FORM A FAMILY LIMITED
PARTNERSHIP
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Understanding
Our goal is to provide each of our clients with as much
information as possible about starting a Family Limited Partnership. As you will see
as you review the following material, there is a lot of information to digest and
consider. Many legal aspects may be complex and confusing. We want you to know we
are available to speak with you about any legal aspects of the formation of your
Family Limited Partnership at your convenience either over the telephone or in
person at the Spiegel and Utrera, P.A., office
nearest you.
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What's a Family Limited Partnership?
The
Family Limited Partnership (âFLPâ) is a limited partnership where family members hold
most or all of the ownership interest in a limited partnership, and it is an important vehicle for
asset protection and estate planning. The FLP can be used to create a powerful strategy for asset
protection and for realizing estate tax and income tax benefits.
The FLP can be formed
so that a husband and wife are each general partners that handle the day to day operations of the
family business or perhaps by a husband and an older son. Also, the FLP has limited partners that
invest, perhaps only nominally, in the FLP. Typically, the husband, wife and children are the
limited partners.
After forming the FLP, all family assets can be transferred into it,
including investments and business interests. After the transfers, rather than such assets being
owned individually by the husband and wife, etc., the husband and wife will own a controlling
interest in a business entity that owns the assets. The family members that are general partners
will have complete management and control over the affairs of the partnership and can buy or sell
any assets they wish on behalf of the FLP. Furthermore, as general partners the family members can
decide to distribute the proceeds from the sale of the assets or for the FLP to keep such proceeds.
Asset Protection from Creditors
An important feature of the FLP is asset protection. If an individual is sued and the plaintiff gets
a judgment against the defendant, the plaintiff/judgment creditor can seize everything owned by the
defendant/debtor. If a husband and wife plan wisely and are partners in an FLP where all they
transferred their formerly personal assets to the FLP, the only asset individually owned is the
interest in the FLP. Such a creditor cannot reach into the FLP and seize the investments and bank
accounts of the FLP. The creditor has no rights to any property held by the FLP. Since title to the
assets is in the name of the FLP and it is an individual that is a partner rather than the
partnership itself which is liable for the debt, the partnership assets may not be taken to satisfy
the judgment.
A creditor may apply to a court for a charging order against an individual
partnerâs partnership interest. When this happens, in the event of an FLP distribution, instead of
the money going to the individual partner, the money goes to the judgment creditor until the amount
of the judgment is satisfied. Cash distributions paid to the partner/debtor could, therefore, be
taken by the creditor. This doesnât mean that the judgment creditor is a partner in FLP, it means
the judgment creditor receives the right to any distributions paid to an individual partner/debtor.
The way to forestall such a scenario where a creditor has obtained a charging order is
that the FLP should have provisions in its partnership agreement preventing distributions to the
debtor partner. Since the partnership would not have any distributions, the judgment creditor wonât
get paid, at least not from that collection method. Instead, the FLP would retain its funds and
continue to invest and reinvest its money.
The Family Limited Partnership is an
excellent vehicle for holding interests in other business entities. Because you want to protect your
valuable family assets from creditors, you do not want the FLP to actively conduct business, as this
will expose such valuable family assets to litigation. Instead, you want the FLP to own shares of
corporate stock or membership interests in limited liability companies (âLLCsâ). Such corporations
or LLCs in turn will hold individual investment properties or conduct business with a specific
business purpose. In this way, exposure to liability is isolated where litigation concerning one of
your businesses will not jeopardize the other businesses and the assets they hold.
Tax Benefits
The FLP has tremendous flexibility. To that end, with family assets held by an FLP, it may be
possible to obtain income tax savings by spreading income from high tax bracket parents to lower tax
bracket children and grandchildren who are fourteen years or older.
The FLP can also be
a vehicle for dramatically reducing or eliminating estate taxes by shifting the value of your assets
out of your estate without any loss of control through a program of gifting limited partnership
interests to your children or other family members. This is done with an estate plan including an
FLP established to hold all of your family assets. Say for example you and your wife are general
partners of the FLP. As such, you would have management and control over your property in the FLP.
Initially, you could make a gift of the FLP interests to your children in an amount equal in value
to the combined maximum estate tax credit (currently $2 million). Later, you could gift limited
partnership interests equal to the amount of the annual gift tax exclusion of $22,000 per child
($66,000 per year).
The value of each gift of a limited partnership interest may be
discounted in order to account for the lack of marketability and the lack of control associated with
those interests. Instead, because the FLP interest cannot be readily sold and because the donee has
no right to participate in management of the FLP, many financial advisors recommend discounting the
transferred interest to reflect its true market value. Depending on the situation and estate
planning aggressiveness discounts in the range of 30 to 50 percent may reduce the estate tax burden.
FLPs versus Family-Owned Dual Class LLCs
Generally speaking, a family-owned Dual Class LLC may achieve the same results as an FLP, insofar as
multiple-member LLCs can be taxed as a partnership and the management and investment aspects can be
isolated the same way as with an FLP. Also, instead of the general partner of the FLP either being
exposed to liability (if a plain vanilla limited partnership, rather than a limited liability
limited partnership) or facing the expense of forming a corporation or other entity that
intrinsically has limited liability, all managing members will have their liability limited to the
extent of the capital they have contributed in exchange for their equity interest. Furthermore, the
Family Owned Dual Class LLC is considerably less expensive than the FLP. Finally, the Family Owned
Dual Class LLC is extremely flexible, as it can be taxed as a partnership or a corporation,
depending on what the members elect. However, it should be noted that because limited partnerships
have been around for years, court cases involving limited partnerships allow planning to be more
certain compared to the dearth of guidance for LLCs in general and Dual Class LLCs in particular.
Thus, you will want to carefully analyze your situation and seek guidance from an attorney or other
estate planning professional for the entity that best fits your family business situation.
Formalities Are a Must
Please be advised that in order to fully realize the asset protection and estate planning potential
of FLPs, it is essential that all business formalities are followed and documented as if the FLP is
a completely independent entity and that there are no family relationships involved, as courts and
the Internal Revenue Service will carefully scrutinize the dealings of the FLP in order to disallow
the tax benefits claimed by the partners of the FLP (see
Kimbell v. U.S.A., Case No. 03-10529
(May 20, 2004 )). This means that all the financial and business records should be carefully
maintained, that funds are not commingled, that any and all agreements are carefully drafted, that
real property and other assets should be treated as FLP assets rather than personal assets, that
transactions should be carefully documented and
bona fide rather than disguised gifts
or sham transactions, that any price paid for in a FLP transaction is fair market value, that any
transaction have a valid business purpose such as asset protection or continuity of family ownership
rather than tax avoidance and that appraisals used to claim a valuation discount are adequately
substantiated.
Careful drafting of FLP documents is crucial, and the partnership
agreement of the FLP must contain certain key provisions designed to protect your valuable family
assets from creditors of individual partners and that family members maintain control over the FLP.
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