联邦制、监管竞争和有限责任运动:土狼嚎叫,兽群狂奔

J. W. Callison
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The limited liability company (LLC) emerged as a significant new organizational form,2 and the traditional general partnership and limited partnership forms mutated to permit limited liability protection for owners that historically had unlimited personal liability.3 As a result, business owners are not forced to suffer the tax disadvantages resulting from state law incorporation in order to obtain corporation-like limited liability protection. This change resulted from an elaborate interplay between two separate spheres that influence the selection of U.S. business entities-federal income taxation and state business organization law. The momentum for this change rapidly accelerated when the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) pronounced that Wyoming LLCs, which provide limited liability protection to all owners and managers, would receive favorable partnership taxation.4 By 1996, all fifty states and the District of Columbia had enacted LLC statutes. 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引用次数: 9

摘要

从历史上看,企业实体决策的选择涉及考虑和平衡三个因素:(1)根据适用的商法,所有者和管理者对企业债权人和侵权行为受害者的个人责任程度;(2)企业实体的税收和监管待遇,包括企业实体及其所有者是否将被单一或双重征税;(3)所有者当前的投资偏好和为实体吸引额外资金的需要着眼于这些因素,美国商业组织法自1988年以来发生了根本性的变化。有限责任公司(LLC)作为一种重要的新组织形式出现,传统的普通合伙和有限合伙形式发生了变化,允许对历史上拥有无限个人责任的所有者进行有限责任保护因此,企业主不必为了获得类似于公司的有限责任保护而被迫遭受由州法律注册而产生的税收劣势。这种变化源于影响美国商业实体选择的两个独立领域——联邦所得税和州商业组织法——之间复杂的相互作用。当美国国税局(IRS)宣布怀俄明州有限责任公司(为所有所有者和经理提供有限责任保护)将获得优惠的合伙税时,这种变化的势头迅速加速到1996年,所有50个州和哥伦比亚特区都颁布了有限责任公司法规。继有限责任公司革命之后,德克萨斯州于1991年创建了有限责任合伙企业(LLP),从而允许专业合伙企业中的普通合伙人通过提交注册声明并在合伙企业名称中使用“LLP”称谓来避免共同和部分渎职责任其余49个州和哥伦比亚特区迅速制定了有限责任合伙立法,一些州将有限责任合伙的概念扩展到有限合伙企业(lllp),在有限合伙企业中,一般(但不是有限)合伙人历史上对实体债务和义务承担连带责任虽然合伙企业税收分类与个人责任的脱钩最终发生在1988年,但它在美国国税局放宽有限合伙企业税收分类规则时就有先例。在20世纪90年代初稳步增长之后,1996年达到顶峰,当时美国国税局颁布了规定,规定大多数由多个成员组成的非法人商业组织按合伙企业征税,除非该组织积极选择按公司征税这些法规颁布后,任何要求非法人商业组织保留类似合伙企业的商业特征以获得合伙企业联邦所得税待遇的要求都消失了。美国商业组织法的近代史始于怀俄明州的企业家们创立的有限责任公司替代制度,并由此对传统的联邦实体税收分类规则造成压力。联邦税务监管机构最终做出了回应,修改了分类规则,允许将有限责任公司作为合伙企业征税。这一变化的重点是联邦税法,而对州法律领域漠不关心。这些税收变化使各州的立法部门做出了大规模和迅速的反应,以消除个人对组织债务和义务的责任,从而加强各州的亲商环境随着各州立法机构争相创建有限责任公司、有限责任合伙公司和有限责任合伙公司,人们很少注意到将有限责任保护扩展到这些公司的理论或规范方面虽然一些评论家在讨论有限责任公司的出现时采取了一种胜利的州法律第一的态度,但12各州不加批判地采用有限责任作为对税收监管变化的反应,可以被视为一种“逐底竞争”。…
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Federalism, Regulatory Competition, and the Limited Liability Movement: The Coyote Howled and the Herd Stampeded
I. INTRODUCTION Choice of business entity decisions historically have involved considering and balancing three factors: (1) the extent to which owners and managers are personally liable to business creditors and tort victims under the applicable commercial law; (2) the tax and regulatory treatment of the business entity, including whether the entity and its owners will be subject to single or double taxation; and (3) the owners' current investment preferences and need to attract additional capital to the entity.1 Focusing on these factors, United States business organization law has undergone fundamental change since 1988. The limited liability company (LLC) emerged as a significant new organizational form,2 and the traditional general partnership and limited partnership forms mutated to permit limited liability protection for owners that historically had unlimited personal liability.3 As a result, business owners are not forced to suffer the tax disadvantages resulting from state law incorporation in order to obtain corporation-like limited liability protection. This change resulted from an elaborate interplay between two separate spheres that influence the selection of U.S. business entities-federal income taxation and state business organization law. The momentum for this change rapidly accelerated when the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) pronounced that Wyoming LLCs, which provide limited liability protection to all owners and managers, would receive favorable partnership taxation.4 By 1996, all fifty states and the District of Columbia had enacted LLC statutes. Following on the heels of the LLC revolution, Texas created the limited liability partnership (LLP) in 1991,5 and thereby permitted general partners in professional partnerships to avoid joint and several malpractice liability by filing a registration statement and using the "LLP" appellation in the partnership name.6 The remaining 49 states and the District of Columbia quickly enacted LLP legislation, and several states extended the LLP concept to limited partnerships (LLLPs), in which general (but not limited) partners historically have joint and several liability for entity debts and obligations.7 Although the de-coupling of partnership tax classification from personal liability finally occurred in 1988, it had its antecedents in the IRS's relaxation of tax classification rules with respect to limited partnerships. After steady growth in the early 1990s, it climaxed in 1996 when the IRS issued regulations providing that most multiple member unincorporated business organizations are taxed as partnerships, unless the organization makes an affirmative election to be taxed as a corporation.8 When the regulations were issued, any requirement that unincorporated business organizations retain partnership-like business characteristics to obtain partnership federal income tax treatment disappeared. The recent history of this U.S. business organization law revolution started with Wyoming's entrepreneurial creation of the LLC alternative9 and the resulting pressure on traditional federal entity tax classification rules. The federal tax regulators eventually responded by changing the classification rules to permit taxation of limited liability firms as partnerships. This change was undertaken with a focus on federal tax law and an indifference to the state law sphere. These tax changes enabled massive and rapid state legislative reaction to eliminate personal liability for organizational debts and obligations in order to enhance the individual states' pro-business environments.10 As the state legislatures rushed to created LLCs, LLPs, and LLLPs, little attention was paid to theoretical or normative aspects of the extension of limited liability protection to these firms.11 Although some commentators adopt a triumphal state-law-first attitude when discussing the LLC's emergence,12 the states' uncritical adoption of limited liability in reaction to tax regulatory changes can be viewed as a "race-to-the-bottom. …
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