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2 Home Office/Small Busines
Category 7, Topic 19
Message 1 Fri Mar 23, 1990
J.ATTARD [Janet(sysop)] at 21:54 EST
Larry or Phil: I had a question in email from a user who I believe runs a one-
person business and wanted information on the tax benefits of incorporating.
When you get a chance, could you leave some thoughts on when -- from a tax
standpoint--it's beneficial to incorporate-- both for one-person businesses
and businesses that have employees? Are there any general tax rules of thumb
to follow? What about drawbacks for one person corps? --Janet
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2 Home Office/Small Busines
Category 7, Topic 19
Message 2 Sun Apr 01, 1990
L.BENTON at 21:54 EDT
If a "one person" business carries with it ANY business liability I would
suggest to a client that the business be incorporated. First, corporations
offer the limited liability feature. Secondly, having the corporation elect
the S corporation will allow them to avoid the double taxation of regular (C)
Corporations. By the way, that election should be from day ONE of activity
(to avoid certain tax problems. Next, the profits of a S Corporation are
passed thru to the stockholder and are NOT subject to Self-employment (FICA)
tax. At least in NY, if there is only a stockholder doing work in the
corporation, workmen's compensation and disability
insurance can be waived. The only drawbacks, again in NY, is the NYS
Franchise filing fee of $325 and of course the cost of legal fees for
incorporating. I hope that this has been helpful and please feel free to send
me any questions you may have.
Larry
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2 Home Office/Small Busines
Category 7, Topic 19
Message 3 Mon Apr 02, 1990
SEITZINGER [Kent] at 00:56 EDT
You might want to check out the legal category here on HOSB (cat 8). In most
cas4s, limiting liability is NOT a good reason to incorporate a "one person"
business. The reason: even a corporate veil will not protect you from your own
negligence or breach of contract. =Kent=
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2 Home Office/Small Busines
Category 7, Topic 19
Message 4 Mon Apr 02, 1990
PHOTOBASE2 [John Crane] at 21:06 EDT
Kent, what you say about incorporation not protecting a self-employed person
from liability corresponds with what I've been advised here in Florida.
- John
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2 Home Office/Small Busines
Category 7, Topic 19
Message 5 Tue Apr 10, 1990
TAXES at 01:35 EDT
I am also from the school of thought that ncorporation is not of benefit to
the small business. The main reason given for incorporating is to protect
assets if one is sued. Both a corporation and an individual can purchase
insurance to deal with the possiblity of suits. Keep in mind that sales taxes
and payroll taxes are considered "trust funds" (the government is trusting you
to turn over "their" money and as such "trust funds" are the personal
liability of more than 5% shareholders and or/ responsible corporate officers
who may be liable at the federal level for a 300% penalty if the taxes aren't
paid. In most states, a corporate officer may not exclude him/herself from
unemployment coverage but try firing yourself and then try to collect while
still a stockholder/officer in the corporation.
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2 Home Office/Small Busines
Category 7, Topic 19
Message 6 Sun Apr 15, 1990
R.GREENBERG5 [ROY] at 11:42 EDT
TAXES, as long as we're touching on shareholder liability, be aware that at
least in New York, the ten largest shareholders are liable for the wages of
unpaid employees. I haven't looked at that particular section of the law in
some time, but it struck me as so strange, that I never forgot it.
With respect to collecting unemployment when you're a shareholder of the
same corporation, forget it.
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2 Home Office/Small Busines
Category 7, Topic 19
Message 7 Tue Apr 17, 1990
J.ATTARD [Janet(sysop)] at 23:59 EDT
Hmmmm, Roy, does wages also apply to fees of independent contractors... and
how does one find out who the shareholders are if the amount involved doesn't
really warrant hiring an attorney to pursue (small claims court type
amounts.) --Janet
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2 Home Office/Small Busines
Category 7, Topic 19
Message 10 Fri Dec 28, 1990
D.T.HILL at 00:59 EST
I have a question maybe someone can help with... In Aug my partner and I
decided to form a S corp for the asset protection it offers. We filed the
paperwork with the state and IRS. The IRS denied our S corp status for this
year, which I can understand. But since we have filed the paperwork for
incorporation we can not file as a partnership for the entire year, can we? I
am afraid we will have to file half a year as a partnership and the other half
as a corporation. Any ideas? S
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2 Home Office/Small Busines
Category 7, Topic 19
Message 12 Sun Dec 30, 1990
J.SLICKJR [Jack-CPA] at 21:54 EST
D. T. Hill,
If you incorporated and operated the business as a corporation then you
can't file a partnership return, you will have to file a regular corporation
return. While S-corps and partnerships are very similar in operation the
legal status of a corporation takes precedent. So if you don't have a valid
and approved S-election you cannot file as a S-corp.
Jack
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2 Home Office/Small Busines
Category 7, Topic 19
Message 13 Tue Jan 01, 1991
TAXES at 22:07 EST
THE REASON YOU BUY INSURANCE IS TO PROTECT YOU IN CASE OF SUIT. BEING AA
CORPORATION DOES NOT NECESSARILY PROVIDE YOU THE PROTECTION YOU DESIRE; I.E.
PAYROLL TAX LIABILITY IS A PASS THROUGH TO THE SHAREHOLDERS IF NOT PAID. YOU
ARE A CORPORATION AND MUST FILE A RETURN; HOWEVER, YOU CAN CONDUCT ALL
ACTIVITIES THROUGH THE PARTNERSHIP AND BE AN INACTIVE CORPORATION WHICH WOULD
REQUIRE MINIMUM PAYMENT ONLY TO THE STATE OF INCORPORATION.
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2 Home Office/Small Busines
Category 7, Topic 19
Message 14 Wed Jan 02, 1991
B.LERER [Bruno Lerer] at 22:41 EST
The IRS should have approved your application for S status if it was filed
within 75 days of incorporation and allow your corporation to be qualifed as
an S corp. for its first short year (August- December). You would then file a
partnership return for the period January-July and and S return for the rest
of the year. If you were too late in filing (but the corporation otherwise
qualifies as an S), its application should be approved for the 1991 year. You
would then file a C corporation return for the rest of 1990 and an S return
for 1991 and later. Hope this helps.
Bruno
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2 Home Office/Small Busines
Category 7, Topic 19
Message 15 Sat Jan 12, 1991
A.THORPE [Al] at 15:15 EST
I'm new to GEnie. Brad Solomon invited me here. I just wanted to mention
that some creative accounting could be used for the short period from when the
corporation had stockholders or was in business to the end of the year at
which point a S election on Form 2553 could be filed. The mission is to
exactly break it even, if C Corp status is unacceptable (as it would be,
perhaps with a professional service corp- oration). If it had a loss, it
would be unavailble to the S Corp period. If it had a profit, the small amount
of income would get taxed at 34%. I saw a memo from our local IRS complaining
about professional C Corps which ignore this point, and it appears that they
(the IRS) are going to start examining Forms 1120 which look like professional
service corps and which are making use of the 15 and 25% rates.
[C[C[C[C[C[C[C[C[C[C[C[C[C[C[C[C[C[C[C[C[C[C[C[C[C[C
[C[C[C[C[C[CAl Thorpe
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2 Home Office/Small Busines
Category 7, Topic 19
Message 17 Tue Sep 17, 1991
C.BROWN at 22:09 EDT
As a New Non-profit corporation, what tax forms are we supposed to file also
I your year ending is something else than Dec. 31 do you still use it as your
tax year. Help needed? /s{
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2 Home Office/Small Busines
Category 7, Topic 19
Message 18 Tue Sep 17, 1991
JSLICK [JACK] at 23:52 EDT
C. Brown,
The proper form to be filed is determined by what type of non- profit you
are. There are about 3 or 4 different types and each one has a different
filing requirement. As far as year end goes a non- profit can select any year
end they wish. Select something other than December 31, and you will really
make your accountant happy!
If you let me know wich type of non-profit you are, I'll try to steer you to
the proper forms. Generally they are forms 990, but there are different
suffixes that designate the different types of non-profits. Most common are
generic 990's and 990PF's there is also a 990T and there may be another that
I'm not thinking of, let me know in what manner you filed for exemption with
the IRS, and I'll try to steer you to the proper form.
Jack
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2 Home Office/Small Busines
Category 7, Topic 19
Message 19 Wed Sep 18, 1991
BRAD [Brad Solomon] at 00:34 EDT
C.BROWN,
The federal reporting form for most non-profit corporations is the 990. I
say most, because there are many types of non-profit corps - my condo
association is one, and it uses 1120, 1120-A or 1120-H, private foundations
use a 990PF, etc.
State and local filing requirements vary.
Yes, you can file on a fiscal year basis.
Brad
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2 Home Office/Small Busines
Category 7, Topic 19
Message 21 Sat Sep 21, 1991
C.BROWN at 16:54 EDT
Jack
Our non-profit corp filed as a 501 (c)(3) Child Care Organization. We star
started our business year October 1, 1990. We aThanks for your help.
When do we file our tax return. C.Brown
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2 Home Office/Small Busines
Category 7, Topic 19
Message 22 Sat Sep 21, 1991
JSLICK [JACK] at 23:47 EDT
C. Brown,
OK, you will need to file form 990, you'll also need to file the schedule
A that goes with it. As to year-end anything that makes sense. If you do
nothing, your year-end would be September 30. My suggestion would be that
your slowest time would be when the school year ends, which would make it
easier to close the books and get the year-end done. So a June 30 year-end
would make sense. All you need to do is file your first return with a June 30
year-end, which means that the return needs to be filed by November 15th.
Jack
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2 Home Office/Small Busines
Category 7, Topic 19
Message 23 Sun Sep 22, 1991
BRAD [Brad Solomon] at 01:34 EDT
C.Brown,
A 501 (c) (3) organization like you describe would file a 990, unless your
annual gross receipts are normally $25,000 or less. If your gross receipts
are less than $100,000, and your total assets are less than $250,000, you may
be able to file form 990EZ.
Either form is due by the 15th day of the 5th month after your accounting
period ends. Assuming that you are using a fiscal year starting October 1,
1990 (and ending September 30, 1990), it would be due February 15, 1991.
Your state and locality may also have filing requirements.
Brad
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2 Home Office/Small Busines
Category 7, Topic 19
Message 26 Fri Jan 01, 1993
S.BURTCHAELL at 13:11 EST
How can incorporating with a minimum number of employees provide tax
shelters, if any. The goverment keeps sticking there hand in your pocket.
What are the advantages?
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2 Home Office/Small Busines
Category 7, Topic 19
Message 27 Sat Jan 02, 1993
JSLICK [JACK] at 17:38 EST
S. Burtchaell,
Well it depends on your definition of shelter. A C corporation allows a
profitable business to pay tax at lower rates (assuming that the owners have
taxable income also). With an S-corporation the opportunity is there to avoid
some employment taxes. So even with minimal employees there are opportunities
to save taxes. It depends on the businesses objectives whether a corporation
is right for them. However in most cases where a sole proprietorship is
providing all the income for an individual and that income is less than
$20,000 going the corporation route just doesn't make sense. Anything above
$20,000 needs to look at their goals and determine whether a corporation is
right for them or not.
Jack
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2 Home Office/Small Busines
Category 7, Topic 19
Message 28 Mon Jan 04, 1993
BRAD [Brad Solomon] at 00:24 EST
Actually, if the business is basically one that could have been a
sole proprietorship, and performs a service rather than something
like sales (i.e. a store), it could qualify as a "personal service
corporation". In that case, there are no lower rates as a
corporation.
There are other benefits, and you can still pay out the income in
salary (which is reasonable if all the income came from your
services).
Brad Solomon
Marlton, NJ
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2 Home Office/Small Busines
Category 7, Topic 19
Message 29 Thu Jan 07, 1993
S.CONROY1 [Sonsie] at 23:05 EST
Brad, could you expand a bit on the "personal services corporation?"
It sounds like something I should look into. I'm currently operating as a sole
proprietor. Would switching over to this type of corporation benefit me? Could
I cut my 15% SE tax, for example, or fully deduct the cost of health insurance
as a cost of doing business?
Thanks...
=Sonsie=
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2 Home Office/Small Busines
Category 7, Topic 19
Message 30 Fri Jan 08, 1993
BRAD [Brad Solomon] at 04:46 EST
Sonsie,
You don't elect to be a PSC, you are one if certain conditions apply.
As a PSC, you would still be able to deduct health insurance. Instead of SE
tax, both you and the company pay social security, but this comes out the
same. You also have the limited liability that incorporating would save.
Brad Solomon
Marlton, NJ
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2 Home Office/Small Busines
Category 7, Topic 19
Message 31 Fri Jan 08, 1993
S.CONROY1 [Sonsie] at 22:33 EST
Brad, I fit the description you gave...a sole proprietor who offers
services, not merchandise. Is there an IRS reference you could direct me to,
so I could further explore the possibilities? I currently file as a sole
proprietor, and wonder if I could do this other thing.
=Sonsie=
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2 Home Office/Small Busines
Category 7, Topic 19
Message 32 Sat Jan 09, 1993
BRAD [Brad Solomon] at 07:48 EST
Sonsie,
There is no benefit to becoming a PSC - the benefit (if any) is in
incorporating at all. Being a PSC means that any net corporate income is
taxed at a higher rate.
Brad Solomon
Marlton, NJ
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2 Home Office/Small Busines
Category 7, Topic 19
Message 34 Sat Jan 09, 1993
JSLICK [JACK] at 17:44 EST
Sonsie,
Inj addition you also have two tax returns, separation of business from
personal accounts, etc. If you are a PSC then higher tax rates apply to any
income left in the PSC. If you incorporate you need to be aware of all the
rules, its not something to jump at without weighing all the pros and cons.
Jack
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2 Home Office/Small Busines
Category 7, Topic 19
Message 36 Fri Mar 26, 1993
S.CALVIN [Scott] at 20:52 EST
I've been slowly digging my way through this BB, and I'm starting to get the
idea incorporating is probably not going to be worth it for me. I will
continue to explore the idea, however.
I am the sole proprietor of a tutoring/seminar service in New York City. My
gross income is climbing substantially each year, and may approach $40k this
year--after expenses it will be more like $30k. I'm not concerned with
liability issues, and would certainly be classed as a PSC. I don't =have= an
accountant or lawyer to check with on this issue--as a sole proprietor I do
all my taxes myself, and am just now approaching the point where I have
reasonably organized business records.
There's still one little nagging point that will keep my researching whether I
should incorporate: New York City has an =unincorporated= business tax of 4%!
That's on =top= of city income tax. Does anyone have any general comments
about incorporation for a business located in NYC? I know I'll have to
investigate my own situation, but is that 4% unincorporated tax meant to
somehow approximate taxes the city would get if the business were
incorporated, or is it just a gratuitous add-on?
--Scott
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2 Home Office/Small Busines
Category 7, Topic 19
Message 37 Sun Mar 28, 1993
JSLICK [JACK] at 00:00 EST
Scott,
Given the nature of taxes in New York I would expect that if anything
doing business as a sole proprietorship would be less taxing then as a
corporation. However you really do need to talk with someone familiar with NY
taxation to find out if this is true. You wouldn't be a PSC, since the law
only includes specific types of businesses and your's doesn't fall into the
types included. Good luck in deciding which way you want to go.
Jack
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2 Home Office/Small Busines
Category 7, Topic 19
Message 38 Sun Mar 28, 1993
BRAD [Brad Solomon] at 00:05 EST
Scott,
I don't remember offhand what the NYC corporate rate is, but, if you plan to
pay out all (or most of) your corporate income as salary, NYS & NYC have an
"alternate tax," where they do a calculation adding back the principals'
salaries. I vaguely recall either a $15000 or $30000 exclusion, then maybe
30% of the remainder, the result subject to the corporate tax. I haven't done
NY corporate returns for a while - maybe the state alternative tax went away
when the state UBT went away.
Brad Solomon
Marlton, NJ
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2 Home Office/Small Busines
Category 7, Topic 19
Message 39 Mon Apr 05, 1993
S.NEWTON [Steve Newton] at 17:04 EDT
I was a sole prop for 4 years doing consulting work in a "one horse"
consulting firm. In my case there are 2 tax advantages to incorportating.
First, the corportation can duduct medical insuranse expenses. As an sole
prop, I never spent enough to exceed the AGI lid.
Second, the corp. can pay my SEP contribution with pre-tax dollars. In both
cases the board (my wife & I) held formal meetings and voted to extend these
benefits to the employees (me).
To prevent paying corporate taxes - at the end of the year, if there's any
money left in the corp, a bonus is paid to the employees. The corp ends up
with income that equals expenses.
In my case, incorporating works better. (I bought a kit ($35) and did all of
the paperwork myself. The only other cost was $300 charged by the state of
Texas.)
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2 Home Office/Small Busines
Category 7, Topic 19
Message 45 Mon May 31, 1993
JSLICK [JACK] at 22:23 EDT
Well basically what Janet said, limited liability companies are available
as an option in some states but there are caveats that apply. First is that
these companies are so new that case law isn't available yet to determine how
and whether the companies will be treated as something different from a
corporation for tax purposes. In MD the law is so loose that depending on how
your organizing document is worded you can end up with a corporation or a
partnership that doesn't have limited liability.
Second, at least in MD, the documents are so complex and have so many
choices to make that it typically will cost two or more times that of forming
a corporation, and even at that cost there are areas that only the courts will
address, and obviously case law is not to be found yet on those matters.
For my money I'd rather let others do the experimenting and wait for the
issues to be decided before investing the money in a LLC since in most
circumstances a S-corp or a limited partnership can achieve the same goals and
in those entities there are less unknowns. That said though there are certain
situations where a LLC makes sense but those are few and far between right
now. A good Business attorney can help you in making the decision but I'd bet
on the S-corp or limited partnership for most circumstances. BTW LLC stands
for Limited Liability Company.
Jack
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2 Home Office/Small Busines
Category 7, Topic 19
Message 46 Tue Jun 01, 1993
BRAD [Brad Solomon] at 03:08 EDT
You also have to find out your state's treatment of S-corps. F'r'instance, NJ
does not recognize them. If all your income is from your personal service,
you'd _probably_ be better off forming a C-corp and paying out most, or all,
of the profits as salary, than forming an S-corp, and ending up paying the
state's corporate rate on the earnings.
There are considerations, of course, but I just wanted to point out the state
considerations.
Brad Solomon
Marlton, NJ
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2 Home Office/Small Busines
Category 7, Topic 19
Message 47 Tue Jun 01, 1993
A.ZACK [AndyZack] at 23:15 EDT
Hmm. I'm in NJ and didn't even know they didn't recognize S-corps. The
business I'm thinking of starting is a literary agency (I'm a freelance editor
now and have worked in-house at several large publishers). Since I'd be
handling money for clients, it seems to me that incorporating is something of
a must. But I could be wrong. Could someone tell me what a C-corp is? I saw
it on some paperwork today, and then here. What exactly is it?
Thanks.
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2 Home Office/Small Busines
Category 7, Topic 19
Message 48 Wed Jun 02, 1993
BRAD [Brad Solomon] at 01:37 EDT
AndyZack,
A C-corp is just a term used for a normal corporation, as opposed to an S-
corp. I understand, it threw me too the first time I heard it, too.
Brad Solomon
Marlton, NJ
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