In many, perhaps most New York business divorce lawsuits, tax documents play a key role.
Equity holder status is essential for standing to sue – including to dissolve, to sue derivatively on behalf of the entity, to sue directly as an owner, or to challenge a merger, consolidation, divestiture, or asset sale.
For entities whose principals decline to follow corporate formalities, like issue stock or membership interest certificates, or adopt written shareholder or operating agreements identifying the owners, Schedules K-1 from the entity’s tax returns identifying the entity’s pro rata owners and their proportionate share of taxable income or losses may be the most important evidence of equity status. Oral general partnerships, in particular, often have no indicia of ownership but Schedules K-1.
Tax records can be important for many other reasons. An owner’s personal tax returns may be necessary to show whether he took funds from the business, distributed income or salary disproportionately, or diverted assets or opportunities to a competing business.
The entity’s income tax returns often contain a wealth of important information about the entity’s financial performance critical for appraisal and valuation.
The list goes on and on.
But to the dismay of many business divorce practitioners and their clients, tax records can be devilishly difficult to get in disclosure.
Continue Reading When Trying to Discover Tax Returns in Business Divorce Litigation, Bring Your A Game