Awesome thread(s) mont7071, I have a quick question if you don't mind:
For asset protection with an existing corporation, are you able to setup a secondary corp (i.e. subsidiary) and transfer the monies from your original corp to this newly setup corp?
For example, let's say you have a relatively successful IM corp which contains a large sum of business income which is currently held by the corporation. As IM is a risky business, you could potentially get sued by anyone for anything. I guess the biggest issue would be getting sued and potentially losing everything you've earning so far that's remaining in the original corp.
Would setting up a secondary corp and transferring the existing business assets to the new corp (of course covering all the tax obligations to the government as needed) protect you from any liabilities that your original corp may encounter? If your original corp gets sued, and there are essentially no business assets left in this corp (as they've been transferred to the secondary corp), is the person suing able to go after those monies?
Would love to hear your thoughts on this. Thanks man.
Sure, it's done quite often actually, for exactly the reason you suggested. The main legal gotcha is whether you do a "stock" sale, or an "asset" sale from the first company to the new one. There are different pros and cons to consider for each one (beyond the scope of this post and very situation-specific) but generally speaking an "asset sale" is akin to a firesale of all the actual hard assets owned by the first company ( can include intellectual property like patents and brand names), whereas a "stock sale" transaction is more like swallowing the original company whole, which can include things like goodwill and other intangibles, but typically also comes with some higher risk of "inheriting" some of the original company's liabilities and potential liabilities (but can have some great tax and creative financing advantages). For this type of sale, its usually best to consult with an attorney who is familiar with the particular facts of your company
The best example I can think of off-hand is yellow cab companies. With most of these, every individual cab (even if they have thousands) is its OWN subsidiary company owned by the parent company. That way, when a drunk cabby runs down 5 nuns in a cross-walk, the only real asset of the "guilty" company is that one (now damaged) cab, not all the other cars in the fleet, even though they all technically have the same owner. This way the entire company can compartmentalize its risk down to individual cabs and not put all the other assets (other cabs) at risk in case of a lawsuit against one.
Great Q.