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Information
Sheet 25 - Limited Liability Partnerships
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What
are they? MOST
IMPORTANT FEATURES OF LLPs: Where business owners have wanted to limit their personal liability in the past, they have normally set up companies and any profits made by those companies are subject to corporation tax. Dividends paid by the companies can then be taken as income of the shareholders. LLPs are taxed quite differently in that the profits are treated as the personal income of the members as if they had run their business as a partnership. The taxation of companies and partnerships is very different but taxation should not be the main consideration in choosing a business vehicle. We would be very pleased to discuss the impact in any particular case. LLPs will produce and publish financial accounts with a similar level of detail to a similar sized limited company and will have to submit accounts and an annual return to the Registrar of Companies each year. This publication requirement is far more demanding than the position for normal partnerships and some specific accounting rules (which have not yet been published) may lead to different profits from those of a normal partnership. SETTING
UP LLPs OR CONVERTING AN EXISTING PARTNERSHIP Existing partnerships can convert to a LLP by exactly the same process of incorporation and providing there are no changes in membership or in the way in which the partnership operates, there may well be no impact on the partnership's tax position. Again care and advice needs to be taken before any decisions are made. It is not possible for a limited company to convert into a LLP and there will be a significant legal and taxation impact where a LLP takes over the business of a company. WHICH
BUSINESSES MIGHT WANT TO USE A LLP? |
However other businesses may also benefit from using LLPs, particularly new start-ups who might otherwise have formed limited companies. WHAT LIABILITY MIGHT MEMBERS OF A LLP HAVE IF SOMETHING GOES WRONG? Because LLPs are completely new, there are no decisions yet by the courts where something has gone wrong. This is therefore a hard question to answer but it looks as if the following describes the position as most people understand it at present: if,
for example, a member of a LLP were to give bad advice to a client
and the client suffered a loss as a result, the client may be able
to take the LLP to court and be awarded appropriate compensation; it
is possible that the member who actually gave the advice may also
be required by a court to pay compensation to the client; it is however probable that any other members who were not directly involved in the advice will not have any personal liability. In a normal partnership it is quite possible that they would have had a personal liability. It will still be essential for LLPs (and individual members) who might find themselves in this position to have suitable insurance cover. The other area that needs to be considered is to do with what the law calls unlawful or insolvent trading. In just the same way as company directors can be prosecuted for these offences, members of a LLP can also be prosecuted (and can be disqualified from being a member of a LLP in the future). A
DECISION TO USE A LLP? We
would be delighted to discuss these issues with you and demonstrate what
the impact would be on your business. For
information of users: |