I'm like you, with my primary private practice focused on M&A. Even as a GC, my direct reports were responsible for entity management and governance support fortax strategies, so I didn't get into a lot of these issues other than in connection with tax free dispositions for spin offs and reverse morris trusts. However, my financial and tax advisors and my estate lawyers are more into this, and they would give me strategies like these that my estate lawyer would execute. Maybe they wanted to reorganize in another state? Not sure what exactly happened based on the article, but based on timing, common sense would indicate that this was a tax-free transfer to another form of entity organization.Unit2Sucks said:Nice to hear from you and thanks for your input.calbear93 said:Hey U2 and Wife - haven't visited here in awhile, but good to see you still educating folks here.Unit2Sucks said:Yes, seriously. My initial reaction was similar to yours, but this doesn't match up with the claims in the post article. My best guess is that they dissolved the old partnership to leave some liabilities behind or maybe it's just 100% tax driven, I don't really know. That's why I said unknown reasons.wifeisafurd said:Seriously? The new entity was created and assumed the business with the same name except LTD was replaced by LLC. Perhaps a reorganization into a LLC? Does that sound to you like a defunct business? I would expect that from Dajo, but not someone with your background.Unit2Sucks said:wifeisafurd said:Ddi you actually read the article? The "defunct" company changed its name (because it went from a LTD to a LLC) and is not defunct. Thomas reported income using the entity's old name, which had an Ltd in the back of its name and he didn't know it changed to LLC in the back of his name. At this point, I'm calling utter BS, and thinking it no longer is aboutThomas' sins but orchestrating an attempt to make him step down with misleading article titles on matters without substance, by media with agenda. Tom, I think you are part of the problem by retweeting articles without understanding what they say or mean. That is a modus operandi on this board..concordtom said:
Yet another line of potential scandal has popped up:
https://www.yahoo.com/news/supreme-court-justice-clarence-thomas-090016209.html
Claiming income from a defunct company since 2006. Yikes!
It wasn't a name change either, if you want to be technical about it. The original entity was shut down for unknown reasons and a new entity was created and assumed the land leasing business.
I agree that this is a small sin but in light of the larger context shows he doesn't take disclosure too seriously. Not a great look for the Supreme Court.Quote:
Over the last two decades, Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas has reported on required financial disclosure forms that his family received rental income totaling hundreds of thousands of dollars from a firm called Ginger, Ltd., Partnership.
But that company a Nebraska real estate firm launched in the 1980s by his wife and her relatives has not existed since 2006.
That year, the family real estate company was shut down and a separate firm was created, state incorporation records show. The similarly named firm assumed control of the shuttered company's land leasing business, according to property records.
...
Ginger Limited Partnership was created in 1982 to sell and lease real estate, state incorporation records show, and its partners were Ginni Thomas, her parents and her three siblings.
...
The firm was dissolved in March 2006. Around the same time, Ginger Holdings, LLC was created in Nebraska, according to state records, which list the same business address as the shuttered company and name Joanne K. Elliott, the sister of Ginni Thomas, as manager.
The same month, the leases for more than 200 residential lots in Ginger Woods and Ginger Cove were transferred from Ginger Limited Partnership to Ginger Holdings, LLC, property records in Douglas County show.
My guess is that this was a conversion from a partnership to a limited liability company. My guess is that the financial advisor recommended that they convert the entity to an LLC since LLC has no downside relative to a partnership. They are both pass through entities for tax purposes, but an LLC does not require one person to assume the liabilities like a partnership would required from the general partner. Instead you just have a operating manager without the personal liabilities. Really no reason not to convert.
I would guess Justice Thomas took this action based on advice from his estate lawyer and tax attorney.
I disagree with you, U2, that this was ever a defunct entity other than as a mechanism for pure conversion. A conversion is a tax free transaction without having to realize capital gains. It would be idiotic to do what the author implied, which would only accelerate capital gains. There is no benefit even from reducing the liability of the former GP since the legacy liability would survive any dissolution.
I don't think this was intended to be a hit piece. I think, like most dumb articles, this was based on ignorance and laziness. And people with equal ignorance of the corporate and tax laws would perpetuate this as something nefarious. Happens all the time from both the right and the left. Pure laziness by the author since it would have taken a 5 minute fact check with a corporate lawyer for the author to understand this.
Doesn't mean Justice Thomas is not an embarrassment, with Ginni shamefully perpetuating the election lies.
Anyway, came back because I am just that happy that Fox is gone.
Now that I am retired, always fun to discuss corporate law. However, everything else here, including the same persons still engaging in mindless personal attacks, is still boring as ever. Take care you two.
I guess I was indexing on the fact that the leases were "transferred." I spent most of my M&A career trying to avoid transfers like these so I would have assumed there was some tax-friendly way to structure it such that there wasn't an explicit transfer but maybe this is the small business way of doing it? Still I shudder at having to deal with 200 lease transfers.
If this was a simple conversion, why wouldn't they have done a conversion as provided by the Nebraska corporate code? Wouldn't have required a dissolution because the entity would still be the same. Or if that would trigger some issue, maybe drop the LTD under a new LLC?
Admittedly, I didn't do real estate work, but it just seems to me that creating a new entity, individually assigning contracts and shuttering the original entity is creating a fair amount of pointless and expensive work and that there would have to have been a reason before doing so. Converting a pass-through partnership into a pass-through LLC should be a tax-free transaction, so why create all of the extra work?
I suspect the leases provided for unilateral assignments to affiliates.