Small Businesses At Risk of Being Liable for Their LLC's Debts & Obligations
I just scored a big victory on behalf of a client in Los Angeles Superior Court, and it reminded me to remind you of the importance of observing business formalities with your corporations and LLCs.
In the late 90s, my client had loaned about $200,000 to an acquaintance (we’ll call her Lauren), for use in a business Lauren was forming with a business partner. Lauren and her partner took the money and formed an LLC, but never paid back a dime of the loan. Of course, to keep the matter challenging for me, the loan agreement was entirely verbal. Thus, I not only had to prove an oral agreement, I had to deal with the statute of limitation problem from this decade old debt.
The LLC was defunct, so a judgment against that entity would have been worthless. In any event, it had always been my client’s understanding that these were personal loans to the individuals, not to the company.
I tried the case to a jury, and I called the defendants as my first witnesses, even before my own client, because I anticipated that they would acknowledge the debt (and thereby avoid all those problems of proving the oral agreement), but would try to push it off to the LLC. They testified as expected, and I was then able to show through the testimony of my client why the debts that they had just admitted to were in reality personal debts. The total judgment awarded by the jury and court exceeded a million dollars.
The Defendants, in their minds, may well have intended that the debts be company debts, but they did not observe the necessary formalities. They may have thought they hit the jackpot when they found someone willing to loan them $200,000 with no documentation, but that contributed to their own downfall. If these had been real company debts, then we would expect to see the usual formalities such as promissory notes issued by the company, and company minutes reflecting the terms of the loans. Most LLCs operate in a small business fashion and as a result run a high risk of inadvertently losing their liability shield under what is known as the Alter Ego Doctrine. The Alter Ego Doctrine is generally based on the idea that the member(s) of the LLC have acted as one and the same in a manner that works a fraud or injustice on another, and therefore should share the same liabilities. In determining whether the individual members are personally liable for the debts and obligations of the LLC under this doctrine the courts consider several factors, the most significant of which is failure to follow organizational formalities.
A failure to follow formalities has been seen to include improperly organizing an LLC, not timely filing required forms or paying required fees and taxes, not having a continuous presence in the home state, and not having a designated agent to receive legal documents. There are a few specific activities that commonly cause problems under the "failure to follow organizational formalities" factor: (1) Commingling of Assets; and (2) Failing to Keep Company Records.
A simple and common example of commingling and failing to keep records is where a member uses LLC funds or assets for personal use without documenting the transaction, and with no proof of authorization under the LLC’s articles. The lack of any formal procedure in the expenditure will make plain to any deciding judge that the LLC was no more than a name, and at all times the member and the business were one and the same entity.
These issues are of particular concern for the small business oriented LLC because they tend to operate on more limited budgets, have less management personnel, and, as a result of the primary focus being profits, generally have less time to ensure the LLC is complying with nuanced and complicated business laws. While the best answer to avoid the above mentioned pitfalls is of course what the small business person would most love to avoid, the high risk of inadvertently putting all personal assets at stake requires that they bite the bullet and consult with a business planning attorney. While doing so may serve a frustrating cost, it must be remembered that the above mentioned concerns are only a few of the many an LLC member must be wary of. In the end, the business person’s choice on whether to forgo professional consultation will most likely make the difference between walking away from any future financial disaster, or bringing it home.
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