A question regarding the following:
My client had a short period, maybe six weeks, of non-committal partnering with another individual for business purposes.
My client was the person who started the business last year and made it a going concern. They agreed to do this business together, but their personalities did not make it work. They had no formal agreement, only oral. The other person had contributed about $14,000 during the initial phase, for inventory purchases, so I am wondering how to have my client not have to pay the portion of the other person's taxes on the potential profits derived from the sales of this inventory.
Therefore, how should my client provide the other person the necessary paperwork, so that each reports his portion of the profits. I am stumped about this.
Thanks for your help.
RFK
My client had a short period, maybe six weeks, of non-committal partnering with another individual for business purposes.
My client was the person who started the business last year and made it a going concern. They agreed to do this business together, but their personalities did not make it work. They had no formal agreement, only oral. The other person had contributed about $14,000 during the initial phase, for inventory purchases, so I am wondering how to have my client not have to pay the portion of the other person's taxes on the potential profits derived from the sales of this inventory.
Therefore, how should my client provide the other person the necessary paperwork, so that each reports his portion of the profits. I am stumped about this.
Thanks for your help.
RFK
Comment