A complicated question,
Two individuals, one a RE broker (mortgage business, CA) and one an ind contractor. They have an agreement to split expenses as sole props; they are not supposed partners. They just want to split the expenses.
The complication arises because how are they to going convince an auditor that they are sole props when they are splitting expenses? An example, if the main person, the RE mortgage broker, buys a printer on his business CC account, he wants to now have the ind contractor pay for 1/2 of it. I don't think that income comes into play as far as services, it is just the expenses that they are sharing together that the RE M. Broker is collecting from the other person. But is this situation going to fly in the end?
Do any of you see any holes in this?
RFK
Two individuals, one a RE broker (mortgage business, CA) and one an ind contractor. They have an agreement to split expenses as sole props; they are not supposed partners. They just want to split the expenses.
The complication arises because how are they to going convince an auditor that they are sole props when they are splitting expenses? An example, if the main person, the RE mortgage broker, buys a printer on his business CC account, he wants to now have the ind contractor pay for 1/2 of it. I don't think that income comes into play as far as services, it is just the expenses that they are sharing together that the RE M. Broker is collecting from the other person. But is this situation going to fly in the end?
Do any of you see any holes in this?
RFK
Comment