In North Carolina, generally, the answer to this question depends on (1) what type of business you own; (2) whether you have bylaws or an operating agreement; (3) whether you have a will; and (4) if you have an insolvent estate.
No matter what type of business, your interest in the business is an asset. Unless there’s a contract stating otherwise, it is an inheritable asset, meaning if you have a will, you can name who the interest passes down to, or if you do not have a will, the interest will pass to your heirs (spouse, children, etc.). If you want to pass your business interest to your son, who will run the family business, instead of it passing naturally to your spouse, you need to have a will drafted. When the individual and the business entity are interwoven, like a sole proprietorship or a partnership, it is important to note that business debts are oftentimes personal and can cause your estate to be insolvent (leaving nothing for your family). This is an important reason to form a business entity separate from the individual. If your business is not healthy, it may cease to operate at your death and wipe out your estate. If you have a contract with other members of the business, you can state what happens to your interest when you pass. This is one of the reasons why we urge people who are going into business with non-relatives to enter into operating agreements – do you really want to be working with your business owner’s spouse after the pass away? More importantly, what happens if the spouse has no interest in running the business? What if she wants to sell or have you buy her out? What if you cannot afford to do so? In addition to recommending our clients enter into operating agreements, we recommend that they incorporate buy/sell language into these agreements. Financial professionals can find inexpensive ways to fund these agreements so that a partner can afford to buy another out. If you own stock in a corporation, that stock will be passed to your beneficiary or heirs just like any other property. While this is not a big deal if you own stock in AT&T, for example, it is a big deal if you own 90% of the shares of a small, family owned business. Again, maybe your business partner does not want to own the corporation with your spouse. If it is your wishes to continue your business when you pass, and your family is onboard, it may be a good idea to put your business interest in the name of a revocable trust. This way, your business interest stays out of your estate when you pass away and the trustee can manage your business interests better than the executor can. Many attorneys will recommend to executors to liquidate business assets because there is too much potential for liability on the executor’s part if he/she attempts to continue to operate the business. We recommend that all individuals get an estate plan in place. However, as you can see, there is more planning to be considered when that individual is a business owner. Feel free to contact Jesson & Rains if you have questions about your business or estate plan.
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Soon-to-be-business owners often ask us if there is any reason to form their businesses in Delaware instead of North Carolina because they’ve heard or read that corporations frequently form their businesses there. Lately, there’s been a lot of interest in incorporating in Nevada and Wyoming due to aggressive advertising.
For most small business owners, incorporating in a state other than your home state will have very little benefit to you and the business and will likely cost you more money. Not only will you have to file annual forms with both states every year, which costs money, you’ll have to get a Certificate of Authority to do business in North Carolina after your formation paperwork has been approved in the other state, which also costs money. Depending on the state, the formation paperwork could cost considerably more than North Carolina. Some people recommend incorporating in Nevada and Wyoming because those states do not have a corporate tax or a personal income tax. This fact may be insignificant if your business is an LLC, not a corporation, because an LLC oftentimes does not pay corporate taxes. If your business is paying corporate taxes, it may have to pay them anyway because the corporation is based out of and does business in North Carolina. Furthermore, whether you pay personal income tax depends on the state where you live. North Carolina has a personal income tax. Forming in a tax-free state will not save you money on taxes if you live and work in another state. The reason why so many large corporations form or convert their business to a Delaware corporation is because Delaware has a sophisticated corporate law and a Court of Chancery that only hears corporate cases. Based on these thoroughly-developed statutes and judicial opinions, corporate directors and officers are able to better understand their fiduciary duties and shareholders know what to expect. Delaware also has a reputation of being pro-management. Nevada has recently amended its corporation law, which now resembles Delaware’s. However, at one point, Nevada touted that it is even more pro-management, limiting director’s and officer’s liability only to violations involving intentional misconduct or fraud. Shareholders may want to be cautious of Nevada corporations. For most small businesses, these facts are insignificant because they are single member or family-run LLCs. There are no boards of directors or shareholders. However, if a small business expects to grow rapidly and has an eye towards getting venture capitalist funding or an IPO, it may want to consider forming in Delaware. Investors may require that those businesses convert into a Delaware corporation. If it is highly likely that will happen, the business may save some money by forming that way initially. This is a rare case, and converting a business to a Delaware corporation is not very expensive. So in conclusion, like a lot of things we write about, do not always believe what you hear! There are little to no advantages to forming your business in other states, and it is likely that doing so without guidance from an attorney can result in additional costs to you. Please give us a call if you would like more information. “One size fits all” is the wrong approach to take when dealing with estate planning and business documents. And when you purchase legal forms from the internet, that is exactly what you are getting. For estate planning, no person’s circumstances and wishes is going to be identical to the next. For businesses, while forming the LLC or incorporating may be simply accomplished by using the Secretary of State’s forms (no need to even use RocketLawyer, here, for example), what about the other documents that you may need to go with it? We’ve talked about the importance of operating agreements before. Those are absolutely not one-size-fits-all.
Here are some risks: 1) The document may not be valid at all. I have personally had a client bring me a form he purchased online that was advertised as North Carolina-specific that was NOT valid in North Carolina. He wasted money on that form and then paid me to re-do it, when it could have been done correctly the first time. Attorneys oftentimes say, “Pay us a few hundred dollars now to do it right the first time or a few thousand dollars later to fix it.” 2) While valid, the document may not be the best. Admittedly, the online legal form websites sell forms that are likely valid. They put just enough stuff in there to make them valid. However, they leave out state-specific clauses and references to statutes that may save you and your family or business tremendous time and money in the future. Here are some examples: a. Attorney’s fees provisions. In North Carolina, these are only valid in some types of contracts and only if reciprocal. Without these clauses, you could be out thousands of dollars if a dispute arises. Or, you could have a false sense of security thinking you will be entitled to attorney’s fees if a dispute arises, only to find out that your type of contract or the way the clause is written does not allow for attorney’s fees. b. Leases. Did you know that if a tenant breaches a lease, other than for non-payment of rent, you cannot evict the tenant unless the lease specifically provides for such? This has happened to a client of ours – the lease did not provide for it, and he was stuck with that tenant. Also, you can put language in a lease that waives notice requirements prior to evicting them. Online form leases do not contain this language. c. Wills. We have already discussed the very important language that can be included in a will that will save your executor time, money, and stress when they are handling your estate. It goes without saying, the only way to ensure that your last wishes are accomplished is to hire an attorney. There’s no way of knowing if you use an online form. I have spoken to attorneys who litigate estate cases (after someone has died, for example contesting a will on behalf of a beneficiary, or just asking the court for guidance in interpreting a will) and their business is booming thanks to online legal forms. d. State laws are different. North Carolina treats non-compete clauses and forum selection clauses differently from Florida, for example. Laws are created by the courts, too. A legal form website is not going to be current on courts’ interpretations of a state’s statutes. Just take a look at LegalZoom’s terms of service: “. . . LegalZoom cannot guarantee that all of the information on the Site or Applications is completely current. The law is different from jurisdiction to jurisdiction, and may be subject to interpretation by different courts. The law is a personal matter, and no general information or legal tool like the kind LegalZoom provides can fit every circumstance. Furthermore, the legal information contained on the Site and Applications is not legal advice and is not guaranteed to be correct, complete or up-to-date. Therefore, if you need legal advice for your specific problem, or if your specific problem is too complex to be addressed by our tools, you should consult a licensed attorney in your area.” 3) While valid, the document may be worse than not having one at all. You may leave language in an online form that actually puts you in a worse position. A business owner may do something that puts him personally liable for the business. The devil is in the details. In a case out of Canada, a poorly placed comma cost a business nearly $1,000,000. 4) No attorney-client relationship. By having personal interaction with an attorney, the attorney can draw information out of you that is important that you did not know was important. As a layperson, you don’t know what you don’t know – and that’s what you pay an attorney for. Hopefully you develop a long-term relationship with your attorney. You can continue to seek advice from someone who knows the ins and outs of your business or knows your family. On a different note, an attorney is a fiduciary who owes a duty to you. If they do something incorrectly which costs you money, you can sue the attorney for malpractice. You cannot do this with online legal forms. As simple as your legal issue may seem, there is value in consulting with an attorney. The document itself, in my opinion, is free. Did you know you could be held personally responsible for your corporation’s debts if the corporation is dissolved improperly?
The first step in closing your corporation is called “dissolution.” Once a corporation has filed for dissolution, it is no longer able to carry on business, except for business that is necessary to wind up the corporation’s affairs (for example collecting assets owed to the corporation and disposing of any corporate property). One of the most important steps involved in dissolving a corporation, and the one that can get the shareholders in trouble, personally, is that of disposing of claims against the corporation (in other words, money owed by the corporation). The dissolving corporation must notify known claimants, in writing, that: it is dissolving; describe any information required by the corporation to process a claim; provide a mailing address where the claim can be sent; state a deadline (which must be no fewer than 120 days from the date of the written notice) by which the corporation must receive the claim; and state that the claim will be barred if not received by the deadline. For unknown claims, the corporation can publish this notice in a newspaper in the county in which the corporation had its principal office. If the procedure is not followed, then the shareholders of the corporation could be held personally liable, up to the individual shareholder’s pro rata amount of the claim or up to the amount of the corporate assets distributed to that shareholder. For example, XYZ, Inc. is a corporation with two shareholders that wishes to dissolve. XYZ, Inc. has $1 Million in assets which are distributed to each shareholder evenly. At the time of XYZ, Inc.’s dissolution, there was a known claimant who had a claim against XYZ, Inc. in the amount of $800,000.00. If XYZ, Inc. properly notifies the claimant of XYZ, Inc.’s dissolution, and the claimant fails to make a claim within the deadline, the claim will be barred, and the shareholders can split the remaining assets. However, had XYZ, Inc. not followed the correct notification procedures, the claimant could recover $400,000.00 from each of the shareholders. This is bad news for the shareholders if they have already spent or invested the $400,000 they received when the corporation closed. As you can see, liability issues do not only occur during the initial startup phase or during the day to day business operations of the corporation. Even once your corporation has been dissolved, claimants can come back at a later date and claim money from a corporation’s shareholders. The attorneys at Jesson & Rains, LLP can help you avoid many corporate pitfalls and are able to offer assistance and counselling in all stages of your corporation’s life. |
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