A three-member LLC that has been taxed as a partnership has negative equity apportioned across all three capital accounts. The members want to elect S-Corp taxation, which as you all know is a deemed liquidation whose proceeds are used to buy shares in a new S-Corp and distribute those shares to the members, so the S-Corp inherits all liabilities and assets. The members don't have the cash to bring their capital accounts back to zero, so they want to treat the amounts owed as loans from the LLC to each member in the amount needed to offset the negative capital account balances and bring these loans over with them to the new S-Corp structure.
The LLC's partnership operating agreement has provisions for loans made to the partners, with one already outstanding, and the new draft S-Corp agreement affirms that prior partner loans will become shareholder loans upon assumption, so as far as I'm aware, this is perfectly fine. Anyone have any cautionary tales or see a red flag I'm missing?
The LLC's partnership operating agreement has provisions for loans made to the partners, with one already outstanding, and the new draft S-Corp agreement affirms that prior partner loans will become shareholder loans upon assumption, so as far as I'm aware, this is perfectly fine. Anyone have any cautionary tales or see a red flag I'm missing?
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