Practical Differences Between Llcs and Corporations
Posted on Nov 18, 2008 under xn--zqqs84h3is.com | editAn LLC, however, works a bit differently. There are no shares. Instead a person buys a percentage interest. Instead of being called a shareholder, the person is called a member. Members own an LLC and shareholders own a corporation.
Creating the business entity is another area where terminology is often abused. To create a corporation, one incorporates by filing articles of incorporation with the relevant Secretary of State. To create an LLC, one organizes it by filing articles of organization with the secretary. It sounds like a simple distinction, but it is important because filing the wrong paperwork can result in the voiding of the business entity, a total disaster.
So, who governs the business entity? In a corporation, the Board of Directors is the governing entity. The number of directors is set out in the bylaws of the corporation and they are elected by the shareholders. They usually serve for a year. An LLC, of course, is completely different. The LLC is governed by the members. If there is more than a couple members, they usually elect a manager who is often a member, but doesn t have to be. This person usually serves for a year as well.
The formalities of the business entity is one area where LLCs and corporations are often distinguished. A corporation is often cracked upon because there are formalities required to keep it functioning. The formalities include proper notice of meetings, holding meetings and formalizing the minutes of same in the corporate book. LLCs do not require such formal function, but that doesn t mean you shouldn t do it anyway. If a dispute every arises regarding the running of the LLC [and it will], you want a paper trail regarding how the entity has been run. Without such evidence, any dispute boils down to a liars contest in court, to wit, a flip of the coin. Hold meetings and document them if you have an LLC!