Incorporation Facts 

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Protecting Your Personal Assets

by Janet Attard

Many small business owners incorporate because they believe that incorporating will protect their personal assets if they get sued. Unfortunately, however, when you are both the owner and one of the principal employees (or the only employee) in your small company, you often don't gain much of a liability shield by incorporating. Here's why:

Even though you, as a shareholder of your own corporation, may not be responsible for the debts of the corporation (since the corporation is a separate "person"), there is nothing to prevent someone from suing you personally for actions you performed. For instance, suppose you personally created an ad campaign for your corporation criticizing a competitor. The competitor views the campaign as malicious and untrue and decides to sue. They might sue your corporation and you, personally, as the creator of the ad. While you would not be liable for any settlement the corporation has to pay as a result of the suit, your personal assets could be attached to pay off any judgment the competitor won in its case against you the individual.

In addition, even though you might not technically be liable for the corporation's debts, if you owned a very small corporation, chances are you would have to dig into your own personal bankroll to come up with the money to fight the lawsuit.

Thus incorporation does not necessarily prevent liability problems. One important step you can take to help protect your assets against loss is to obtain adequate liability insurance (business property, professional errors and omissions, and product liability).

The other fallacy about incorporation is that somehow it protects you from paying off any bad debts the corporation incurs. But things rarely work that way. While you are not automatically responsible for the corporation's debts the way you would be responsible for your sole proprietorship or partnership debts, rarely will you be able to get a loan for a new small corporation unless you sign a personal guarantee, which means that you, personally, will have to pay back the loan if the corporation defaults. You may also have to sign personal guarantees on building or equipment lease agreements.

Incorporation Facts

Copyright 1993, 2000, 2004 by Janet Attard. All rights reserved.
The preceding article is excerpted from The Home Office and Small Business Answer Book by Janet Attard. The book contains more than 800 answers to the most frequently asked questions about starting and running small and home businesses. For information about licensing this and other small business and startup content for your site, please send email to sales@businessknowhow.com.

 
 
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