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Casual Articles - Single Member LLC- Charging Order, Creditor Claims, Pass-through
Library Cubicles otection against liabilities arising from "the conduct of the LLC" but not the owner of the LLC membership shares. In other words, "if" the LLC does something wrong, the owner is not necessarily responsible. To reach the owner's personal assets, a plaintiff would have to "pierce the veil" of the entity showing that:Library cubicles are independent study rooms for individuals. They are meant for individuals who need to spend more time in reference work. The cubicles are a calm and quiet place to go through available study material.In colleges and universities, library cubicles are specially made for graduate students and faculty members. It can be used by those individuals doing research work and handling special projects. With limited number of cubicles, individuals need prior permission from library members to make use of the cubicles. There is need to follow certain rules and regulations to access cubicles.Library cubicles are complete with shelves for books. The books and journals in cubicles are available fo A. The LLC, the corporation, or the Sub "S" was undercapitalized for it's intended business purpose, B. Formalities were not followed, C. The owner used the LLC, Corporation or Sub "S" mostly for personal purposes, D. It did not serve a "bona fide" commercial purpose, E. It lacked in economic substance and was merely an alter ego of the owner whose sole intention is to frustrate the creditor(s), etc. A single member LLC (one owner), Corporation, or Sub "S" will not protect the owner, because the charging order protection that is much touted, is based on protecting the "innocent" non-debtor. Under the Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act you would be committing a crime, see Section 19.40.041: "...(a) a transfer made or obligatio Forex Trading Strategy - The Ultimate Momentum Indicator for Huge Profits Recently I've run across some significant issues with the single member LLC's with courts handing down noteworthy judgement decisions in favor of creditors using the theory of "fraudulent transfers" and "civil conspiracy." I ran across two such individuals that have made me more caution on client advice regarding single member LLCs.Many traders in their forex trading strategy simply pick levels and buy or sell into them and hope they hold. This simply sees them lose, as they are hoping levels will hold and NOT acting on confirmation of price momentum to put the odds in their favor.Here we are going to look at the ultimate momentum indicator that will help you time your trading signals with laser accuracy.The momentum indicator we are referring to is the stochastic and it simply should be considered by anyone serious about making money in forex trading.The logicOf the stochastic is based on the assumption, that when a market is rising, it will tend to close near the highs of the session - and when a market falls, i SINGLE MEMBER LLC - LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY PASS-THROUGH LEGAL ENTITY The LLC is a TAX HYBRID "pass-through" legal entity similar to a partnership but with the limited liability of a corporation. The LLC is tax-driven and was classified legally by the IRS on January 1, 1997 when the IRS threw out its old, and unnecessarily complicated, business entity tax classification regulations and agreed that LLCs should be taxed as partnerships (or sole proprietorships if they have one owner) without jumping through a number of technical hoops. Moreover, the IRS now lets an LLC elect to pay taxes as a sole proprietorship, as a partnership, or as a corporation by filing IRS Form 8832. For "Income Tax purposes" income and expenses of the LLC "pass-through" directly to your income tax return proportionate to your percentage of ownership, or if there is more than one member, whatever percentage you decide, for example, 50/50 or 75/25. Irrespective of your equity ownership percentage, this is a significant advantage over other forms of business entities, and the LLC also has another significant advantage; members decide how they want to be taxed or, in other words, as sole proprietor, partnership, or corporation. The LLC will obtain it's own Federal Identification Number (similar to a social security number), operate as a business, and maintain it's own bank account. SINGLE MEMBER LLC MAY NOT BE PROTECTED FROM CREDITORS Ninety percent of financial advisors give the wrong advice regarding single member LLC formations. Single member LLC are mistakenly assumed to protect the member from the creditor. Most financial LLC advisors state that a Limited Liability Company (LLC) protects the owner (i.e. single member LLC) against present, past, and future creditors because the creditor may not step into the shoes of the LLC and has to look at the LLC member for collection. The advisors point to an IRS Revenue Ruling (77-137), where the creditor holding the "Charging Order" will receive the "K-1." They further explain, the creditor must pay the taxes on the income generated by the LLC, even though the creditor never receives any actual cash from the business. The creditor saddled by the charging order is treated as a "substituted limited partner for tax purposes" and will suffer the tax consequences without capacity to force payment, dissolution, or distribution of the LLC. CHARGING ORDER DEFINES CREDITOR AS SUBSTITUTED LIMITED PARTNER FOR TAX PURPOSES TO PROTECT SINGLE MEMBER LLC The area of the laws surrounding the issues of the charging order to protect the single member LLC is dynamic and evolving. There's no legal reasoning for a charging order protection for single member, even though most state statutes call for such protection. The charging order protection cannot create a "personal legal liability" out of a legal business entity for "the acts" of the LLC. There are several litigation issues unique to the LLC that are beginning to emerge in trial forums. State LLC laws, when written, were primarily tax driven, and accordingly, they defined key terms and concepts in accounting and tax terms, and not with thought of contract tort law issues. When the LLC is in financial distress, litigation will usually focus on: A. Dissolution issues, B. Capitalization issues, C. Failure to comply with state statutory and regulatory requirements, and D. Violation of one or more provisions of the entity's documents. FRAUDULENT CONVEYANCE, CIVIL CONSPIRACY WITH SINGLE MEMBER LLC The central issue to single member LLCs (one owner) is "FRAUDULENT CONVEYANCE" which, if not handled properly may become part of a "civil conspiracy" to fraudulently act against creditor claims. In some cases the financial planner, lawyer, or accountant becomes part of the conspiracy and in some cases such advisors have been reprimanded. Single shareholder corporation, single shareholder of Sub "S", and single member LLCs can provide the owner with protection against liabilities arising from "the conduct of the LLC" but not the owner of the LLC membership shares. In other words, "if" the LLC does something wrong, the owner is not necessarily responsible. To reach the owner's personal assets, a plaintiff would have to "pierce the veil" of the entity showing that: A. The LLC, the corporation, or the Sub "S" was undercapitalized for it's intended business purpose, B. Formalities were not followed, C. The owner used the LLC, Corporation or Sub "S" mostly for personal purposes, D. It did not serve a "bona fide" commercial purpose, E. It lacked in economic substance and was merely an alter ego of the owner whose sole intention is to frustrate the creditor(s), etc. A single member LLC (one owner), Corporation, or Sub "S" will not protect the owner, because the charging order protection that is much touted, is based on protecting the "innocent" non-debtor. Under the Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act you would be committing a crime, see Section 19.40.041: "...(a) a transfer made or obligation US And Global Trade Benefit From Outsourcing s-through" directly to your income tax return proportionate to your percentage of ownership, or if there is more than one member, whatever percentage you decide, for example, 50/50 or 75/25. Irrespective of your equity ownership percentage, this is a significant advantage over other forms of business entities, and the LLC also has another significant advantage; members decide how they want to be taxed or, in other words, as sole proprietor, partnership, or corporation. The LLC will obtain it's own Federal Identification Number (similar to a social security number), operate as a business, and maintain it's own bank account.Contrary to recent reports criticizing the outsourcing industry of wreaking havoc in the lives of most Americans, a research by the US Chamber of Commerce declares otherwise. The study shows that the effects of the outsourcing industry on American economy and global trade, in general, are very positive. The report also indicates that the American economy is enjoying an upsurge in profits within the global trade market because of its extensive outsourcing programs.The state-supported study shows that the American economy actually gains an average of $50 billion in net profits because of its outsourcing industry. Currently, immigrants and off-shore outsourcing companies comprise more than a quarter of the tota SINGLE MEMBER LLC MAY NOT BE PROTECTED FROM CREDITORS Ninety percent of financial advisors give the wrong advice regarding single member LLC formations. Single member LLC are mistakenly assumed to protect the member from the creditor. Most financial LLC advisors state that a Limited Liability Company (LLC) protects the owner (i.e. single member LLC) against present, past, and future creditors because the creditor may not step into the shoes of the LLC and has to look at the LLC member for collection. The advisors point to an IRS Revenue Ruling (77-137), where the creditor holding the "Charging Order" will receive the "K-1." They further explain, the creditor must pay the taxes on the income generated by the LLC, even though the creditor never receives any actual cash from the business. The creditor saddled by the charging order is treated as a "substituted limited partner for tax purposes" and will suffer the tax consequences without capacity to force payment, dissolution, or distribution of the LLC. CHARGING ORDER DEFINES CREDITOR AS SUBSTITUTED LIMITED PARTNER FOR TAX PURPOSES TO PROTECT SINGLE MEMBER LLC The area of the laws surrounding the issues of the charging order to protect the single member LLC is dynamic and evolving. There's no legal reasoning for a charging order protection for single member, even though most state statutes call for such protection. The charging order protection cannot create a "personal legal liability" out of a legal business entity for "the acts" of the LLC. There are several litigation issues unique to the LLC that are beginning to emerge in trial forums. State LLC laws, when written, were primarily tax driven, and accordingly, they defined key terms and concepts in accounting and tax terms, and not with thought of contract tort law issues. When the LLC is in financial distress, litigation will usually focus on: A. Dissolution issues, B. Capitalization issues, C. Failure to comply with state statutory and regulatory requirements, and D. Violation of one or more provisions of the entity's documents. FRAUDULENT CONVEYANCE, CIVIL CONSPIRACY WITH SINGLE MEMBER LLC The central issue to single member LLCs (one owner) is "FRAUDULENT CONVEYANCE" which, if not handled properly may become part of a "civil conspiracy" to fraudulently act against creditor claims. In some cases the financial planner, lawyer, or accountant becomes part of the conspiracy and in some cases such advisors have been reprimanded. Single shareholder corporation, single shareholder of Sub "S", and single member LLCs can provide the owner with protection against liabilities arising from "the conduct of the LLC" but not the owner of the LLC membership shares. In other words, "if" the LLC does something wrong, the owner is not necessarily responsible. To reach the owner's personal assets, a plaintiff would have to "pierce the veil" of the entity showing that: A. The LLC, the corporation, or the Sub "S" was undercapitalized for it's intended business purpose, B. Formalities were not followed, C. The owner used the LLC, Corporation or Sub "S" mostly for personal purposes, D. It did not serve a "bona fide" commercial purpose, E. It lacked in economic substance and was merely an alter ego of the owner whose sole intention is to frustrate the creditor(s), etc. A single member LLC (one owner), Corporation, or Sub "S" will not protect the owner, because the charging order protection that is much touted, is based on protecting the "innocent" non-debtor. Under the Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act you would be committing a crime, see Section 19.40.041: "...(a) a transfer made or obligatio Building a Following for Your Writing and has to look at the LLC member for collection.The Internet has changed the way publishing is done forever. Instead of taking months, or even years, to build a following for your writing, you can begin to build a following in just days.Building a following for your writing is crucial to your publishing success. Without readers, you have no one to read your writing.Although I know most writers hate marketing, if you take the time to market your writing, you will build your following more quickly and see results.Your first step in building a following to your site should be to add a list. This can be a simple autoresponder script where you add a subscription box to your site. This way, readers can subscribe to your list to get updates, read y The advisors point to an IRS Revenue Ruling (77-137), where the creditor holding the "Charging Order" will receive the "K-1." They further explain, the creditor must pay the taxes on the income generated by the LLC, even though the creditor never receives any actual cash from the business. The creditor saddled by the charging order is treated as a "substituted limited partner for tax purposes" and will suffer the tax consequences without capacity to force payment, dissolution, or distribution of the LLC. CHARGING ORDER DEFINES CREDITOR AS SUBSTITUTED LIMITED PARTNER FOR TAX PURPOSES TO PROTECT SINGLE MEMBER LLC The area of the laws surrounding the issues of the charging order to protect the single member LLC is dynamic and evolving. There's no legal reasoning for a charging order protection for single member, even though most state statutes call for such protection. The charging order protection cannot create a "personal legal liability" out of a legal business entity for "the acts" of the LLC. There are several litigation issues unique to the LLC that are beginning to emerge in trial forums. State LLC laws, when written, were primarily tax driven, and accordingly, they defined key terms and concepts in accounting and tax terms, and not with thought of contract tort law issues. When the LLC is in financial distress, litigation will usually focus on: A. Dissolution issues, B. Capitalization issues, C. Failure to comply with state statutory and regulatory requirements, and D. Violation of one or more provisions of the entity's documents. FRAUDULENT CONVEYANCE, CIVIL CONSPIRACY WITH SINGLE MEMBER LLC The central issue to single member LLCs (one owner) is "FRAUDULENT CONVEYANCE" which, if not handled properly may become part of a "civil conspiracy" to fraudulently act against creditor claims. In some cases the financial planner, lawyer, or accountant becomes part of the conspiracy and in some cases such advisors have been reprimanded. Single shareholder corporation, single shareholder of Sub "S", and single member LLCs can provide the owner with protection against liabilities arising from "the conduct of the LLC" but not the owner of the LLC membership shares. In other words, "if" the LLC does something wrong, the owner is not necessarily responsible. To reach the owner's personal assets, a plaintiff would have to "pierce the veil" of the entity showing that: A. The LLC, the corporation, or the Sub "S" was undercapitalized for it's intended business purpose, B. Formalities were not followed, C. The owner used the LLC, Corporation or Sub "S" mostly for personal purposes, D. It did not serve a "bona fide" commercial purpose, E. It lacked in economic substance and was merely an alter ego of the owner whose sole intention is to frustrate the creditor(s), etc. A single member LLC (one owner), Corporation, or Sub "S" will not protect the owner, because the charging order protection that is much touted, is based on protecting the "innocent" non-debtor. Under the Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act you would be committing a crime, see Section 19.40.041: "...(a) a transfer made or obligatio Accountability for Results: A CEO's Ultimate Challenge ral litigation issues unique to the LLC that are beginning to emerge in trial forums. State LLC laws, when written, were primarily tax driven, and accordingly, they defined key terms and concepts in accounting and tax terms, and not with thought of contract tort law issues. When the LLC is in financial distress, litigation will usually focus on:Have you participated in a business initiative that your company never completed? Did you watch key business goals suffer as teams missed deadline after deadline?Often such problems arise because neither the employees nor the management team hold themselves truly accountable. When teams don’t execute effectively because of lack of accountability, the company fails to generate results.Accountability for results is the crucial step in producing outstanding performance. Many CEOs have trouble providing this accountability.Establishing AccountabilityThe CEO is responsible for creating accountability in his organization.First, the CEO and his management team must develop and commit A. Dissolution issues, B. Capitalization issues, C. Failure to comply with state statutory and regulatory requirements, and D. Violation of one or more provisions of the entity's documents. FRAUDULENT CONVEYANCE, CIVIL CONSPIRACY WITH SINGLE MEMBER LLC The central issue to single member LLCs (one owner) is "FRAUDULENT CONVEYANCE" which, if not handled properly may become part of a "civil conspiracy" to fraudulently act against creditor claims. In some cases the financial planner, lawyer, or accountant becomes part of the conspiracy and in some cases such advisors have been reprimanded. Single shareholder corporation, single shareholder of Sub "S", and single member LLCs can provide the owner with protection against liabilities arising from "the conduct of the LLC" but not the owner of the LLC membership shares. In other words, "if" the LLC does something wrong, the owner is not necessarily responsible. To reach the owner's personal assets, a plaintiff would have to "pierce the veil" of the entity showing that: A. The LLC, the corporation, or the Sub "S" was undercapitalized for it's intended business purpose, B. Formalities were not followed, C. The owner used the LLC, Corporation or Sub "S" mostly for personal purposes, D. It did not serve a "bona fide" commercial purpose, E. It lacked in economic substance and was merely an alter ego of the owner whose sole intention is to frustrate the creditor(s), etc. A single member LLC (one owner), Corporation, or Sub "S" will not protect the owner, because the charging order protection that is much touted, is based on protecting the "innocent" non-debtor. Under the Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act you would be committing a crime, see Section 19.40.041: "...(a) a transfer made or obligatio Web Coach Tip: The Single Most Important and CRUCIAL Element of Your Web Site otection against liabilities arising from "the conduct of the LLC" but not the owner of the LLC membership shares. In other words, "if" the LLC does something wrong, the owner is not necessarily responsible. To reach the owner's personal assets, a plaintiff would have to "pierce the veil" of the entity showing that:Here’s the single most important part of your website: YOUR WEB COPY! And remember: Your website isn’t about YOU, it’s about THEM!Again, it's NOT about you, it's about THEM!*Note: May I add, this is an area where most of my clients get stuck…If you find yourself at a total loss when it comes to writing, please let me know. ______________________________________________Write/gather/compile; prepare copy for your main pages:• Answer questions.Frequently asked questions woven into your copy will give your visitor confidence in you because you answered their concerns right away. Think of questions you’ve been asked and document them providing the most detailed and complete answer A. The LLC, the corporation, or the Sub "S" was undercapitalized for it's intended business purpose, B. Formalities were not followed, C. The owner used the LLC, Corporation or Sub "S" mostly for personal purposes, D. It did not serve a "bona fide" commercial purpose, E. It lacked in economic substance and was merely an alter ego of the owner whose sole intention is to frustrate the creditor(s), etc. A single member LLC (one owner), Corporation, or Sub "S" will not protect the owner, because the charging order protection that is much touted, is based on protecting the "innocent" non-debtor. Under the Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act you would be committing a crime, see Section 19.40.041: "...(a) a transfer made or obligation incurred by a debtor is fraudulent as to a creditor whether the creditor's claim arose before or after the transfer was made or the obligation was incurred, if the debtor made the transfer or incurred the obligation: (1) with actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud any creditor of the debtor..."
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