of Dividends
  • Dividend Received Deduction by Corporations
  • If a corporation owns owns more than 80 of the
    dividend-paying corporation, it is allowed to
    deduct 100 of the dividends it receives.
  • If it owns more than 20 but less than 80 of the
    corporation paying the dividend, it is able to
    deduct 80 of the dividend received.
  • If it owns less than 20 of another corporation,
    it is able to deduct 70 of the dividends it
    receives.

19
  • Selection of Entities
  • Complexity
  • Corporations Least complicated, easiest to take
    "public"
  • S Corporations Ownership restrictions and only
    a single class of stock allowed
  • Partnerships Most complex, substantial tax
    "boilerplate, difficult to take public
  • LLCs Like partnerships

20
  • Selection of Entities
  • Flexibility
  • Corporations Flexible employee incentives.
    Flexibility on classes of shares, reorganization,
    etc.
  • S Corporations All distributions and tax items
    must be shared pro-rata. Limited flexibility on
    employee incentives and reorganizations
  • Partnerships LLCs Greatest flexibility making
    distributions and allocating tax items. Limited
    flexibility on employee incentives

21
Selection of Entity
Limited Liability Company The limited liability
company (LLC) is a statutory form of business
entity which operates as a hybrid between a
partnership and a corporation. All states and
the District of Columbia have currently enacted
LLC legislation. .
22
The most significant characteristics of an LLC
are that it commonly allows for the pass-through
advantages of a partnership (that is, favorable
tax treatment) and the limited liability of a
corporation, generally limiting an owner's
personal liability to his or her investment.
23
  • Formation of LLC
  • A limited liability company may have one or more
    members.
  • i. Members may be individuals, general
    partnerships, limited partnerships, other limited
    liability companies , corporations, trusts,
    business trusts, estates or any other type of
    association. There is no numerical or other
    limit as to membership in an LLC

24
ii. This flexibility in membership of an LLC is
unlike an S corporation, which has an upward
limit of 100 stockholders and is limited as to
the type of entity which can own stock and
having only one class of ownership. b. An LLC
is formed by filing with the secretary of the
appropriate state the articles of organization,
which is a document very similar to a
certificate of incorporation
25
c. The articles of organization are superior to
the operating agreement, which is a document
setting forth the arrangements among the LLC
members relating to transfers of interest,
management, ownership, voting and other rights,
much in the same way that bylaws and stockholders
agreements of a corporation or the operating
agreement of a partnership. d. There must be
incorporated into the name of the organization
some form of the phrase "limited liability
company or LLC.
26
Selection of Entities
LLCs - PROS
TAXED LIKE PARTNERSHIPS
Limited Liability for ALL Members
LLCs-Cons
Very little precedent
27
LLC Liability in Florida
  • FL ST 608.701 provides
  • In any case in which a party seeks to hold the
    members of a limited liability company personally
    responsible for the liabilities or alleged
    improper actions of the limited liability
    company, the court shall apply the case law which
    interprets the conditions and circumstances under
    which the corporate veil of a corporation may be
    pierced under the law of this state.
  • See Dania Jai-Alai Palace, Inc. v. Sykes, 450
    So.2d 1114 (Fla. 1984)
  • NOTE Only LLCs ( not LPs or LLPs or LLLPs) have
    this protection directing the courts to corporate
    case law

28
Selection of Entities
Registered Limited Liability Partnership LLP A
registered limited liability partnership is a
general partnership, which, by satisfying certain
statutory requirements, has insulated its
partners from personal liability arising from the
negligence, malpractice or improper conduct of
other partners or employees of the partnership.
i. This protection is currently available in 35
states and the District of Columbia.
29
LLPs in Florida
  • Limited Liability Partnerships (LLPs) are
    essentially registered general partnerships that
    choose to file a statement of qualification
    (Fla.Stat. Sec 620.9001)
  • Fla. Stat. Sec 620.8306(3) provides that the
    obligation of a P/S incurred while the P/S is an
    LLP whether arising in contract, tort or
    otherwise is solely the obligation of the LLP,
    rather than the partners.

30
LPs in Florida
  • LP (Limited Partnership) is a P/S formed by two
    or more persons having as members one or more
    general partners and one or more limited
    partners. Fla. Stat. Sec 620.102(7)
  • Unlike GPs, LPs are creatures of statute and
    one must file documents with the Secretary of
    State. Fla. Stat. Sec 620.108

31
LLLPs in Florida
  • LPs may register as a limited liability limited
    partnership (LLLP) Fla. Stat. Sec. 620.187
  • By so registering the concept of unlimited
    liability for the general partners is not
    applicable, except if the general partner
    expressly assumes liability or is the actual
    tortfeasor.

32
How money goes to shareholders
C CORPORATION
Double Tax Taxed at Corporation Level
Shareholder level
Dividends NON deductible
Salary Deductible
Repurchase of stock-depends
33
Partnership Taxation ONE level only
PROFITS pass through to Partners Caveat Even
if the profits are not actually distributed
LOSSES Pass through to Partners
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