An Overview Of Legal Isues For Small Business
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Transcript of An Overview Of Legal Isues For Small Business
- 1. Small Business Legal
Small Business Big Issues
Paul Bennett
Bennetts Legal
2. What is a small business?
Less than 50 people
Start up to 50 people
Owner managed
Often run by family and friends
Often smaller
Focus on what they know
Fall outs and failures come at a high price
3. What will we cover in this course?
Business Structure;
Insurance;
Red Tape The Danger Areas;
Finance;
Terms of business/Contracts
4. Aims & Audience
This is not a how to do it course!
Small businesses may view it to understand areas of risk;
Non-specialist solicitors (or paralegal/new qualified) will get
something out of it;
It is not a specialist legal discipline course it is a mix of
general commercial and employment law disciplines.
Understand the aim is awareness and it should help when advising
businesses.
5. Business Structure
Sole Trader
Partnership
Ifthey intend to be a sole trader, they are self-employed, with no
special legal structure.
The trader is the business.
In a partnership, two or more self-employed people work together as
partners and share the profits (or losses).
No legal personality meaning the partners are liable for the
businesses debts
6. Structure Part 2
Limited Company
Limited Liability Partnership
A limited company is a separate legal entity, distinct from its
shareholders, directors and employees.
Unlike a sole trader or partnership, it is not the same as the
individuals who own or run it. For example, it is a separate legal
entity and can sue or be sued in its own name.
A limited liability partnership has some of the advantages (and
disadvantages) of both a company and a partnership.
It has a separate legal entity and therefore can continue despite
the resignation or death of some members.
7. Why this matters?
Managingentrepreneur risk plays a huge part in the solicitors
advice on this issue;
What risk are the business owners comfortable with?
Taxation is also effected;
Personal
Business
Capital Gains Tax
Accountants may therefore take a different view to
solicitors.
8. Attitude To Risk
High
Low
Speculative nature
Limited funds
Business plan unwritten
No management experience
No industry knowledge
Stock or set up costs are high
No stock
Limited start up costs
Good industry knowledge
Well researched
Business plan established
Solid financial footing
9. Taxation
Personal
Business
Income tax
National insurance
Capital Gains Tax
Value Added Tax
Corporation tax
Value Added Tax
Capital Gains Tax
LLP Return
10. Insurance
Risk
Taxation
Is it covered by insurance?
Key man?
Health insurance?
Employee Insurance?
Public Liability Insurance?
Company and individual cover?
11. Sole Trader
Advantages
Disadvantages
Clients can keep simple, unaudited accounts.
Their National Insurance is low.
Unless their earnings are high, total tax payments can be lower
than if you formed a limited company.
Setting up is quick and easy.
Clients will need to tell the tax and VAT authorities this can be
done online now.
You can form a limited company later and transfer the business to
it, though some stamp duty may have to be paid.
Clients are personally liable for all the businesses debts.
This means thattheir own assets - all of them - are at risk.This
includes many peoples houses and family assets etc.
The options for raising money are limited.
If clients are a sole trader, it is harder to sell the business or
pass it on the value is less because so much depends on the
individual and their goodwill.
12. Partnership
Advantages
Disadvantages
Each partner is personally liable for all the business debts of the
partnership (other than tax on profits), even if another partner
caused them.
Clients may be able to raise money by introducing new
partners.
Limited start up costs.
To avoid disputes, it is vital to have a comprehensive agreement
drawn up by a lawyer and agreed by all partners.
This means if the business is speculative then this is an
issue.
13. Limited Company
Advantages
Disadvantages
Own legal personality it can sued or sue in the companies
name;
Protects personal assets;
Company takes risks not the individuals (or group of
individuals);
Creditability enhanced company not just one person
perception.
Costs;
Need Directors and Shareholders;
Corporate tax not just personal tax;
Increasingly complex accounts needed;
Annual management (costs and issues)
14. Limited Liability Partnership
Advantages
Disadvantages
Modern;
Half way house between partnerships and limited company;
Personal taxation retained by partners;
Retain the trust element between partners.
Limited taxation options;
Bureaucratic;
More complex to manage than Limited Company so it is worth
it?
15. What is the right structure?
It depends on the business and the owners of it?;
Taxation and risk need to be balanced;
Evaluate the options with the business owners start up options
likely to be simple and cheap as grow can always change but beware
of the risk element.
16. Checklist Part 1
Do you need to protect your personal assets from unpredictable
liabilities, e.g. being sued by a client?
Do you need to be able to distribute profits to working
principals?
Do you want your children (or member of family or others) to
inherit your share of the business?
17. Checklist Part 2
Do you need to be able to raise outside capital (e.g. to
develop the business)?
Is your partnership agreement or, if a limited company, articles of
association, meeting the needs of you and your business?
Do you want to give or sell key staff a stake in the
business?
Do you know what will be the effect on the business if
a shareholder director/partner dies unexpectedly?
18. Checklist Part 3
Has the business owner(s) spoke to an accountant or tax advisor (if
not they should do so as once risk is considered the likely
solution lies with the taxation);
Review the position after a few months and twelve months then
periodically with the business owners (due to capital gains tax and
risk factors changing).
19. Insurance
Businesses (of whatever structure) need to consider what risks they
need to be insured against and they would like to be insured
against;
As a solicitor advising small businesses they is a crucial first
meeting issue what have they got? What must they have? What do they
really need?
20. Public Liability Insurance
This covers those in contact with the public for accidents, mishaps
and claims against the business;
A slip, trip or accident;
Typically all businesses will need this and it can be purchased
cheaply;
Details of the insurance should be kept by the business for 40
years (it is a requirement).
21. Examples
The Painter and Decorator
People visiting the site having an accident;
Injury;
Losses from the actions of the painter;
The householder who purchased the service.
The Party DJ
Held in a hall/pub;
Someone falling over equipment;
Liability may be split with others (i.e. Venue);
Likely that responsible venues will require service from someone
with insurance.
22. Employers Liability Insurance
Usually sold with PLI;
A requirement of being an employer or having workers;
Covers injury type claims sustained in the workplace;
Covers the actions of your business and your workforce against
third parties.
23. Professional Indemnity Insurance
Covers advice and actions of the business to its clients;
Tends to be thought of as advisors or professional insurance;
Growing importance and width to small business the website designer
with defective software would need this type of insurance;
Speak to a broker and get covered for a few hundred pounds.
24. Red Tape The Business Barrier
99% of my clients resent red tape and the costs of compliance when
they make their first appointment;
Many are relieved when the know the reality and not the
perception;
Key issues for small business are insurance, health & safety,
data protection and employment law.
25. Health & Safety
Its a two way thing;
The business sets the policy and manages risk;
The Employees must take care of themselves and each other!;
Free resources are made available by the Health & Safety
Executive these cover common risk and industry
With my clients I offer to guide them through the HSE material in
the context of their business or get a specialist consultant to do
so;
Legaltraining.tv are preparing a course on this so watch this
space.
26. Health & Safety Checklist Part 1
Have you considered the industry and known risk on the HSE
website?
Has the small business?
Is the process documented?
Are records kept? By whom and where?
Risk assessments has one been done? Is it up to date;
27. Health & Safety Checklist Part 2
Does the business have a policy to manage Health &
Safety?
Does the business provide appropriate equipment and training? (the
HSE website guides on these);
Do the managers need extra training ( and a referral to a
specialist H&S provider).
28. Data Protection
Information Commissioners Registration? Does the business handle
personal data?
Annual registration fee;
Guides for issues and industries on the website businesses can
therefore self-manage this or pay a service provider to.
Myths exist so start with a simple review and policy of what the
business does with data and why?;
Use Commissioners Checklists and pass these on to clients;
Telling employees and customers etc what the data is collected for
and how it is handled is a golden rule.
29. Data Protection Part 2
Checklists should be used to monitor and record the information and
compliance;
Review compliance at least annually with the business
What has changed data use wise;
Why?
How?
Who needs to be informed?
How to get that consent and record it?
30. Employment Law
The starting point with employment law is always have what you have
done documented:-
Offer of Employment Letters;
Contracts or Statement of Terms;
Have policies in a Staff Handbook have a Managers Operations Manual
to support this and aid day to day staff management;
Document and take notes at any discussions with staff what was
said, why, agreements reached.
31. Employment Law Part 2
Have redundancy and disciplinary criteria documented;
Get staff to sign, acknowledge and agree handbooks, policies and
agreed actions
32. Employment Law
Remember the legislation protects applicants as well as
employees;
Workers (including self-employed people) have certain employment
rights.
The curse of the generalist many commercial and generalist advisors
try to be employment lawyers dont it is contract, employment
legislation, data protection litigation and non-contentious rolled
into one.
33. About the speaker
Founded Boutique Employment & Business Support Law Firm
Bennetts Legal in 2009;
Clients include other law firms, management consultants and various
businesses an industries including healthcare, SMEs and sport
clubs.
Bennetts Legal operate nationally from a West Midlands base see
www.bennettslegal.co.uk or call 01743 453 161 or email
[email protected]