What is a Limited Liability Partnership (LLP)?
The following information is designed to give you a better
understanding of what a Limited Liability Partnership is
and to assist you in making the decision of whether it is
the appropriate solution for your business.
Background of
LLP's
Benefits of LLP's
Management of an LLP
Considerations when forming
an LLP
Limiting
Liability
Background of LLP's
Limited Liability Partnerships (LLP's) are the latest business
vehicle and were introduced on 6 April 2001 after The
Limited Liability Partnerships Act 2000 received Royal Assent
on 20
July 2000 .
The introduction date was used to coincide with the Inland
Revenue tax year due to the way that LLP's are taxed. They
may be seen as a hybrid between limited liability companies
and traditional partnerships, in that they offer the limited
liability available to limited company shareholders combined
with the tax regime and flexibility available to partnerships.
Prior to this legislation, it was only a Private or Public
Limited company that offered all of its members limited
liability.
The types of business that LLP's were originally designed
for were professional partnerships such as lawyers, surveyors
and accountants. In many of these cases, though not all,
they have not been able to operate through limited companies
because of restrictions from their professional associations
and the option of using a LLP offers some advantages.
However other businesses may also benefit from using LLP's,
particularly new start-ups who might otherwise have formed
limited companies.
Benefits of LLP's
The
key advantage of a LLP compared with a traditional partnership
is that the members of the LLP (it is important that they
should not be called partners but members) are able to limit
their personal liability if something goes wrong with the
business, in much the same way as shareholders in a limited
company are able to.
Where business owners have wanted to limit their personal
liability in the past, they have normally set up limited
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. LLP's 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.
As
to flexibility, the great benefit is in the ability to separate
out different rights. For example, an entity seeding a new
fund might be given rights to income (and then, only income
from the fund they are seeding). An individual being made
a member, or a retiring member, might also be given rights
to a fixed level of income only, leaving the founders with
the majority of voting rights and rights to assets on winding
up. Some founders or other key team members might be given
a different percentage of, say, voting rights compared to
income rights. All these matters can be comfortably accommodated
in the members' agreement.
Management
of an LLP
Management of a partnership
can be a difficult issue. But in the same way that all partners
participate in management, so can all members of an LLP.
The members of an LLP
are free to agree amongst themselves the relationship between
them, rather as partners do in a partnership, the LLP itself
is a separate legal entity, owned by the members. This means
that the LLP is able to enter into contracts and hold property
and the LLP is able to continue in existence independent
of changes in membership. What
is important is ensuring that the agreement between members
addresses the issue of management, particularly as an LLP
does not have to have a formal members agreement on creation.
We can provide you with a fact sheet on request that may
assist you in developing a members agreement (commonly called
a partnership agreement).
Considerations
when forming an LLP
The
consent of third parties also needs to be born in mind.
Anyone
lending money to the LLP such as a bank may still require
personal guarantees from the members, as they frequently
do with shareholders in a company.
If
you are converting an existing partnership to an LLP the
bank's consent will be required to transfer overdrafts and
borrowings of the partnership to an LLP. Furthermore as
the bank's level of security will be less in respect of
an LLP than a partnership, the bank may require personal
guarantees from the LLP's members. Similarly a landlord's
consent will be required to transfer a lease from the partnership
to an LLP. The extent to which this consent can be withheld
may depend on the exact terms of the lease. Again, personal
guarantees may be required as the landlord's security will
be reduced in respect of an LLP.
Consideration
should be given as to whether any significant contractual
liabilities of the partnership need to be transferred. In
addition the treatment of annuities may cause significant
difficulties preparing accounts on a 'true and fair view'
basis.
Part
of the 'price' to pay for an LLP is that it will be necessary
to publish annual accounts. For some this will be unacceptable.
LLP's 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 may lead to different
profits from those of a normal partnership.
The legislation also requires
that the profit share of the highest earning member is published
if the LLP's profits exceed £200,000. A further tax
consideration arises in respect of overseas operations.
LLP's will be tax transparent for UK
purposes. However, it is unclear whether other jurisdictions
will treat LLP's in this way. It is possible some jurisdictions
will ignore the situation in the UK and treat them as corporations
and tax them accordingly.
Whether
or not to have an LLP raises many issues, but there is clearly
a need to plan ahead particularly if considering converting
to an LLP from a Partnership. At the very least the partnership's
engagement letter should provide for a transfer of the engagement
if that is the way the firm decides to go.
Limiting
Liability
To
what extent is your liability limited? Because LLP's are
relatively new, there is little case history examining the
extent of liability. The following is a guide as to the
potential liability should anything go wrong with your LLP
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
may also be possible that the member who actually gave the
advice 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. This has
not yet been tested.
It
will still be essential for LLP's (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).
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