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LLCs in Iowa August 17, 2010 Des Moines, Iowa By Jason M. Stone, J.D., LL.M. JasonStone@DavisBrownLaw.com. Background. History of LLCs Originated outside the US First US LLC act passed in 1977 (Wyoming) First Iowa LLC act passed in 1992 Check-the-box Regulations adopted in 1997
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LLCs in Iowa August 17, 2010 Des Moines, Iowa By Jason M. Stone, J.D., LL.M. JasonStone@DavisBrownLaw.com
Background • History of LLCs • Originated outside the US • First US LLC act passed in 1977 (Wyoming) • First Iowa LLC act passed in 1992 • Check-the-box Regulations adopted in 1997 • 8,443 LLCs were formed in 2009 while only 2,577 corporations and only 418 limited liability partnerships were formed in 2009
New Act • Generally • Passed: 2008 • Effective: January 1, 2009 for LLCs formed on or after that date; January 1, 2011 for all others • Source: Based upon the Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act • Codified: Chapter 489 of the Iowa Code
New Act • Structure • Unlike prior acts, which drew from corporation law for guidance, the new act draws heavily from partnership law • It’s a default statute and can, except in limited circumstances, be varied by contract
New Act • Material Changes • Change in terms (e.g. Certificate of Organization vs. Articles of Organization) • Shelf LLCs • Change in the way votes are cast (per capita vs. per capital) • Change in the way distributions are made (per capita vs. per capital)
New Act • Material Changes • Elimination of statutory apparent authority for members in member-managed LLCs (Statements of Authority) • Clarification of fiduciary duties • Modifications to information provisions • Changes to transfer provisions
New Act • Material Changes • Changes to dispute resolution provisions • Changes to dissolution provisions
What does it all mean? • If you have a written operating agreement – not much. • If you don’t have a written operating agreement – you are in for big and potentially unwanted changes.
What do I do? • Adopt an operating agreement if you don’t already have one. • If you already have one, review it.
What to consider in when adopting or revising an operating agreement • Contribution provisions – particularly additional capital contribution provisions • Management structure • Information and reporting provisions
What to consider in when adopting or revising an operating agreement • Duties and obligations (competition and confidentiality) • Distribution provisions • Tax provisions • Dispute resolution provisions • Transfer provisions • Merger and Integration Clause • Amendment provisions
Tax Aspects of LLC’s Dave Watson August 17, 2010
Dice Holdings, Inc. Sarbanes-Oxley Project 2008 Tax Aspects of LLC’s Flow-through taxation - Compare to C-Corporations ▪ Income taxed at C-corp level ▪ Taxed again when distributed from corp i.e. dividends ▪ Losses trapped in C-corp ▪ Only offset by future income, if any 2
Dice Holdings, Inc. Sarbanes-Oxley Project 2008 Tax Aspects of LLC’s Flow-through taxation, cont’d. - One level of taxation for LLC’s ▪ Income not taxed twice ▪ Losses useable by members to offset other taxable income - Exception for passive members 3
Dice Holdings, Inc. Sarbanes-Oxley Project 2008 Tax Aspects of LLC’s Flow-through taxation, cont’d. - Compare to S-Corporations ▪ S-corps also have flow-through taxation ▪ Per/share, Per/day allocation - Special allocations of profits/losses available for LLC’s ▪ Possible shield from Self Employment tax 4
Dice Holdings, Inc. Sarbanes-Oxley Project 2008 Tax Aspects of LLC’s Debt used as basis - Allows members to take losses > capital contribution - At risk limitation - Passive activity limitation 5
Dice Holdings, Inc. Sarbanes-Oxley Project 2008 Tax Aspects of LLC’s Ownership Issues - Limit on types of S-corp owners ▪ No limit on types of LLC owners - Must have ≤ 75 S-corp shareholders ▪ No limit on number of LLC owners 6
Dice Holdings, Inc. Sarbanes-Oxley Project 2008 Tax Aspects of LLC’s Traps - Prior losses taken with help of debt may create phantom income later - All profits from trade or business may be subject to self employment tax - Corporate merger candidates could create taxable event 7