Proper valuation of a shared LLC is an essential element of a sound divorce settlement, and it requires the careful guidance of an experienced divorce attorney like those on our team at The Montanari Law Group. Contact us today at 973-233-439 or by completing our online contact form if you are navigating a divorce that involves a shared business, and read on to learn more about how having an LLC affects New Jersey divorce.
There are multiple options for spouses who share a limited liability company and are getting divorced. The couple may decide to sell the company and equitably split the profits or for one to buy out the other’s stake in the company. The couple may determine a way to divide the company into separate organizations, with each spouse heading one section of the business. Or, if the couple is amicably separating, they may decide to continue running the business together.
What makes having a skilled divorce attorney on your side a priceless element of any divorce involving a shared LLC is their capacity to help you properly valuate the corporation. Because value isn’t a fixed number, they will call on experts such as forensic accountants and financial analysts intimately familiar with your field to determine the full value of the LLC. Then, your attorney will help you work with your spouse to decide the best steps forward regarding your stakes in the company, either selling it off completely, negotiating a buyout, or continuing to maintain co-ownership of the business.
All assets acquired after the marriage are considered marital assets, with limited exceptions. As such, if you started your company before the marriage and ran it on your own, it will likely be considered a personal asset, not subject to New Jersey’s equitable distribution laws. If you started the company after marriage or had a joint share or role in the company, it will likely be considered a marital asset, subject to equitable distribution.
When an LLC is part of a divorce settlement, the benefit and downright necessity of qualified legal counsel cannot be overstated. The purpose of New Jersey’s equitable distribution law is to ensure that you get a fair percentage of marital assets in the divorce, but until you have a clear and expertly-determined valuation of your marital assets as well as the specifics of your equitable right to them, you cannot hope to receive your fair share in a divorce. Our team at The Montanari Law Group handles a multitude of divorces involving family businesses, including LLCs.
We represent divorcees in West Orange, Wayne, Prospect Park, Ringwood, Montvale, Little Falls, and throughout Essex, Bergen, and Passaic County, helping them to determine whether it is in their best interests to sell their share of the company or buyout their spouse, sell the company as a whole and equitably distribute profits, or keep working together professionally after divorce. We also employ the services of the top business valuation and financial experts in New Jersey to help you determine the living value of your LLC. Contact us today at 973-233-439 to learn how we can protect your best interests in divorce.