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SERIES LLC*
The firm practices in the area of Series LLC evaluation,
analysis, drafting and implementation, and has been in the
forefront of Series LLC planning.
Series LLCs are the most sophisticated, and also most
complex, form of business entity. They are very useful in
the following areas:
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Hedge Funds and Venture
Capital Funds
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Real Estate Investment Funds
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Fractional Share Arrangements
for Aircraft
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Oil & Gas Partnerships
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Mergers & Acquisitions
- Extended Family Estate Planning
Chris Riser and
Jay Adkisson are the authors of the best selling "Asset
Protection: Concepts and Strategies" (McGraw-Hill 2004).
Chris Riser is currently the Chairman of the American Bar
Association's Asset Protection Planning Committee.
Caution that Series LLCs are not meant to be a "Poor Boy"
substitute for forming multiple entities where the latter is
warranted. For instance, multiple real estate parcels should
not be placed into the same Series LLC if it would be
feasible to place those parcels into separate LLCs, since
the separate LLCs will provide better asset protection to
each parcel.
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* Please note that no
attorney of the firm has sought board certification by any
state as a specialist in any area of practice, and no
attorney of the firm claims to be a specialist in any
practice area. The firm does not solicit new clients in any
jurisdiction where the firm does not have a member of the
firm licensed to engage in the practice of law.
Article: When One is Better Than
Many: The Series LLC
by Jay Adkisson and Chris Riser
Segregating “dangerous” assets and
businesses into separate entities away from other assets,
especially “safe” assets, is always a good idea from an
asset protection point of view. For example, an individual
who owns a gas station and a rental home should not own both
within the same entity. Further, an individual with a large
amount of liquid assets (cash, securities, etc.) to protect
should not hold those assets in the same entity as a
business.
Best practices would dictate that every
distinct business or major business asset be segregated into
a different limited liability entity. In an ideal situation,
someone with 25 rental properties would have 25 separate
LLCs, one for each property. However, this is not always
practical because of administrative costs and government
fees that must be paid for each LLC. What can such a
business owner do to protect his assets from liabilities
unrelated to those assets in a cost-effective way?
Enter the series LLC. The LLC acts of
Delaware, Iowa and Oklahoma provide for the creation of
separate protected “cells” (‘series’) within one limited
liability “container” (the series LLC) without the need to
create separate entities, thus avoiding the inefficiencies
associated with multiple related entities. [1] The Delaware
LLC Act is the LLC act most often used for series LLCs and
is the act used for discussion purposes in this article.
The Delaware LLC Act provides that the
liabilities of a particular series are enforceable only
against the assets of that series. The Act also provides
that classes or groups of members can be established, having
whatever rights the LLC agreement says they have.
The combination of these two provisions
allows a series to function in many ways as a separate
entity for practical purposes. The series LLC concept is
similar in function to segregated portfolio companies and
protected cell companies designed for the mutual fund and
captive insurance industries in a number of offshore and
onshore jurisdictions.
The Act allows an LLC agreement to
designate series of members, managers or LLC interests that
have separate rights and duties with respect to specific LLC
property or obligations. So, each series can be tied to
specific assets and can also have different members and
managers.
Each series can have its own separate
business purposes. A series can be terminated without
affecting the other series of the LLC. A series can make
distributions to its own members without regard to the
financial condition of the other series.
Most importantly, the Act provides that
debts, liabilities and obligations incurred, contracted for
or otherwise existing with respect to a particular series
are enforceable against that series only, and not against
the assets of the LLC generally or any other series of the
LLC.
In order to obtain inter-series liability
protection, each series must be treated separately and the
public must be put on notice of the liability limitation by
the inclusion of the series limitations in the LLC’s
Certificate of Formation filed with the Delaware Secretary
of State. Records must be kept for each series and the
assets of each series must be held and accounted for
separately. The separate holding and accounting required may
be in the LLC’s records, so long as separate and distinct
records are maintained for each series. However, the safest
practice would be to segregate and separately hold series
assets titled, to the extent possible, in the name of each
series (e.g., “ABC LLC, Series X”).
Federal tax law rather than state law
determines the existence of an entity for tax purposes. In
many cases, the members of each series of an LLC will be
identical. In such cases, it is fairly certain that the
series LLC as a whole will be treated as a single tax entity
for federal tax purposes. On the other hand, if the series
of an LLC have the same members, or identical or similar
membership rights, or similar business purposes, each series
may be treated as a separate LLC for income tax purposes.
In both cases, however, there should be
only one filing with a state’s secretary of state for the
LLC (rather than for the individual series). Furthermore, in
most cases, there should be only one state franchise (or
similar) tax filing.
Practical Uses of the Series LLC
The most obvious use for the series LLC
is to hold multiple parcels of real property in
liability-segregated cells. Owners of small commercial or
residential properties may find the series LLC particularly
appealing. This is especially true in states with high
minimum franchise taxes. Forming and maintaining a number of
separate LLCs may cost several thousand dollars in the year
of formation and several thousand dollars each subsequent
year. Using a series LLC with each property held by a
separate series may save several thousand dollars in startup
costs and another several thousand dollars a year in ongoing
administrative and state tax costs.
Another use for the series LLC is to
facilitate an equity compensation program in a business with
multiple divisions. With each division segregated into a
separate series, the LLC can give the key employees of each
series some sort of equity interest tied to that series only
rather than equity interests in the entity as a whole. This
rewards employees at productive divisions and protects them
from the potential downside of other divisions.
Another use for the series LLC is to
facilitate the combination of business operations of
distinct businesses. For example, rather than undertaking a
traditional merger, two companies wishing to join forces
might form a series LLC, with each company contributing its
assets to a separate series, or with the owners of each
company contributing their ownership interests to a separate
series. The LLC agreement and series agreements could be
drafted to determine exactly which rights and
responsibilities are shared and which are maintained
separately. The series LLC provides a unique and very
flexible framework for this sort of business combination.
Finally, yet another use for the series
LLC is to facilitate joint ownership of aircraft and
watercraft. The flexibility in fashioning series interests
can be helpful in customizing a joint ownership arrangement.
While ownership of a boat by a series LLC should be
relatively straightforward, FAA rules about fractional
ownership of aircraft and entity ownership and operation of
aircraft are quite complex. Expert aviation law advice and
expert series LLC advice are crucial for anyone considering
using a series LLC to own an aircraft.
Do Series LLCs Work In Non-Series
LLC States?
An entity formed in one state cannot do
business in another state unless it is first "qualified" to
do business in the non-formation state by filing an
application with the Secretary of State of the non-formation
state. Usually, this application must include a fee that is
about the same as if you had just formed the entity in the
non-formation state in the first place. However, without
qualifying to do business in the non-formation state, the
entity will not be able to hold real estate or qualify for
licenses, etc., and may later get hit for penalties for not
qualifying.
However, once an entity qualifies to do
business in the non-formation state, it basically becomes
subject to the non-formation state's laws. So, if an LLC is
formed in Delaware, and qualifies to do business in
California so that it can own real estate in California,
then that LLC becomes subject to California law as least as
the California courts will be concerned. Thus, the
California courts will presume that they will apply
California law to all disputes regarding the entity -- with
one exception.
The exception is that as to the internal
governance of the LLC, the courts of the non-formation state
(California in our example) will normally apply the law that
is either designated in the LLC's operating agreement, or
the laws of the formation state (Delaware) if it makes sense
to do so (such as if the LLC is doing business in Delaware
or several other states in addition to California).
Internal governance usually means
disputes between members as to how the LLC is owned or
operated, and does not include disputes with creditors or
third-parties who are not signed on to the operating
agreement. That brings us to the trouble with Series LLCs.
While the non-Series state (California)
might apply the Series legislation of Delaware to internal
disputes among the members, the non-Series state is very
unlikely to apply the Series-legislation as to creditors,
claimants, and other third-parties who did not agree to be
bound by the Series legislation. And, after all, why should
they be bound to the limitations of a Series LLC when they
didn't agree to be bound, and their elected legislature has
not adopted such legislation? In other words:
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The Series provisions are likely to
work between members of the LLC, even if they are all in
California.
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The Series provisions have a slim
chance of working for tenants who sign a lease provision
which says that in the event of a dispute they must
respect the Series limitations (but, considering
California's heavy consumer- and tenant-protection
statutes, I wouldn't bet on it).
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The Series provisions are highly
unlikely to work in the non-Series state against
creditors and claimants who did not sign a consent to be
bound by the Series provisions, and probably none will
have by the time they sue.
The qualification-to-do-business problem
is why corporations, LLCs, and other entities formed in
other states probably don't offer any advantages over those
formed in the state where property will be held or business
conducted, since effectively all you are doing is doubling
your formation fees and non-formation law will apply anyhow.
If you are going to hold property or do business in
California, you are better off using a California entity to
do it, since you'll have to pay the same fees and California
law will apply to it anyhow.
On the bright side, more states are
considering Series legislation (Illinois just adopted it),
and California will probably have it within a couple of
years. But, there are almost no planners who understand
these entities very well -- maybe less than a dozen
nationwide -- and even if the legislation is passed you
might have a hard time finding a planner who is
sophisticated enough to know how they work and how to
navigate around the extremely complex tax issues involved
with these entities.
Note that if even if the Series
provisions don't stand up, the entity should be treated as
an ordinary LLC.
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
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Delaware Series LLC
Provisions --
The provisions of Delaware law that authorize the Series
LLC.
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California Rules Each Cell Taxable
-- An article from the California Franchise Tax Board
that holds that each cell of a Series LLC shall be
treated as a separate LLC requiring an independent
payment (minimum $800) of the LLC annual fee.
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