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Posted by Paul Thomas, CPA on February 13, 2007, 11:19 am
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>I own a business that is structured as a corporation with s-corp
> status with the IRS. A private party wants to buy the business. Now
> of course he can just buy the assets of my corp and form his own corp
> but doesn't want to because off all the licenses and bank accts we
> have. It would be a paperwork nightmare.
>
> So basically I want to sell him my shares in the corporation. That way
> he can just walk in and take over.
>
> My questions are:
>
> 1. How exactly do you sell the shares you own (I own 100%)? What
> document proves they are xfered to the buyer?
You get a lawyer to create all the necessary documents to finalize the sale.
> 2. The corp has s-corp status with the IRS. Profits from the corp are
> automatically tagged to my personal income. How is this changed so the
> IRS sees the new owner of the corp?
It's not automatic, and if you think it was, then you're missing something.
The corporation files an 1120S with the appropriate K-1 forms to report the
net profit and/or loss to the shareholders during the year. If you sell
your shares in mid-year you and the other shareholder will EACH receive a
K-1 reporting your respective shares of net profits (or losses) for the
year. There are two different ways to do this, so consult a CPA or EA
familiar with "S" taxes, ~~~before~~~ you go to the attorney to draw up the
sales agreement, as it should be stipulated in the documents how this get
handled.
FYI: You'll be getting a K-1 that will be prepared by the new shareholder,
so you had better know he's not going to stick you with the profits that
you'll not have any benefit from.
--
Paul Thomas, CPA
paulthomascpapc@bellsouth.net
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