Sunday, November 24, 2019
(1) Forms of business organisations Essays - Free Essays
(1) Forms of business organisations Essays - Free Essays    (1) Forms of business organisations    Sole Trader:  Business owned by one person (generally quite small) but sole trader can have employees  Counts as self-employed  Individual pays income tax  No need to make financial information publicly available  Sole trader has UNLIMITED LIABILITY  No need to keep formal accounting records  No legal procedure required to end the business  Business seizes when the owner dies    Partnership  "A group of sloe traders"  Company counts as a legal person  JOINT and SEVERAL LIABILITY: all partners are equally liable to all debts. Creditors will sue whoever has the most money ie whoever is most likely to pay  Profits don't have to be shared evenly  Can share the load/responsibilities with partners  Partnerships pay income tax   3 sorts of partnerships:  Traditional Partnership: defined by the Partnership Act 1890. Two or more people working together. Not a formal company but may have a trading name. Relatively small number of partners. Unlimited liability. Each partner is equally responsible for debts regardless of profit sharing ratio  Limited Partnership: guided by the Limited Partnerships act 1907. Composed of a number of sleeping partners who have limited liability. You still need one general active partner with limited liability  Limited Liability Partnership (LLP): governed by the Limited Liability Partnerships Act 2000. Has many features of a company but it is still a partnership. Partnership does NOT end when one of the partners dies. Limited Liability. Used mainly by professional firms eg accountants, lawyers, architects, etc.    The Company  Incorporated following procedures in the Companies Act 2006  Consequences of incorporation:  Separate legal personality. We sign legal documents as a company, we are sued as a company, we enter in to contracts as a company (a legal entity)  Shareholders have limited liability (normally the amount you invested at the start ie the nominal value of the shares)  May have to sign a personal guarantee (you act as a guarantor by providing personal collateral against the debt) if you're a small company  Company may be legally liable   The company is owned by shareholders, run by directors/managers    Public v Private Companies:  Public limited= PLC, Private Limited=Ltd  Specified in the memorandum  PLC still has limited liability  Must have at least 50000 authorised capital, 25% of which is paid up  If you want to be quoted on the stock exchange you have to be a PLC. But not all PLC's are quoted on the stock exchange   PLC has different reporting standards  Any other company is Private(Ltd)     Limited v Unlimited Companies  Unlimited companies are rare  Limited companies can be set up for under 200   Limited to the sum invested or what they have agreed to invest (shareholders are not personally liable)    Advantages and Disadvantages    ADVANTAGES  DISADVANTAGES  Sole Trader  complete control  freedom to make decisions  easy to set up  simple record keeping  Unlimited Liability  Partnership  someone to share load/responsibilities with  more funding to work with  more expertise  Unlimited Liability  Limited Company  Limited Liability  Administratively much more complicated      (2) Partnerships  General Partnership:  an unincorporated business where all partners have unlimited liability. You have joint and several liability   Key Legislation: Partnerships Act 1890 (PA 1890)  Definition (S1): The relation which subsists between persons carrying on a business in common with a view of profit'  The relation which subsists - partnership is a relationship (between people) NOT a legal entity therefore it does not have a separate legal personality  Between persons - a company can be a partner in a partnership, but you need at least one partner with unlimited liability  Carrying on a business - (S45) covers everything (every trade, occupation or business)  In common - carrying out business together  With a view of profit - non-profit organisations eg charities can't be partners. Can have a partnership that fails making profit (doesn't have to have made a profit, just needs to try making a profit)  Partnership starts when you start carrying on business, not when deed of partnership is signed  Different Sorts of partners:  Salaried Partner: receives a salary instead a share of the profits (May or may not have limited liability depending on their agreement. Decided by the courts judgement)  Equity Partner: general partner who receives a share of the profits (and losses)   Sleeping Partner: partner who invests in the business but doesn't actively manage the business. Court decides whether or not the sleeping partner has unlimited liability    Khan v Miah (2001): 3 individuals decided to open a restaurant: bought furniture, equipment, advertised but there was a fallout before restaurant opened and partnership was dissolved - was a partnership formed? (important because if yes, then joint liability for purchases). HELD yes there was a partnership because although they hadn't started trading,    
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.