S-Corp shareholders

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • Acownt4it
    Senior Member
    • Aug 2005
    • 274

    #1

    S-Corp shareholders

    Husband and wife are 50/50 shareholders in 2005. They want to change this to 51/49 with wife the major shareholder.
    Are there any IRS form(s) that need to filed or elections that I need to make in the 1120-S to make this change; or is this like a stock sale and nothing needs to be filed?

    I just want to make sure we don't get a letter from the IRS down the road.
    Noel
    "Some cause happiness wherever they go; others, whenever they go."- Oscar Wilde
  • jerome
    Member
    • Feb 2007
    • 75

    #2
    Have the husband gift some of his stock to his wife so that she now owns 51% of the company. The gift is a tax free transaction and not subject to gift tax since it is between spouses. Nothing would need to be filed with IRS.

    Comment

    • JoshinNC
      Senior Member
      • Feb 2006
      • 1180

      #3
      In the IRS's eyes they collectively own 100% of the shares anyway,

      so a transfer between them would not be a transfer of shares. At least that's my first inclination. I remember reading in a Pub, maybe the 1120 instructions, that the shares collectively owned by a husband and wife are considered to be owned 100% by each.

      Comment

      • ChEAr$
        Senior Member
        • Dec 2005
        • 3872

        #4
        Of course it is a transfer of shares

        Originally posted by JoshinNC
        so a transfer between them would not be a transfer of shares. At least that's my first inclination. I remember reading in a Pub, maybe the 1120 instructions, that the shares collectively owned by a husband and wife are considered to be owned 100% by each.
        At formation two stock certificates were probably issued, each with 1/2 the number of
        shares. To effect this transfer, both certificates are to be turned in to the secretary
        who will void each and reissue new certificates with the correct number of shares to
        each stockholder.

        and of course nothing to be filed with IRS, except the 1120S next time round with
        proper allocations on the K-1's.
        ChEAr$,
        Harlan Lunsford, EA n LA

        Comment

        • JoshinNC
          Senior Member
          • Feb 2006
          • 1180

          #5
          That's what I meant

          Originally posted by ChEAr$
          At formation two stock certificates were probably issued, each with 1/2 the number of
          shares. To effect this transfer, both certificates are to be turned in to the secretary
          who will void each and reissue new certificates with the correct number of shares to
          each stockholder.

          and of course nothing to be filed with IRS, except the 1120S next time round with
          proper allocations on the K-1's.
          No change with the IRS. Sorry for the confusion.

          Comment

          Working...