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Estate Planning

Overview

Revocable Living Trusts

Will Portfolio

Irrevocable Life Insurance Trusts

Special Needs Trusts

Charitable Remainder Trusts

Asset Protection

Overview

Corporations

LLC's

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Request Info

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Legal Plan

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Benefits

Similarity to Health Insurance

Facts

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Identity Theft Protection

DocuBank

Overview

Accredited BBB Company

DocuBank
New Member Benefit: Manage and Control your Healthcare Decisions

LLC: Limited Liability Company
  1. Services offered in connection with forming your LLC
  2. Potential Creditors
  3. Veil Piercing
  4. Protecting assets from creditors
  5. Comparison Chart Corp v. LLC v. FLP

Veil Piercing

This term is a metaphor for the liability protection offered by an incorporated business entity, such as a Corporation or Limited Liability Company (LLC).

“Piercing” the corporate veil is an equitable remedy created by the courts and now in some states codified in state statutes, which allows creditors of a liability limiting entity (Corp or LLC) to satisfy their claims against not only the entity’s assets, but also the personal assets of the owner(s) of the entity.

Factors for Piercing: 

Alter Ego
Commingling of funds
Failure to observe procedures and formalities

Dominion/Control
Where the member has all or substantially all control over the LLC.  Not enough of an issue to allow piercing by itself especially if proscribed procedures and formalities are followed.

Undercapitalization
Was there enough cash or other assets available to meet the company’s obligations?  Did the company consistently operate at a loss (before depreciation or other non cash expenses)?  Did the owner contribute personal funds repeatedly without properly documenting them for example as loans with a stated interest rate?

Fraudulent Conveyance
Typical fact pattern is where a debtor makes transfers (either by gift or “excessive” payment to a particular person or favored creditor) of some or all of his/her/its assets, usually to a party related to or controlled by the debtor, leaving themselves with insufficient assets from which to pay the attacking creditor.

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This publication is designed to provide accurate information in regard to the subject matter covered.  It is not intended to be relied upon for legal, accounting, tax or other professional advice. If legal advice or other expert assistance is required, the services of a competent professional person should be sought.


 
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