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Mihevc: Steps required by law to preserve corporate status

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Many family owned and operated businesses in McHenry County are organized as corporations under Illinois law. A family business owner who operates his or her business as a corporation must take the steps necessary to maintain corporate legal status in order to receive the legal protection afforded by Illinois law and to preserve the tax status of the business.

Family business owners typically choose the corporate form of existence based on the limited liability for the equity owners of the business; the decentralization of management; the ability to raise capital; the transferability equity interests; and tax considerations.

These goals are jeopardized if the business fails to follow the steps required by law to preserve corporate status. Contract parties, creditors, personal injury plaintiffs, IRS auditors and other claimants will examine the validity of the corporation to determine whether they can look through the corporate form to reach its shareholders. Personal shareholder liability can be disastrous for the business owner both professionally and personally.

Under Illinois law the shareholders of a corporation are generally not liable for the debts and obligations of the business. However, Illinois courts will disregard the corporate form and hold the shareholders of a corporation personally liable if (1) there is such a unity of interest and ownership that the separate personalities of the corporation and the individual no longer exist; and (2) if the adherence to separate corporate existence would sanction a fraud or promote injustice. Disregarding the corporate entity and holding the shareholders personally liable for corporate obligations is known as “piercing the corporate veil.”

In deciding whether to pierce the corporate veil, courts will focus on a number of factors, which include inadequate capitalization; non-payment of dividends; insolvency of the corporation; nonfunctioning of the officers and directors; absence of corporate records; commingling of funds between the corporation and its owners; diversion of assets from the corporation by or to a shareholder; failure to maintain arm’s length relationships among related entities; and the corporation functioning as a mere façade for the operation of the dominant shareholders.

Many of these factors are difficult pitfalls to avoid for the family owned and operated business. However, sound business practice requires the family business owner to avoid any of these traps in order to maintain the corporate legal form.

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