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"Bulletproof" Your
Wealth with Family Limited Partnerships and LLC's
By
William
Bronchick, J.D.
The Basics of Limited Partnerships
A limited partnership is a partnership that has at least one
limited partner and one general partner. Most states require
the filing of a certificate with the state in order to be
recognized as a limited partnership.
The limited partners generally have no liability beyond
their contribution to the partnership. If the limited
partnership business fails, the creditor cannot go after the
limited partners for debts (there are a few minor exceptions
to this rule that are not difficult to avoid). Furthermore,
limited partners are not personally liable for wrongful acts
committed by the other partners. In exchange for this
limited liability, the limited partners give up their right
to participate in the control and management of the
partnership.
The general partners run the management of the
partnership. The general partners control the cash
distributions to the partners. The general partners also
have unlimited liability, as in a general partnership.
Creditors of the partnership can look to the general
partners' personal assets if the limited partnership's
assets are insufficient. Furthermore, the general partners
are liable to third parties for wrongful conduct within the
partnership business (e.g., a "slip and fall lawsuit").
Thus, a corporation is usually better for pure liability
protection for its owners.
The limited partnership does not pay taxes as an
"entity." It files an informational tax return to the IRS.
It issues a form K-1 to the partners who include the
partnership income or loss on their personal tax returns.
The partners must pay income tax on all gains whether or not
the profit is distributed.
Creditors of individual partners cannot take a partner's
place in the partnership. A creditor may garnish the
partner's share of income (called a "charging order"), but
has no right to participate in the management or utilize
partnership property. Thus, if a limited partner's income is
garnished by a creditor, the general partner (who should be
under the limited partner's control) can frustrate the
creditor by not distributing income to the partners. Since a
partner is required to pay taxes on his share of the income
whether or not the income is distributed, guess who gets the
tax bill? You guessed it, the creditor! If your assets are
held in a limited partnership, they are virtually
judgment-proof!
The Family Limited Partnership
Let's look at a variation known as a "family" limited
partnership. Suppose that you and your spouse create a
limited partnership to hold your family's liquid assets.
Your limited partnership contributions are all of your
stocks, cash, CD's and mutual funds totaling $300,000. Your
partnership agreement could state that your spouse will act
as general partner with a 2% share (the size of the general
partnership share does not affect the general partner's
power to manage the partnership's affairs). You agree in
writing that your contributions constitute a 98% limited
partnership interest.
The partnership agreement could further state that the
limited partnership shall have the right to buy out the
general partner for his share of the partnership and appoint
a new general partner to replace her (the "you" in this
example is the husband; we are making the wife general
partner because we assume that husband's risk of getting
sued is higher; if the opposite were true, then we would
arrange the partnership accordingly).
Let's say that you are sued and a creditor obtains a
$50,000 judgment against your name. The creditor can attach
your limited partnership interest but only to the extent of
your income as a limited partner (called a "charging
order"). The creditor who attaches a limited partnership
interest cannot participate in the management of the
partnership, and thus cannot force the general partner, your
spouse, to distribute income. As general partner, your
spouse stops paying the limited partners' distributions,
because in her discretion the limited partnership would be
better served to reinvest the capital.
One year later, the creditor still has a $50,000
unsatisfied judgment. Just to top it off, the partnership
sends the creditor a form "K-1" for the creditor's share of
your "phantom" income (In our example, the partnership
assets are worth $300,000. At a 10% annual return, your
share of income would be approximately $30,000 - the
creditor would have to pay income taxes in the ballpark of
$10,000! If the creditor does not pay the tax due on your
undistributed share of income, the IRS will come after the
creditor!). You will be in a strong position to force your
creditor to settle his claim for a fraction of its
value.
Let's say a creditor sues your spouse and tries to attack
your spouse's general partnership interest. At that point,
the partnership exercises its power under the partnership
agreement to buy out her general partnership interest in the
amount of $2,000 or 2%. The partnership then finds a new
general partner. With proper planning, this may not be
considered a "fraudulent" conveyance because the general
partner received full compensation for her partnership
share.
As you can see, the limited partnership is one of the few
entities which affords control over your money, yet still
provides you with asset protection.
"Family" LLC's - To Good to be
True?
Another similar tool for protecting your wealth is the LLC
or "Limited Liability Company." An LLC is like a cross
between a corporation and a limited partnership. All of its
partners (called "members") have limited liability and all
of its members can participate in the management of the LLC
without suffering any liability.
Although the law is not entirely clear in all states yet
(since LLC's are quite new), it appears that any assets you
hold in an LLC are protected from creditors in the same way
your assets are protecting in a limited partnership (i.e.,
the creditor's remedy is limited to a "charging order"). In
addition, since all members are shielded from liability, an
LLC may be an excellent device for holding investment real
estate - the members are protected from tenant lawsuits and
the equity of the members is protected from other creditors.
Unforntunately, there is no "uniform" law which can be
relied upon from state to state (contrast the limited
partnerships which are governed by the "Uniform Limited
Partnership Act"). Time will only tell whether the LLC may
replace the limited partnership and corporation as the
ultimate asset protection tool.
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