Legal Question in Real Estate Law in Ohio
LLC Asset Protection
We are forming a Real Estate Short Sale company LLC. We want to make sure we protect our personal assets from any possible lawsuits against this company. Can you please provide any advice? Do you suggest Business Insurance? Are we allowed to transfer funds to and from this company account from our personal accounts, or do we just have to fund it with a dollar amount that would cover all expenses during operation? It would be much easier for us to transfer funds from our personal accounts as needed, since this is a new business for us and we are unsure how much we will need to fund it with. Our main concern is that we operate this business (LLC compliant) and that we are protected from someone coming after our personal assets by using a lawsuit against our company. Thanks again for any help you can provide.
Lg
1 Answer from Attorneys
Re: LLC Asset Protection
Dear Inquirers: You may wish to protect your individual assets by doing business as an LLC. This LLC can borrow funds, etc. and you can lend the LLC funds, with specific provisions for repayment, and memorandum or resolutions of record.
A limited liability company, like a corporation, is a legal entity separate from its members. It may be formed by two or more individuals or members. The members may themselves be a legal entity such as a corporation, association or trust. Limited liability companies offer the major tax advantage that a partnership does and a corporation does not. That is, taxation on profits is only at the individual level, and not also at the company level. Consequently, profits in a limited liability company avoid being taxed twice the way they are in a corporation. While this is also true for the �S� corporation form of business that allows owners to have the same tax advantage, a limited liability company has far fewer restrictions imposed on it than the �S� corp.
The limited liability company is also very favorable to members with regard to liability. In a corporation, owners are only liable up to (the limits of) their investment. In a partnership, partners have unlimited liability for contracts entered into, and for the wrongful acts committed by other partners. The limited liability company (LLC) members, however have only the liability that a corporate owner does, up to the amount of their investment.
While it is true that in a limited partnership (LLP) form of business, a limited partner has liability only up to the amount he or she invested, and that a limited partner may not take part in management, in contrast, a member of a limited liability company (LLC) may manage as actively as desired, while still maintaining the limited liability protection under the law.
Selection of the form of business entity, and the contracts for it, should be made with the assistance and guidance of experienced counsel, in order to maximize the benefits available under the law, minimizing risk.
Retain experienced legal counsel to guide and advise you. Good luck!
Sincerely,
J. Norman Stark, Cleveland, OH.
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