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Protecting Real Estate Investments with a Series LLC
Recent legislation, combined with protections historically available in
Texas, make Texas one of the best locations in the U.S. for protecting
assets from creditor claims.
Texas has now joined seven other states in permitting the creation of a series
limited liability company (LLC). A series LLC permits one LLC to be created
with multiple “cells” or series. Each series serves as a sub-LLC and permits
the LLC to serve as an umbrella entity with the ability to partition its
assets and liabilities among the various series or cells. Each sub-LLC can
have different assets, liabilities, and managers. In other words, each
sub-LLC performs like a separate entity. A firewall is created between each
series with the profits, losses, and liabilities of each series legally
separate from the other series. The structure is similar to a parent
corporation with subsidiaries but without the expense, formalities, and
potential heavy taxation.
For a real estate investor, this can have substantial positive effects.
Assume, for instance, an investor owns four duplexes and a couple of single
family residences. She has heard some of the horror stories about creditors
and wants to protect her assets as much as possible.
Prior to the series LLC, her choices involved creating multiple entities,
such as LLCs, to hold her property or forming one such entity and placing
all of the properties in one LLC. If she places all of the properties in one
LLC, a claim arising out of one of the properties would place all of the
properties at risk because they are all owned by one LLC.
If the investor forms six separate LLCs, the liability arising from each
property can be contained within each LLC, but the investor has the cost of
creating and maintaining six separate entities.
With a series LLC, the investor can create one LLC with six series or
sub-LLCs and place one property in each series. The risks associated with
each investment property can now be contained within each of the six series.
The Texas statute is very new. It became effective in September, 2009. The
statute provides that the liabilities of series are enforceable only against
the assets of the series and not against the parent LLC generally, if
(a) the owner keeps separate accounting records for each series and accounts
for the assets of a series separately from the assets of any other series or
the LLC generally,
(b) the operating or company agreement states the liability limitations, and
(c) the certificate of formation gives notice of the limitations on
liability.
Each series may in its own name sue and be sued, contract, and hold title to
its assets, including real estate and personal property.
Within the recent past, Texas law was also modified to limit a creditor to a
charging order against an ownership interest in an LLC and preventing the
creditor from actually taking an investor’s interest in an LLC. I know this
concept is confusing. Let me explain by contrasting the difference between a
creditor claim against the ownership interest of an investor in a
corporation and an LLC.
If an investor owns an interest in a corporation and a creditor gets a
judgment against the investor personally, the law allows the creditor to
actually take the ownership interest of the investor in the corporation.
That means that the creditor becomes a shareholder in the corporation and is
now entitled to the significant legal protections the law affords any
shareholder. This could include the right of the creditor to force the
dissolution of the corporation placing all six of our hypothetical
investor’s properties within reach of the creditor.
With an LLC, the creditor cannot actually take the investor’s LLC ownership
interest but is limited to a charging order. A charging order is a court
order which states that if there are any distributions from the LLC to the
investor-owner, the creditor gets the distribution. With a charging order,
the creditor will probably not be able to actually force an distribution or
a dissolution of the LLC. He simply has the right to receive the
distribution if one is made.
Assuming that the LLC is controlled by friendly parties, there will likely
be no distributions made while the creditor has a charging order.
Additionally, once the creditor obtains the charging order the creditor may
have to pay taxes on money that the LLC earns, even if it was not
distributed. This is a serious problem for a creditor with a charging order.
These two changes in Texas law, along with significant tax advantages of an
LLC and the reduced record keeping and formalities required to maintain an
LLC, make it hands down the entity choice for small real estate investors
and perhaps for some larger deals.
Since series LLCs are very new and we have no court interpretations of the
law. Until the courts have reviewed and construed the new law, we will not
know exactly how the courts will view these entities.
There are also unresolved issues concerning taxation. However, it is clear
that these entities can provide substantial benefit to investors and will
likely become very popular as real estate investment entities.