Maintaining
Separate Accounts
Avoid
Commingling With Personal Accounts
Commingling of
your business/corporate funds with your personal funds can lead to
arguments by creditors of your business that your corporation is being
operated as an "alter ego." If a creditor successfully makes
this argument in a court of law, a court could disregard your corporate
entity and order the attachment of your personal assets for corporate
liabilities and obligations.
Importance
of Separate Accounts
You must set up
a separate banking account for your corporation. All revenues received
from the corporation's line of business must be deposited in the corporate
accounts. There should be no commingling of the corporation's funds
with your personal accounts. Additionally, all expenses related to
the corporation's business must be paid from corporate accounts.
Customer
Invoices
You should also
make all of your invoices to customers payable to your corporation.
This information should be clearly contained on all invoices. You
should also be certain that your merchants account is set up under
the corporation rather than your individual name.
Additional
Funding to the Corporation
If it becomes
necessary for you to place additional revenues in your corporation
from your personal account in order to meet startup or ongoing corporate
expenses, the nature of those payments from you to your corporation
should be clearly documented. Check with our accountant to determine
how those payments should be characterized. There are generally two
choices of how to characterize payments from you to your corporation;
(1) additional capital contributions, or (2) loans from you to your
corporation. Normally, it will be beneficial to treat these additional
payments as loans from you to your corporation. If this is the chosen
character of these payments, you should appropriately document these
payments through execution of promissory notes and perhaps security
agreements.
Seek Guidance
From Accountant
Remember to seek
guidance from your accountant on how to characterize these payments
in your particular instance. Then, you should completely document
the nature of these payments through execution of appropriate documents
such as promissory notes, security agreements, or additional capital
contributions.
Disbursements
From The Corporation
Disbursements
that are made from the corporation to shareholders and others should
also be appropriately characterized. There are generally three ways
that these payments might be characterized; (1) as loans from the
corporation to the shareholders, (2) as payment of compensations,
or (3) as distributions of dividends on shareholdings. Again, it is
important to consult with your accountant concerning your desired
characterization of payments from the corporation to the shareholders.
These choices have significant tax and other legal ramifications
How
Our Small Business E-Book Can Help
Our
SMALL BUSINES PACKAGE provides you
with a number of documents to assist you in appropriately documenting
these payments which you can use once you obtain advice from your
accountant regarding the approiate nature of these payments.
