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Buy-Sell Agreements are designed to
ensure ownership succession upon certain
triggering events such as the death,
divorce, bankruptcy, disability, or
retirement of a partner, or the
sale
of interests by one or more business
owners. Buy-Sell Agreements are
effective at providing a set of rules
and procedures for resolving shareholder
or
partner disputes, providing
liquidity to the
heirs of a deceased partner,
protecting any S election made by the
business, and protecting the business from
a shareholders
creditors.
TYPES OF BUY-SELL AGREEMENTS
Cross-Purchase Agreements
●
Cross-purchase arrangements allow or
require the remaining shareholders to
purchase the shares of any shareholder
leaving the company by virtue of death,
disability or other triggering events.
Cross-purchase agreements are typically
funded with life insurance policies
owned by each shareholder on the lives
of the other shareholders. This is an
unduly cumbersome arrangement when there
are more than just a few shareholders.
● Upon the
sale of shares under a cross-purchase
agreement, the selling shareholder will
have a capital gain. However, if the
event triggering the buy-sell is the
death of the shareholder, the heirs will
have a stepped up basis in the
decedents shares and may avoid
recognizing a capital gain.
Redemption Agreements
●
Redemption agreements allow or require
the company to buy the shares of a
shareholder upon certain triggering
events. Redemption agreements are
typically funded with life insurance
policies owned by the company on the
lives of the shareholders, unless the
company has sufficient cash reserves
to dedicate a sinking fund to the
redemption of the shareholders shares.
●
Redemption agreements are simpler to
administer than cross-purchase
agreements because the company is the
only policy owner.
● Under a
redemption agreement, the selling
shareholder typically will report the
sale as a capital gain. Again, if the
triggering event is the death of the
shareholder, the heirs will enjoy a
stepped up basis, and may not recognize
any capital gain.
● There are
certain
tax
pitfalls related to the
redemption agreement. If the agreement
is not structured and implemented
properly, it is possible for the IRS to
characterize the redemption as a
dividend. In that case, the departing
shareholder would likely be required to
report the redemption amount as ordinary
income. With proper planning and
documentation, this can be avoided.
CONTACT US
To
speak to an attorney about preparing a
new buy-sell agreement or ensuring that
a transfer of shares complies with an
existing buy-sell agreement, please
contact us
here or call us at
713.650.9700.
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