Sole trader and partnership Flashcards
Tell about sole proprietorship
Individual who is involved in the management and control of the business. Easy to set up and seize, small entities to take care of. (Not suitable for groups), May not even feature employees as would require knowledge of employment law (small business). Easy set up, no registration requirements
Tell about benefits of sole proprietorship
- Privacy (no accounts need to be published, only to tax and bank purposes)
- Entitled to 100% of profits
- Lack of formality (apart from VAT requirement, no administrative requirements except for planning permission or local authority permission)
- Good to register your name for good will purposes, but not required (Part 41 Companies act 2006 - business name requirement)
Tell about the disadvantages of sole proprietorship
- Unlimited liability, personal wealth on the line
- Management of the business (if you die, business dies, if you are ill, you are still responsible of the running, labour issues)
- No rights under employment law, no sick pay, no annual leave.
Define partnership
“Two or more people coming together for a common, legal business purpose with a view to make a profit”
Explain partnership
The partnership is a business vehicle where two or more people run a business together (in some cases restrictions up to 21 partners)
Tell about the nature of partnership (3 key elements)
1) Individuals combining skills, capital investment, know-how, expertise and contacts, pooling these resources as a means of selling products or services. 2) You also distribute burdens (sick, holiday). 3) Each partner has a right to participate in the business of the partnership and is an agent of the firm with the ability to bind the firm in law
Tell about the Partnership Act 1890
Governs the rights and duties of people or corporate entities conduction business in partnership. Partnership agreement is the key, each partner is entitled to participate in management, get an equal share of profits, and indemnity in respect of liabilities assumed in the course of business and the right not to be expelled by other partners.
Benefits of the Partnership act 1890
- Don’t need to be in writing (but if disputes, act is supreme (all divided equally, debts and profits) as no physical proof)
- In Scotland Act (section4.2) Separate legal entity
Explain what does separate legal entity means
In Scotland it means that the firm may own property in its own name, and sue and be sued in its own name. Benefits: keeps everything tidy for accounting purposes and at the point when partnership seizes
Tell about disadvantaged of Partnership Act 1890
- Unlimited liability (debts of the partnership are personal debts)
- Jointly and severally liable
- Over rules oral agreements which might have benefitted one party more
What duties do the partners have?
Act as an agent for the business, unlimited liability, Fiduciary duty and duty of good faith, Disclose so no conflict of interest, must account any benefit received by them, rightful accounting,
Tell about sharing gross profits case Cox v Coulson
Defendant arranged performance in his theatre with one Mill, who provided actors and scenery, Defendant provided the theatre and lighting. Playbills were proportioned between them both
Plaintiff was struck by a pistol during performance who then sued defendant
Issue: Whether defendant was a partner with Mill, who was in charge of the actors
Held: Defendant not a partner s5 For partnership to exist the net profits should be shared, not the gross receipts Not partnership
Tell about the relationship between partners and third parties
- Every partner is an agent of the firm
- Partners have powers to bind the partnership in the contract with third parties where the partner engages in acts “for carrying on in the business of the kind carried on by the partnership”. (The third party needs to know partner has authority for this, and is the partner does not have authority or third party is unclear are they partners, the firm will not be bound.)
Tell about wrong omission
Any wrong or omission committed by a partner in ordinary course of business has the same effect as if every partner had committed it - partnership is jointly and severally liable to third parties.
Tell about partnership property
-If any property is purchased with the money of the partnership or on accounts of the partnership in the ordinary course of business, such property is owed by partnership (Section 20(1))