Business Questions
Q. What are the benefits of incorporating my business?
A. The principal reason to incorporate is to limit liability of the business owners. This can be done by creating a corporation or a limited liability company (LLC). It is not enough, however, to merely incorporate. The corporation or LLC must be operated as an entity independent of the owners, observe normal business amenities (such as conducting shareholder and director meetings) and carry sufficient insurance to cover the risks of its operations. It is also important to note that business owners will lose their limited liability as to obligations they assume or guarantee, such as bank loans or leases.
Q. How much will it cost to create a California corporation or limited liability company?
A. Creating a corporation or LLC requires both governmental and filing fees and legal fees. The governmental and filing fees are between $180 - $ 220. In addition, corporations and LLCs are assessed minimum franchise taxes of $800 per year by the state of California. Legal fees for a simple incorporation or LLC run between $1000 - $1500. If the owners desire a buy-sell agreement, the cost will increase by between $1000 - $2500, in the usual case.
Q. How quickly can I form a California corporation?
A. We can assist you in forming a California corporation in as few as two days, although there is much higher filing fee for immediate formation. Typically, formation can be effected within 5 to 7 business days without significant additional cost.
Q. How do I know when my business partner and I need a Buy-Sell Agreement?
A. Buy-Sell Agreements are advisable for any valuable business having more than one owner. Such an agreement should provide for the optional or mandatory buy-out of one owner (the Seller) by the others when the Seller dies, retires, or becomes incapacitated. The Agreement should set the purchase price and terms for the buy-out, as well as any restrictions on the Seller’s competition with the business after the buy-out. Life insurance can also be used to fund a buy-sell agreement.
Q. Can a non-competition agreement be enforced in California?
A. In most cases a covenant not to compete cannot be enforced in California unless it is given in connection with the sale of an interest in a business in which the seller has sold and been paid for “good will”, or is necessary for the protection of trade secrets. Good will is generally understood to be the tendency of the customers of a business to continue to patronize it, an intangible asset which is over and above the value of the tangible assets of a business.
Real Estate Questions
Q. Do I need a lawyer when I sell or buy a house?
A. In California, unlike many states, most purchases and sales of residential single family homes are negotiated and documented without either party being represented by legal counsel. While in most cases, neither party regrets this, there are many situations where consulting a lawyer will help a party avoid serious problems. A lawyer should review the real estate broker prepared offer and acceptance, especially when the broker represents both the buyer and the seller. A lawyer should review the preliminary title report, especially the exceptions to title. This type of limited involvement by a lawyer can help the party represented avoid significant loss and aggravation in what is, for most people, their biggest financial investment.
Q. Should my spouse and I hold title to real estate as joint tenants?
A. We generally recommend against two or more persons holding title to property as joint tenants, for several reasons. When one joint tenant dies, the surviving joint tenants succeed proportionally to the interest of the deceased joint tenant in the property they collectively owned. While this sounds like a convenient way for a husband and wife to avoid probate when one of them dies, it can lead to many problems. First, because joint tenancy property automatically passes to the surviving joint tenant, the interest in the property of the first joint tenant to die, will not pass as the joint tenant provides in his or her will or trust unless the named beneficiary and the surviving joint tenant are the same person. Also, if both joint tenants die in a common accident, there will need to be two probate proceedings (one for each joint tenant’s half). Joint tenancy for community property is not desirable because it could, mistakenly, be treated as separate property and thus be deprived of a step up in tax basis on death for both halves. Accordingly, in most cases, community property should be held by a husband and wife as community property and not in joint tenancy. Note that under recent California legislation a husband and wife may now hold title to real property as community property with a right of survivorship. This method of holding title has the advantage of the survivorship feature of joint tenancy without jeopardizing the availability of the double step up in basis applicable to community property.
Q. Should my spouse and I hold title to investment real estate as individuals or through an entity, such as a corporation or LLC?
A. In order to limit liability for personal injuries suffered on the premises, we recommend that individuals form Subchapter S corporations or LLCs to hold investment real estate.
Estate Planning and Administration Questions
Q. What does probate cost?
A. The biggest component of the cost of probate is the fees payable to the personal representative of the estate (i.e., the executor or administrator) and that representative’s attorney. In California, the personal representative and the representative’s attorney are each entitled to a statutory fee based on the value of the estate. That fee is calculated as 4% of the first $100,000 of value, 3% of the next $100,000, 2% of the next $800,000, 1% of the next $9,000,000 and 1/2% of the next $15,000,000. For example, a $750,000 estate will generate a total of $36,000 in fees, $18,000 to the attorney and $18,000 to the representative. In many cases, a family member acting as the personal representative will waive or reduce his or her fee. In addition to these statutory fees, there are probate costs, including the filing fee (which is also linked to the size of the estate and varies slightly from county to county; in Los Angeles County the minimum fee is $271.50, and the fee on a $750,000 estate would be $619); publication costs (usually about $400); and the fees of the court-appointed appraiser of estate assets (called a Probate Referee), which are 0.1% of the value of the assets appraised (e.g., if the assets appraised are worth $750,000, the referee’s fee would be $750). Accordingly, the total cost for the probate of a $750,000 estate could be as much as $37,769.
Q. Will the property taxes on my house increase if I transfer it to a living trust?
A. The transfer of property to a revocable living trust will not cause a Proposition 13 increase in property taxes. The key to avoiding such problems is to properly prepare and submit a Preliminary Change in Ownership Form with the trust funding deed to the county recorder.
Q. If I have a living trust, do I still need a will?
A. Yes. It is important to have a “pour over” will under which any assets not transferred to the trust during the settlor’s lifetime can pass to the trust through probate if necessary. The “pour over” will is a safety net to take care of overlooked assets and assets which, by their nature, cannot be transferred to a trust during a person’s lifetime, such as claims for wrongful death.
Q. How do I assure that my life will not be prolonged by medical technology if I am terminally ill?
A. In California, the document by which a person protects against unwanted prolongation of the process of dying is called a Power of Attorney for Health Care (PAHC). In a PAHC a person (1) appoints a heath care agent (who is usually a spouse or other family member) to make heath care decisions if the person is so incapacitated as to be unable to communicate and (2) expresses his or her wishes about the use of medical technology to prolong life if the person cannot recover or is terminally ill.
Q. How much will it cost for my spouse and me to set up a living trust?
A. The typical estate plan which includes a living trust, also requires wills for both the husband and wife. We also recommend considering creation of Powers of Attorney for Heath Care and for Asset Management. An important component of creating a living trust is funding it with most of the settlors’ assets. Depending on the complexity of the estate plan and the extent of trust funding assistance settlors need, the cost will generally run from $1500 - $3500.
Q. How large an estate do I have to have to worry about death taxes?
A. For those who die in 2005, no federal estate tax or California inheritance tax is imposed on a taxable estate of $1,500,000 or less. Lifetime gifts of the decedent in excess of the annual gift tax exclusion are added back to the decedent’s estate to compute its size. Between 2006 and 2009, the applicable exclusion will gradually increase to $3,500,000. The federal estate tax is repealed for decedents who die in 2010, but in 2011, the federal estate tax, as it existed prior to 2001, is reinstated. President Bush has promised to sign permanent repeal of the estate tax if it is passed by Congress.
Q. How likely is it that federal death taxes will be permanently repealed?
A. President Bush, and many Republican members of Congress have pledged to repeal the federal estate tax (which they call the death tax) during the 109th Congress which begins in January of 2005. Total repeal of the estate tax will, however, exacerbate the growing federal deficit about which many members of Congress profess concern. It remains to be seen which of these conflicting interests will prevail in the 109th Congress. It is possible we will see a compromise under which the estate tax is retained for only the largest estates (perhaps those over $10 Million).
Q. What is the “step up in basis” on death?
A. Under current federal estate tax law, at death all of a decedent’s property receives a new “stepped up” basis equal to its fair market value on the date of the decedent’s death (or in some cases on a date which is six months thereafter). This means, for example, that if you inherit stock from your mother worth $1,000,000 at her death, which she bought for $100,000, then the basis of the stock in your hands is $1,000,000. If you sell it for that price, there will be no capital gain tax.
Q. If federal death taxes are repealed, will I still need to do estate and tax planning?
A. Yes. Wills and trusts will still be needed to assure that your property goes to those you wish to receive it. Trusts will still be needed to avoid costly and time consuming probate proceedings. In the event of federal estate tax repeal, there will likely be only a limited ability for a step up in basis. This means that in many cases, a beneficiary will take property from a decedent with its original basis and, accordingly, will have greater potential liability for capital gains tax on sale of that property. In that case, your will and trust can direct how the benefits of any available step up in basis is to be allocated among your beneficiaries.
Q. I received a letter from a company saying it would help me collect unclaimed property from the State of California for a 20% commission. Is this a good deal?
A. No. This web site maintained by the California State Controller allows you to check for unclaimed property yourself and provides instructions on how to submit a proof of claim. There is no charge for dealing with the State Controller’s office. So we suggest that you do it yourself and save your money.
Our Lawyers Represent Individuals and Businesses Throughout Los Angeles and Across California
At Aikenhead, Cipes & Supanich we represent individuals and businesses throughout greater Los Angeles and across California (CA). From our centrally located office in downtown Los Angeles, we represent people in Los Angeles (LA), Beverly Hills, West Hollywood, Santa Monica, Culver City, Van Nuys, Universal City, Sherman Oaks, Burbank, Glendale, South Pasadena, West Covina, Riverside, San Bernardino, Orange County, Santa Ana, Newport Beach, Ventura, Santa Barbara, and many other areas surrounding Los Angeles, California. We also represent those in other parts of California, such as San Francisco, San Diego, Sacramento, Santa Cruz, San Jose, Oakland and other areas. Please do not hesitate to call us for a consultation.