Contractor's
Plain English Legal Guide
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Chapter
One
What Do You Need to Start a Construction Business?
The construction industry is
filled with small builders, remodelers, and subcontractors —
businesses that can’t easily afford $150 to $200 an hour to hire a
lawyer to help them start up or to handle their day-to-day legal
problems. But in modern America, legal problems are like snakes in
the swamp — you might not see them, but you know they’re there.
This book is intended to
help you get through the swamp without having to hire a $150-an-hour
guide. It’s written to help small builders, subcontractors, and
remodelers recognize and manage the legal tasks, which, with a
reasonable amount of time and thought, they can do for themselves.
Some of those legal tasks aren’t as difficult as you might think. In
many cases, they are tasks a lawyer would simply hand off to his
secretary. However, it won’t be the secretary’s hourly rate you’ll
be paying. If you can read and understand the material for a
contractor’s licensing test, you can certainly read and understand
this book — and you can probably do all the tasks the lawyer’s
secretary can do.
Another, equally-important
purpose of this book is as a “heads-up” for those situations where
you do need a lawyer — or some other kind of professional,
like an accountant, an insurance specialist, or a financial advisor.
When you need a professional, you need to get one before it’s
too late. It’s a lot easier to pull someone out of a swamp when he’s
only ankle-deep. When he’s in up to his neck, it’s a major job, if
not impossible. Wait too long and sometimes all that a professional
can do for you is collect a big fee.
Although, by using the
Contents and the Index, you can find answers to your questions in
this book without reading the entire book, I hope you do read it
all. The book will give you a lot of general information that should
help you stay out of lawyers’ offices as much as possible — not just
by telling you what you can do yourself, but by telling you where
the snakes in the swamp are hiding. Forewarned is forearmed. If
it’s some-thing that can happen to you, it’s probably already
happened to someone else. If you know how it happened to them, you
can make sure you don’t go there. Why learn the expensive way?
And when a particular
problem comes up in the course of your business, before you call
your lawyer, check first to see if it’s covered in this book. I’ve
tried to cover most areas of trouble. There’s a good chance I’ve
covered that one. If so, maybe I’ve saved you a lawyer’s bill!
And now on to the subject of
this chapter.
You want to start up your
own construction business. You want to be the one who calls the
shots and who makes the money. But even though you might not choose
it, you’re in a partnership. Your partner is the government. It
doesn’t pound nails for you, it doesn’t sell jobs for you, it
doesn’t do any of the worrying or suffer headaches for you — but if
you ever make any money, the government will be right there to share
with you. Sometimes you can get a government agency to help you out,
and we’ll cover that later in the book. But at startup time, you
have to consider and follow their rules.
There are many requirements
for a startup contracting business, and they come from several
different levels of government. In this chapter we’ll cover the most
important ones, whether you’re starting out alone at your kitchen
table or setting up a corporation.
Can You Work Out of
Your Home?
There’s one major advantage
small construction companies have over the larger companies: It’s
easier for a smaller company to keep its over-head costs low by not
doing things like renting office space and hiring a lot of office
staff. Many small construction businesses start out in a work-shop
behind the garage, in the garage itself, in an extra bedroom, or off
the kitchen table.
By using modern technology,
a small construction company can do without all kinds of office help
like receptionists, accounting clerks, and even salespeople and
secretaries. Instead, you can use a telephone answering machine with
voice mail, a pager, and a computer with spread-sheets and word
processing programs.
Possible Zoning Problems
One possible problem with
working out of your home is your local zoning code. Some communities
restrict what kind of business (or how large a business) can be
operated in a home or in a residential area. Remember that the
zoning definition of “home” includes the barn and the garage and any
other kind of outbuilding.
It’s how the property is
zoned, not whether or not anybody is actually living in it, that
makes the difference. You could have a vacant lot, but if that lot
is zoned as residential, it’s intended to be used as somebody’s
home. So whether you could put a trailer or a tool crib on that lot
and use it as your permanent office would depend on what the local
zoning laws say about what can be done in a home besides living in
it.
Most zoning codes do
allow some in-home businesses, but restrict the kind of business.
The goal of these restrictions is to avoid the kind of traffic
coming into residential neighborhoods that businesses, such as
retail services or a business with several employees, would
generate. The zoning laws especially want to keep businesses out of
residential neighborhoods that use heavy, noisy equipment — such as
construction businesses — that would disturb people in their homes.
The zoning laws also often
restrict the kind of advertising a home business can do to indicate
its presence. The idea is that commercial advertising in a
residential area lowers property values. That’s why zoning laws
typically either limit the size of a business sign or don’t allow
one at all.
So before you set up shop in
your home, you should check with your local municipality to see if
it’s lawful to run your kind of business there. You should also plan
on being discreet. Many communities don’t enforce their rules until
the neighbors complain. If all you’re doing in your
business-in-your-home office is making and receiving phone calls and
sending and receiving mail, chances are there won’t be complaints.
But if you have lumber delivery trucks rolling in and a steady flow
of clients parking on the street, chances are you’ll be hearing from
city hall.
What About Deducting the
Home Office?
Until 1999, the IRS had a
nasty little surprise for contractors who worked out of their home.
The IRS said that if the office located in your home wasn’t your
principal place of business, you couldn’t deduct it as a home
office. What, you ask, is your principal place of business if you’re
in the construction industry? The job site, the IRS answered.
One of the things that made
this principal place of business rule so illogical was that if you
went out and rented an office, you could deduct it even though you
were doing most of your business at job sites, not at your office.
Under pressure from small
businesses, the IRS changed its rule, and, starting in 1999, the
principal place of business rule was changed to allow a home office
deduction if the business’s principal administrative and management
tasks took place there.
Even under the new rules,
you need a place dedicated to the business before you can deduct a
home office. That has to be absolutely the only thing you do
there. If you work off your kitchen table, that table will never
qualify for a deduction. Also, you can’t use your home office to
create a business loss. In other words, you can only write off home
office expenses against profits.
If you’re a sole proprietor
and you want to write off a home office, you must fill out and file
a Form 8829 along with your Schedule C. It’s a complicated form. If
you use it, first ask for IRS Publication 586: Business Use of
Your Home.
What Do You Need From
the IRS?
There are as many horror
stories about dealing with the IRS as there are about going to the
dentist. I think that’s a shame, for two reasons. First, those
stories can scare people out of doing some really easy things that
they need to do, because they think they will be too complicated to
handle on their own. Second, when people get into trouble, they
think they’re doomed. They often become paralyzed with fear and
don’t deal with the situation. Now, sure, I know some people have
had some genuinely night-marish experiences with the IRS, but I
think those are statistically rare. I also think that, in some of
these horror stories, the person telling the story doesn’t always
include every single fact. Sometimes the situation wasn’t quite as
one-sided as their story suggests.
My experience with the IRS
(knock on wood) is that mostly the agents want to help you work out
your problem.
There’s a very useful
publication, available free from the IRS, that you should get right
away. It’s Publication 334: Tax Guide for Small Businesses.
It’s available at IRS offices, or they’ll mail one to you if you ask
for it. You can also phone them at 1-800-829-3676 to ask for the
publication.
What About a Taxpayer
Identification Number?
The first thing you need
from the IRS is a number, although you may already have it. You’ll
have lots of forms to file with the IRS — and the IRS keeps track of
those forms with numbers, not names, so it’s important to get the
right number to put on your tax forms. You’ll need some kind of
taxpayer identification number — what they call a TIN — to
put on your forms so those forms don’t get lost. The phrase taxpayer
identification number includes several different kinds of numbers.
You may already have all the taxpayer identification you need: your
social security number. Depending on your situation, you may not
need anything else. Here’s how to tell if you can use your social
security number, or if you need to apply for a TIN.
For a Sole
Proprietorship
If you’re not a partnership
or a corporation, and if you have no employees, you can simply write
your social security number on those lines on your 1040 form,
Schedule C and on your quarterly self-employment income reports that
ask for your EIN (Employer Identification Number).
For a Partnership
Partnerships don’t have
social security numbers, so your partnership will need the kind of
taxpayer identification number called an EIN (Employer
Identification Number). Your partnership TIN is an EIN. Got that?
All joking aside, you’ll need an EIN for your partnership even if
you don’t have any employees.
Without an EIN, all the
income the partnership earned would be credited to whichever partner
used his or her social security number on the partnership reporting
forms. That partner could owe a lot of extra tax to the IRS, while
the other partners get a free ride!
To get an EIN, fill out an
IRS Form SS-4 and mail it to the IRS. The IRS will assign a number
to the partnership and mail it back.
For a Corporation
Corporations must have an
EIN even if they don’t have employees. Fill out the SS-4 form, send
it to the IRS, and the IRS will assign an EIN number to your
corporation and mail it to you. This number will be only for the
corporation, not for the shareholders — even if there’s only one
share-holder.
For Any Business That
Has Employees
If your business has
employees, it’ll need an EIN even if the business is a sole
proprietorship. To be sure your reports and payments get credited at
the right places, you’ll also need your employees’ social security
numbers. You get those by asking your employees to fill out W-4
forms for you. The IRS will mail all of these forms to you if you
just call and ask. Their phone number is 800-829-3676.
There’s more information on
these topics in Chapters 5 and 6. Also, the IRS publishes a free
publication, which is surprisingly clear and readable, called
Circular E, Employer’s Tax Guide. When the IRS mails you your
EIN, it sends along a copy of Circular E.
What Do You Need From
the State?
The state regulates your
business names, your license requirements and may impose some
additional tax requirements. Your state may or may not have an
income tax. It may charge sales tax on some of your installation
activity. Contact your state treasury and find out what you have to
do to satisfy your state tax requirements.
You Probably Need a
License
Most states don’t allow
anyone without a contractor’s license to do business in the
construction trade. The penalty for doing business without a license
is usually that any contractor who’s not properly licensed can’t sue
to collect payment for completed work. So if you’re unlicensed and
your customer stiffs you, there’s not much you can do about it. The
customer may get the work for nothing. More about this later in the
chapter.
The licensing requirement is
meant to protect consumers. The idea is that by requiring a license,
the state can set some minimum standards. That’s not a bad idea in
an industry where anyone who owns a hammer thinks he’s a carpenter.
By preventing an unlicensed contractor from collecting for his work,
the state motivates contractors to get their licenses — and does it
without spending a lot of money on investigators and enforcement.
There’s another way the
licensing laws protect consumers. If the customers of a licensed
contractor believe that the contractor has cheated them, they can
make a complaint against that contractor’s license. If the state
then determines that it’s a valid complaint, the state can fine the
contractor, or even cancel that contractor’s license. Generally
speaking, the state won’t usually pull a contractor’s license just
for complaints about bad workmanship, unless the contractor’s work
has actually caused a dangerous situation. In circumstances
involving bad workmanship, the state usually just leaves the
customer to his or her warranty rights.
But usually the state
does act against the contractor’s license in cases where the
contractor has accepted money, then either didn’t start the work, or
didn’t finish it.
Taking away a license is an
administrative procedure. A contractor whose license is threatened
can, and probably should, seek the help of a lawyer.
A contractor’s license can
also be revoked for failure to pay the mandatory annual licensing
fee. That’s usually automatic.
How to Get a License
State licensing requirements
vary widely. Not every state requires a license for every
construction activity. Some states issue a one-size-fits-all sort of
license, which lets the person with the license do everything. Other
states break down their licenses into specialties such as general
contractor, and specific trades, such as electrician, plumber, and
so forth. The license may also act to regulate activities such as
advertising, selling, and some aspects of the contracts between
customers and contractors. Craftsman Book Company, the publisher of
this book, has a Web site called Contractors-License.org that
details the licensing requirements in each state. It has
frequently-updated information on states’ requirements, and links to
each state’s contractor’s license Web site, where you can find out
if a contractor has a license and if it’s current, and learn other
useful information.
Before issuing a license,
most states require applicants to demonstrate that they have some
experience in construction, and that they’re credit-worthy. Some
states make the applicant pass a test. And some, my home state of
Michigan, for example, require all three: experience,
creditworthiness, and an examination.
Who Must Be Licensed?
In Michigan, anyone who is
self-employed and works in the construction trade has to have an
appropriate license. Michigan has different levels of construction
licenses. A general contractor’s license is available for builders
or remodelers. There’s a residential maintenance and alteration
contractor’s license (you have to pass a trade test for your
particular trade), and separate licenses for electrical, plumbing
and mechanical con-tractors. Also, anyone selling remodeling or
building projects has to be licensed as a salesperson and work under
a builder or contractor who is also licensed.
But there are some
exceptions to the requirement for licenses. In some states, a
construction worker doesn’t need a license to perform work for less
than $600 compensation. There are some other exceptions, too. Be
sure to check in your state before you start working as a
contractor.
Some states, Kansas for
example, don’t license contractors at all. But cities or counties in
those states might. So if you find you’re in a state that doesn’t
require a license, don’t assume that you’re off the hook and can
start building. You might be in for an unpleasant and expensive
surprise!
Homeowners
— A homeowner or a landlord doesn’t
need a license to build anything on their own property (although
they’ll probably need a building permit).
Developers
— In a state that requires builders to
be licensed, any land developer, subdivider, or real estate agent
who owns the property and intends to sell it, must have a
construction license or use a licensed contractor in order to build
on the property. They don’t get the homeowner’s exemption because
they don’t intend to make their home on the property — they’re
holding that property for resale.
Subcontractors
— Most states require that anyone
doing business in the construction trade get a license. “Doing
business” includes subcontracting for other contractors.
Partnerships
— Different states have different
rules about partnerships. Some states allow a partnership to use the
license of one of the partners. However, the partner who has
obtained the license must be a managing partner, or the partnership
cannot legally use his or her license.
States such as Michigan
require a partnership to have a license in the partnership’s name,
even though one or more of the partners is already individually
licensed. When the partnership applies for the license, one of the
partners (it must be a managing partner), takes the test. The
license is then issued in the name of the partnership and it becomes
a partnership asset.
Joint ventures
— A joint venture is a kind of
partnership, so most states require a joint venture to do whatever
partnerships are required to do. If the state requires a partnership
to obtain its own license, a joint venture must also obtain its own
contractor’s license. That’s true even if the joint venture has only
been set up for a limited project such as building a single mall,
one building, or an apartment building. The requirement applies even
if the joint venture is set up by two or more partnerships that have
their own licenses.
Corporations
— Some states won’t license
corporations. They only license individuals. So in those states, an
individual in the corporation must get a license in the company
name. The person who takes the tests and qualifies for the license
on behalf of the corporation must hold a managing position in that
corporation.
A few states won’t let
construction companies incorporate at all. The states that do allow
construction companies to incorporate generally require those
corporations to get their own license, even though one or more of
the individual shareholders in the corporation may already hold a
license.
Are There Penalties
for Not Having a License?
There are criminal penalties
for engaging in the construction business without a license. It’s a
misdemeanor that’s punishable by a fine or imprisonment — or both.
However, the public prosecutor is the one who decides whether or not
to enforce criminal penalties. Usually the public prosecutor isn’t
interested in putting unlicensed contractors in prison, unless
they’ve been cheating their customers.
The real penalty for
contracting without a license is that a contractor without the
proper license can’t sue a customer. That means he can’t sue for
nonpayment or enforce a construction lien, because a contractor has
to go to court to foreclose on a lien. For more information about
construction liens, see Chapter 7.
The license requirement
gives consumers a powerful way of protecting themselves from the
dishonest or unskilled contractors (who tend to be the ones without
a license). Consumers dealing with an unlicensed contractor may not
have to pay for the work the unlicensed contractor did for them.
They may even be able to get any money back that they’ve already
paid to the unlicensed contractor. In some states, this is true even
if the customer actually knew the contractor was unlicensed
and lured him into doing the work, knowing that the contractor
wouldn’t be able to collect.
This can be hard on
contractors who weren’t acting in bad faith. There are cases where
the contractor was unlicensed only because of a technicality or a
failure to promptly pay a license renewal fee, but still wasn’t
allowed to sue to collect payment. It sounds harsh, but the courts
rigorously enforce the rule against letting an unlicensed contractor
sue a customer. After all, it’s an effective way to enforce the
state’s licensing laws. It gives the contractor a powerful motive to
make the effort to get that license.
Exceptions to the rule
— Some states will allow a contractor
some recovery (on an unjust enrichment, or quantum meruit
theory) if the contractor can demonstrate that the failure to have a
license was only a technical error. For example, unlicensed
contractors have been allowed to sue their customers for payment in
the following cases based on these facts:
-
Two licensed contractors
had set up a joint venture partnership. They were both properly
licensed, but didn’t realize that their joint venture was supposed
to have its own license.
-
Another contractor had a
license for the bulk of the time that the work was being done, but
had failed to renew it promptly. He was only unlicensed for a
brief period of time.
However, no unlicensed
contractor should count on this relief. There’s at least one case on
record where the court refused to let a contractor collect from a
customer where the contractor worked on the project for several
months and was unlicensed for only ten days because he had failed to
make his annual license payment.
This is an area in which the
law varies from state to state. If you’re involved in this kind of
problem, you should get help from a lawyer who knows exactly what
your local laws are. Your lawyer may tell you that you’re in a state
that closes the courthouse doors to an unlicensed con-tractor —
period. You might as well not bother trying. Just write it off to
the high cost of experience. However, you may be in one of those
states where, in certain situations, unlicensed contractors can sue
for unjust enrichment, or quantum meruit.
Impact on the property
owner —
The penalty for not having a license doesn’t have any impact on the
property owner. The law is only intended as a hammer to force
unlicensed contractors to get licenses. It’s not intended to punish
anybody else. Even though the courts are closed to an unlicensed
contractor, a property owner could sue his unlicensed contractor for
breach of warranty and even for breach of contract.
Let’s look at an imaginary
example: Harry Homeowner hired Contractor Cal to build a room
addition. The contract price was $15,000. When Contractor Cal was
two-thirds done (and Harry had paid him $10,000), Harry learned that
Cal had no license. He immediately told Cal to stop work, and hired
a licensed contractor to finish the job. This second contractor
charged Harry $9,000 for the balance of the job — $4,000 more than
he would have had to pay Cal.
Even though it was he who
stopped Cal from finishing, Harry can now sue Cal for breach of
contract. Cal could be made to reimburse Harry the $4,000
difference. In a few states, Harry could even get back the $10,000
he’s already paid Cal as well.
A homeowner could also sue
an unlicensed contractor who has violated his warranties of good
workmanship or fitness of purpose. For example, suppose an
unlicensed contractor installed a deck without proper footings and
in the first winter, the deck heaved and racked out of square. The
homeowner could sue the unlicensed contractor for breach of
warranty. The one thing that a property owner can’t do, however, is
sue for specific performance. A lawsuit for specific performance is
one that demands that the court order the defendant to complete his
contract. A contract with an unlicensed contractor, in a state that
requires a license, isn’t enforceable. It would be an illegal
contract, and the court won’t order anyone to perform an illegal
contract.
Suppliers to an
unlicensed contractor
— A supplier to an unlicensed contractor
doesn’t lose the right to sue the unlicensed contractor. But in most
states, a supplier to an unlicensed contractor does lose his right
to a construction lien on the building site. Since the unlicensed
contractor couldn’t enforce a lien against the property owner, the
supplier can’t either.
In order to get compensated
for materials already supplied to a job, most states will allow the
supplier to sue the homeowner directly for unjust enrichment. After
all, Bigger Lumbers didn’t intend to donate the materials to Harry
the homeowner, and Harry surely expected to pay somebody at some
time for materials. Unfortunately, the damages on an unjust
enrichment lawsuit can present a further problem for Bigger Lumbers.
What you win in an unjust enrichment lawsuit is supposed to reflect
the value of the goods, which may not be the same as the cost of the
goods.
And, in most states, Bigger
Lumbers won’t be able to get paid if Harry has already paid Cal, the
unlicensed contractor, for the materials. They won’t make Harry pay
twice for the construction materials used on his job. In many
states, this is true even when Cal does have a license.
Subcontractors to an
unlicensed contractor
— Suppose the subcontractor has a license,
but the contractor doesn’t. If the contractor doesn’t pay the
subcontractor, the subcontractor can sue the unlicensed contractor
for payment. In fact, the subcontractor could sue the contractor for
payment even if the subcontractor didn’t have a license, either.
It’s only the homeowner who can’t be sued. Licensed or not, the
subcontractor can’t sue the homeowner if the general contractor
didn’t have a license. The subcontractor doesn’t have any rights
against the homeowner that the general contractor didn’t have.
That’s because the subcontractor’s rights are derivative. That means
the subcontractor gets (derives) his rights from the contract
between the homeowner and the general contractor. If the general
contractor can’t sue the property owner, neither can the
subcontractor.
In Michigan, a licensed
subcontractor who was working with an unlicensed contractor wasn’t
even allowed to collect against the Builders Fund when the
unlicensed contractor didn’t pay him. The court ruled that the
contractor couldn’t have collected from the Builders Fund, so his
subcontractor couldn’t collect either. That’s in spite of the fact
the fund was established to protect (among other people)
subcontractors from property owners who don’t pay.
Another contractor
— The legislation barring unlicensed
contractors from suing property owners for collection is only
intended to protect the property owner. It has no effect on another
contractor doing business with the unlicensed contractor. Other
contractors or suppliers can sue the unlicensed contractor, or the
unlicensed contractor can sue them. In fact, they can sue each other
even if none of them is properly licensed.
For example, suppose an
unlicensed contractor hired a properly-licensed subcontractor to
pour a foundation, and a big crack opened up because the cement was
improperly cured. The unlicensed contractor can sue the
subcontractor for the money it cost to repair the crack and for any
money that the delay cost the contractor.
What About Design and
Build Contracts?
Some states require design
professionals to be licensed by the state. In those states, a
construction contract that includes design functions that aren’t
performed by a licensed engineer or architect may not be enforceable
by the contractor against the homeowner, because of the lack of a
proper license. However, most states that require a separate design
license have held that a contractor without a design license is
permitted to do design work under the supervision of a licensed
design professional, like an architect or engineer.
What About Federal
Projects?
Federal law, not state law,
applies to federal projects. Federal agencies have their own rules
and regulations about which contractors can do federal work. If a
contractor or a subcontractor working on a federal project meets the
federal requirements, it won’t matter if that contractor isn’t
licensed by the state the project is in. And any contractor,
licensed or not, can sue if he doesn’t get paid for work done on a
federal project.
The Name of Your Business
Even if you’re running an
unincorporated business all by yourself off your kitchen table, that
business is still separate from you in some sense. Customers or
suppliers may not realize that you are John’s Better Roofs, so most
states require you to file the name of your business with some local
agency.
Assumed Names
In most states,
unincorporated businesses must register their business name in
what’s usually called a fictitious or an assumed name registry.
There’s nothing sinister about that — it just means you’re doing
business under a name that’s not exactly your own. That business
name must be registered even though it includes your name.
For example, John Smith can
advertise himself as John Smith, Master Carpenter. Even though that
business name includes his own actual name, it’s also the name of
his business. Most states will require it to be registered as an
assumed name.
The law in some states
doesn’t use the terms “assumed name” or “fictitious name.” Instead,
those states may describe you as a company “Doing Business As . . .”
or even just as a “d.b.a.” The term is different, but the intent is
the same.
In Michigan, you have to
register with the Assumed Names Index, located in the county clerk’s
office. Some states require a filing at the state level and
publication in a legal newspaper along with the registration. That
gives someone who’s already using that name an opportunity to
object.
Selecting a Business
Name
Before you chose a business
name, try to make sure no one else is using that name, because it’s
against the law to use a business name that already belongs to
someone else. While it’s not actually a crime unless you do it with
intent to deceive, if someone else is already using that name, they
could sue you for trademark infringement. They could collect damages
from you, and force you to stop using that name, even if you’ve
built up a business under that name.
If there’s a business
already registered under that name in the Assumed Names Index, the
county won’t accept your registration. But you can’t assume that
just because they do accept the registration, there’s no one in the
next county or somewhere else in the state using that name. When
you’re choosing a business name, take reasonable precautions, like
first checking phone books and directories to see if someone else is
already doing business under that name. Nowadays you’d better check
on the Internet too!
If your name is John
McDonald and you want to call your company McDonald’s Construction
Company, will there be a problem with that? Probably not — for two
reasons. First, because you’re using the word construction as part
of the name. That means people hearing your company name won’t
assume you’re selling hamburgers. If you were, or if you were a
restaurant or some kind of food supply company, you’d be hearing
from McDonald’s expensive attorneys. The second reason it’s probably
all right to use McDonald’s Construction Company is that McDonald’s
most likely hasn’t registered that name as a trademark in
conjunction with construction. If they have, you’ll be hearing from
their attack-attorneys.
Corporation Names
Corporations aren’t usually
required to file assumed or fictitious names or d.b.a. certificates
with the county agencies. The name of the corporation and its
official address is already on record with the agency in the state
that regulates corporations. But the corporation will have to
register if it’s doing business under a name other than its
corporate name. Like individuals, corporate names can’t infringe on
someone else’s trademark.
In addition to trademark
restraints, most states regulate what a corporation can call itself.
That’s to protect people who may not realize that they’re doing
business with a corporation, and therefore can’t sue the individual
they’re doing business with for nonpayment or breach of contract.
They can only sue the corporation.
State laws have strict rules
about what can be put into a corporation name, and they’ll review
the name of a corporation to see if it meets their standards before
accepting the incorporation papers. What the state wants is
something in the business name that makes it clear to people doing
business with that company that it is a corporation. The name has to
include words like Incorporated, Corporation, Company or Limited.
Usually, an abbreviation like Inc. or Ltd. is also okay.
Corporations do have to file an assumed names certificate if they’re
using one. If the corporation chooses to do business under an
assumed name, even that assumed name has to meet the state corporate
naming standards.
What Records Should
You Keep — and Why?
Personally, I don’t think
you should ever throw away business records. You might not agree,
especially if you can’t put your car in the garage because of all
the banker boxes full of records you have stored in there. So, what
I’m going to do here is talk about the minimum time you should keep
your records for legal purposes. There are four legal reasons,
besides business reasons, you should plan to keep your records.
You Might Need Your
Records for Tax Audits
The IRS regulations say you
should keep your receipts, canceled checks, and other financial
records for whichever is longer: either three years from the due
date for filing your return, or two years from the date the tax was
paid. If you have employees, you must keep your employee withholding
records for at least four years.
That’s what IRS regulations
say, but believe me, the real number is six years. That’s because
the IRS has six years to assess you if you failed to report gross
income 25 percent greater than what’s shown on your income report.
So, just in case you’re accused of that, you’d better keep the
records to prove you didn’t — or at least, didn’t do it
intentionally — for six years.
If you aren’t filing tax
returns at all, then just keep everything forever. If you’re caught,
at least you’ll have some evidence refuting the Rockefeller-like
income that the IRS could decide you had.
Your Insurance Company
Might Audit You
You should keep copies of
your contracts with subcontractors and copies of their certificates
of insurance on file for at least three years, because your workers’
compensation insurance company might audit your records. If they do
audit you, and if they find that you don’t have copies on file of
your subcontractors’ insurance certificates, the insurance company
may assume that’s because your subcontractors weren’t insured.
What’s your insurance company likely to do about that? They’ll hit
you with a nasty surcharge, because you’ve exposed them to more
liability than they’d agreed to accept. Insurance companies hate
that.
You Might Be Sued
Another good reason to keep
your records is because somebody might sue you. It could be a breach
of contract lawsuit, a warranty lawsuit, or a problem with an
employee (like a workers’ compensation claim for an injury you say
never happened).
Your testimony in a lawsuit
is more convincing if you have business records that support it.
Even if these are records you prepared yourself, they’re admissible
in court if you prepared them in the ordinary course of business. As
long as you wrote it down at the time of the event (and you
typically do write down that kind of event), written evidence is
more convincing than anybody’s memory — and a darn sight more likely
to be accurate.
For legal purposes, I
recommend keeping copies of all your business contracts, purchase
receipts, punch lists, employee injury records, and a daily phone
log that includes all phone contacts with your business customers
and the job site. Even if you don’t actually use these records in
court, it’s important to have them to jog your memory. You’d be
surprised how easy it is to forget the details of even the most
difficult and contentious situation.
Statute of Limitations
You don’t have to live in
fear of a lawsuit for the rest of your life. People can’t wait
forever before they decide to sue. It’s simply not reasonable to let
a potential lawsuit hang over someone’s head indefinitely. So, if
someone has the right to sue you for some reason, the law requires
that they do so within a reasonable period of time — before all the
witnesses die and everyone has forgotten what the fuss was about in
the first place.
The law that says the right
to sue expires after a certain number of years is called the Statute
of Limitations. Different states use different periods of time for
their Statute of Limitations. If you’re in a situation where you
need to be concerned about that, you should check with your
attorney.
The Statute of Limitations
varies for different kinds of lawsuits, and for different states.
But for most kinds of civil (noncriminal) actions, the average
limitation is three years. I suggest keeping your records for six
years, however, because there are situations in which the plaintiff
could get extra time to bring a lawsuit.
For example, if the
plaintiff is a minor, the Statute of Limitations won’t even start
expiring until the plaintiff becomes an adult. That means that if a
child trespassing on your job site was injured, that child could
possibly wait until he or she was 18 to sue you. In a situation like
that, I’d advise getting some legal advice about what you might be
able to do to keep this from hanging over your head for years. Your
liability insurance carrier may also have some legal assistance to
offer you in this situation.
Keep All Employee Records
When you’re deciding what
records to save, don’t forget to keep all of your employee records
for at least three years. You should keep their personnel files,
including all applications, evaluations, injury reports, W-4s and
INS I-9 forms, as well as any complaints about them. Workers’
compensation claims have very short notice requirements, but other
kinds of claims, like discrimination or ADA issues, have different
standards.
The IRS requires that all
new employees fill out W-4 forms, which include their social
security numbers and how many dependants they want to deduct. The
employers don’t have to file these forms with the IRS in most
situations, but they must keep their employees’ W-4s in their office
files.
When you hire someone who’s
not a citizen, you must fill out and keep an INS Form I-9, which you
can get from the Immigration and Naturalization Service. In the I-9
form you swear that you believe that your employee isn’t an illegal
alien, because you took reasonable steps to check his or her status.
Those reasonable steps include checking immigration papers. You
should make copies of the papers you examined and keep those copies
with the I-9 form in your office files for at least three years
after hiring or for at least one year after terminating that
employee.
Summary
In this chapter we’ve
covered most of the issues you’ll have to consider when you start
your business. Remember, some of them depend on what kind of
business you set up — sole proprietorship, partnership or
corporation. But how do you decide which is best for your business?
That’s the subject of the next chapter.
Introduction |
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Contractor's Plain
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Legal Guide
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