Book Chapter

45 min read

LLC Fundamentals

Introduction

This section provides an overview of the limited liability company (LLC) entity. This section offers farmers a basic understanding of what it means to run a farm operation as an LLC. The following sections give you some tools to help you navigate the process of creating and operating an LLC. It includes the fundamentals of an LLC, a checklist for forming an LLC, and checklist and examples for LLC’s Operating Agreement. In a further look into LLC’s, we’ve also included “LLC Operating Agreement Sample for a Farming Couple,” “LLC Operating Agreement Detailed Sample,” “LLC Operating Agreement Formation Checklist,” and “LLC Meeting Minutes Model.”

LLC Origins

An LLC is a separate and distinct legal entity. This means that unlike a sole proprietorship or general partnership, the law recognizes an LLC as separate from the individual(s) that run it.

Increasing popularity of the LLC

The LLC business entity has been gaining popularity over the past 35 years. Wyoming was the first state to create the LLC option way back in 1977. All 50 states and the District of Columbia have now authorized the organization of LLCs by enacting a state LLC statute. It took a while for the LLC to be generally accepted, mainly because it was not clear how the IRS would decide to tax the entity: As a corporation? As a sole proprietorship? Something else entirely? The IRS clarified its rules for LLCs in the late 1990s, allowing LLCs to elect the S corporation tax status. Ever since, the LLC has been gaining traction and is now one of the most popular entity choices for small businesses throughout the country.

The LLC was created to address a growing concern that individuals running sole proprietorships and general partnerships were personally exposed to liabilities related to their business. Before the LLC came about, becoming a corporation (either C corporation or S corporation) was the only option to protect the owner’s personal liabilities. Yet the corporate structure, as we will get into later, is quite
inflexible and can have unfavorable tax consequences for small business owners. The solution was to create the hybrid structure: the LLC. The LLC entity carries the same flexibility and tax status as a sole proprietorship or general partnership while providing the same level of protection from personal liabilities as the corporation.

LLCs are now considered very stable business entities. Many of the same legal standards that apply to corporations in court are being applied to LLCs. For example, a concept like “fiduciary duty” (which involves determining whether an LLC owner acted in good faith and should therefore be protected from liability) is being applied to LLC owners the same way it is applied to a director or officer of a corporation. This continuity of legal principles between the comparatively new LLC and the timetested corporation leaves most legal professionals comfortable recommending LLCs to their clients

Basic Characteristics of the LLC

Forming an LLC

Implementing Best Business Practices for Your LLC

 

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