Find us elsewhere

Contract Attorneys Orangeville ON

Sometimes a handshake just isn't enough. Protect your business with these three agreements. With that in mind, be sure to protect yourself and your business with the proper documentation.

William Parker
519-821-4700
20 Douglas Street
Guelph, ON
Daniel Michaluk
416-864-7253
TD Tower 30th Floor, Box 371, TD Centre
Toronto, ON
Ltv
905-738-4004
20 Rivermede
Vaughan, ON
Trianma Management Services Incorp
905-579-2223
178 Simcoe Street North
Oshawa, ON
Gift Baskets Of Canada
905-427-9241
19 Epps Crescent
Ajax, ON
Freeborn & Associates
905 584-4399
11 Antrim Crt
Caledon, ON
Stuart Rudner
416-595-8672
40 King Street West, Suite 5800
Toronto, ON
Daniel Lublin
(416) 640-1583
317 Adelaide St. West Suite 1001
Toronto, ON
SD And G Community Futures Development Corp
613-932-4333
26 Pitt Street
Cornwall, ON
Workplace Insurance Management
905-427-6255
110 Pittmann Crescent
Ajax, ON
Data Provided by:
 

3 Agreements You Shouldn't Be Without

A handshake may be a meaningful way to seal a deal, but a written contract gives you solid legal protection. With that in mind, be sure to protect yourself and your business with the proper documentation.

Here are three agreements you’ll want to have for your business:

Buy-Sell Agreement

A buy-sell agreement is a contract among the owners of the business to decide what happens to ownership interests when certain events—death, retirement, personal bankruptcy, etc.—occur. Without an agreement in place, the interest of a departing owner can fall into the hands of family members or outsiders who may not necessarily be able to work well with the other owners. A better strategy is to use a buy-sell agreement.

Basic terms

Decide what happens if an owner wants to leave or dies. This can be the requirement of the remaining owners or the company to buy out the departing owner’s interest. Include a formula or clause that will be used to fix the value of that interest. For example, the agreement could require a business appraisal to set value or use a formula based on book value, revenues, or some other financial measurement. As an added benefit, if the agreement restricts transfers and meets certain tests, the valuation method will be acceptable for estate tax purposes as well (additional conditions apply in the case of a family businesses).

Also, include a non-compete clause to prevent a departing owner from setting up a competing business across the street and taking all of the current customers with him. A non-compete clause will be upheld if it is reasonable as to time and location; you can’t keep someone from working forever.

Funding

Decide how to pay for the buyout. Usually, life insurance is used to fund a buyout at death. The agreement can call for the company to buy back the departing owner’s interest over time using company profits.

Resources

You can use a template to create a buy-sell agreement (see Jian at www.jian.com/software/business-contracts/sample-contract/Buy-Sell.pdf ). Then have your attorney review it before you sign.

Independent Contractor Agreement

Outsourcing is a good way to get work done for your company without paying workers’ compensation, payroll taxes, and employee benefits. If you use freelancers and independent contractors to do various tasks for your company, be sure that you follow the law and classify these workers properly. The IRS and many states are hot on the trail of companies that mislabel employees as independent contractors merely as a ploy to avoid payroll taxes and other employee-related costs.

The determination of whether a worker is an employee or independent contractor is a matter of control. If you have the right to say when, where, and how the work gets done, then the worker is your employee regardless of what you call her.

An independent contractor agreement spells out the relationship between you and the worker, making it clear that you intend her to be an independent ...

Author: Barbara Weltman

Copyright 2010 StartupNation, LLC

Click here to read more from StartupNation