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Business Incorporation Lawyers

Have You Considered Incorporating Your Company?

If you go into business, you can operate as a sole proprietorship, corporation, or limited liability company (LLC). If your business has multiple owners, your choice is between a general partnership, limited partnership, or corporation. You can also operate through a limited liability company, but let's consider the LLC the same as a corporation as a liability insulator.

If you’ve thought about incorporating your company, the business incorporation attorneys at The Presser Law Firm, P.A. can assist you. Contact us online or call (561) 953-1050 to arrange a consultation!

The Case Against Sole Proprietorships & General Partnerships

Before we make the case for the corporation, let's make the case against a sole proprietorship or general partnership. Let's begin with definitions. A sole proprietorship is when you operate your business without creating a formal legal entity, such as a corporation or LLC. Operate your business as a sole proprietorship, and there is no legal distinction between you and your business. You become personally liable for every business debt, but personally benefit from every penny of profit.

In these litigious times, why do so many small businesses still function as sole proprietorships? Four out of five small businesses fail within their first several years. The owners of these unincorporated businesses needlessly gamble their family's financial security on the success of their venture. When their business fails – as most do – their owners end up in financial ruin because their business creditors can claim their personal assets. That could have been easily avoided.

General partnerships are a much more risky form of business organization. General partners are jointly and individually liable for every partnership liability. Partners in a general partnership can even more easily lose their personal wealth to business creditors if their business or their other partners have too few personal assets to satisfy the partnership obligations. You can lose your wealth – even if your partner created the liability! Our advice is to never operate as a general partnership.

The major disadvantage with both the sole proprietorship and general partnership then is that they create 'inside-out' liability. Proprietorship or partnership creditors can go outside the business to satisfy their claims from the owners' personal assets. There is also 'outside-in' exposure. An owner's personal creditors can seize business assets to satisfy the owner's personal debts. With the general partnership, a partner's personal creditors can force the liquidation of the partnership to claim that partner's equity in the business.

The Case for a Corporation

A corporation is a separate legal entity distinct from its shareholders. That's why a corporation (or even an LLC) can protect your personal assets from the inevitable debts and lawsuits that may arise against your business. Your corporation is its own legal entity. As its shareholder, director, or officer, you are not personally liable for its debts or lawsuits. If your corporation is sued or becomes insolvent, you'll lose only your investment in the business – your other assets remain safe.

Business owners frequently start as sole proprietorships or general partnerships and become concerned about losing their personal assets only when their business is sued or suffers financial reversal. If you are sued while operating as a sole proprietor or general partnership, it's too late to convert your company to an LLC or corporation to protect your personal assets.

That said, you do have the opportunity to avoid personal liability from future company lawsuits or debts. Incorporate your business with help from a business incorporation lawyer. Transfer the assets of your proprietorship or partnership to the corporation. Your new corporation might eventually pay the debts for which you have personal liability.

No business is too small to protect, because no business is lawsuit-proof. The larger enterprise has more need for corporate protection because it is a bigger target. But no business, no matter how small or seemingly safe, is immune from legal and financial disaster.

Have more questions about this topic? Reach out online to our business incorporation attorneys at The Presser Law Firm, P.A. We can help you assess what the right decision is for your company.

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