Let me start by saying I have made some bad business decisions. I'm hoping this is not another one. Please provide any info you can.
I had an S Corp (lets call it Widget Building Materials) for which I was the sole shareholder. I ran up a bunch of debt with several of my creditors. I also have a rather large unpaid Sales Tax bill with the state (which has since beend transfered from the business name and into my name). After one of my creditors raided my bank accounts, I filed for Ch. 11 protection which was ultimately dismissed (not discharged) in consideration of a few forebearance agreements.
I am currently in default of all forebearance agreements.
I have since started a new S Corp in which my wife is the sole shareholder. The name of the new business is Widget Hardscape and Masonry. We are engaged in the same business as the one before. We have some of the same customers, employees, the same web address, and the same phone number as the old business - but a different physical address.
The two businesses overlap chronologically speaking.
My wife and I have a pre-nuptial stating that all assets are "sole and seperate property".
I'm wondering if I can get hit with the alter-ego doctrine? And if so, what sort of consequences could result?
Any advice would be much appreciated...
-P.
I had an S Corp (lets call it Widget Building Materials) for which I was the sole shareholder. I ran up a bunch of debt with several of my creditors. I also have a rather large unpaid Sales Tax bill with the state (which has since beend transfered from the business name and into my name). After one of my creditors raided my bank accounts, I filed for Ch. 11 protection which was ultimately dismissed (not discharged) in consideration of a few forebearance agreements.
I am currently in default of all forebearance agreements.
I have since started a new S Corp in which my wife is the sole shareholder. The name of the new business is Widget Hardscape and Masonry. We are engaged in the same business as the one before. We have some of the same customers, employees, the same web address, and the same phone number as the old business - but a different physical address.
The two businesses overlap chronologically speaking.
My wife and I have a pre-nuptial stating that all assets are "sole and seperate property".
I'm wondering if I can get hit with the alter-ego doctrine? And if so, what sort of consequences could result?
Any advice would be much appreciated...
-P.
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