Revised and updated October 15, 2009
Abstract: At a time when the American economy can
least afford it, entrepreneurs and small-business owners are under
siege. The Incorporation Transparency and Law Enforcement
Assistance Act (ITLEAA)--currently under consideration in
Congress--would subject small businesses to a series of complicated
and burdensome reporting requirements. These new requirements are
reminiscent to those imposed by Sarbanes-Oxley, and would have
similarly negative consequences: increased costs and reductions in
business activity and job creation. Furthermore, the ITLEAA would
do little to actually reduce the use of LLC forms for criminal
activity--the purported goal of the legislation.
American entrepreneurs form approximately two million limited
liability companies (LLCs) and corporations each year. The vast
majority of these LLCs are small businesses, often family-run
companies that will never issue regulated securities or be traded
on any market. For that reason, they are exempt from the
complicated and burdensome reporting requirements of laws, such as
the Sarbanes-Oxley Public Company Accounting Reform and Investor
Protection Act of 2002 (Sarbanes-Oxley), that are intended to
protect unsophisticated investors buying shares in the public
market. While such laws put larger American businesses at a
competitive disadvantage against foreign rivals, they would simply
wipe out smaller businesses that could not afford the cost of
compliance.[1]
The Incorporation Transparency and Law Enforcement Assistance
Act (ITLEAA), sponsored by Senator Carl Levin (D-MI), would subject
smaller and closely held businesses that are exempt from securities
regulation to similarly burdensome requirements.[2] To combat the rare
use of the corporate and LLC form for criminal purposes, ITLEAA
would require all new businesses taking these forms to
report a variety of information concerning "beneficial ownership"
at the time of their formations and forever after or face the risk
of civil and criminal fines, as well as imprisonment, for errors or
omissions. Further, the legislation relies on vague definitions
that would provide little guidance to business owners, requiring
them to hire lawyers and accountants or accept the risk of
noncompliance.
By increasing the cost of business formation and maintenance,
ITLEAA would reduce the number of businesses formed and cause many
precarious new businesses--and in their early years, most
businesses are financially precarious--to fail.
At the same time, it would provide little deterrent to
criminals, who could choose other business forms that are less
advantageous to those conducting legitimate businesses--such as
partnerships-- or simply falsify the information they are required
to report. After all, individuals willing to commit major felonies
like drug trafficking or money laundering will not hesitate to
misreport required corporate information. At a time when the U.S.
economy is even more dependent on the development of small and
closely held businesses for job creation, growth, and ensuring
America's economic recovery, Congress should not erect new barriers
to the success of small enterprises.
Background
Business creation is primarily a matter of state law. Though
there are uniform acts for business entities that many states have
adopted in whole or in part, every state has its own unique law and
culture of business formation, specifying the rights and
responsibilities of those who partner, incorporate, or form limited
liability companies. Not only has this body of law evolved over
centuries to meet the needs of entrepreneurs and the public, but it
has also seen brisk growth in recent years with the rise of LLCs,
limited liability partnerships (LLPs), and other novel creations.
The law of business entities is truly an area where the states
function as "laboratories of democracy," taking different
approaches, learning from one another's successes and failures, and
most importantly, competing to attract entrepreneurs and spur
economic growth and development.
Such innovation has increased entrepreneurial efficiency by
improving business governance, reducing the cost and difficulty of
business formation, and democratizing access to limited liability
forms, thereby reducing the risks faced by individual entrepreneurs
and investors. Some scholars have gone so far as to predict that
recent innovations in business entity law--once seen as a dry,
static area of the law--point the way to new models of business
organization that could eventually render the corporate form, and
all of the headaches of public ownership, obsolete.[3] LLCs, for example,
have already become the preferred form for many types of innovative
financial vehicles, such as hedge funds. When entrepreneurs have
access to these more efficient entities, they are able to devote
more resources to doing business, and less to maintaining
formalities. This innovation has helped the United States to
maintain favorable economic conditions, even at a time when
growth-stifling regulation has, in general, been on the rise.[4]
Foreign competitors, however, are working to eliminate that
advantage by pressuring the United States to "harmonize" its laws
with their own. In 2006, the Financial Action Task Force, an
inter-governmental organization established by the G-7 Summit in
1989 that sets voluntary standards on laws to combat money
laundering and terrorist financing, issued a report criticizing the
United States for its failure to comply with an FATF recommendation
on the disclosure of the ownership of business entities.[5]
ITLEAA: Burdensome and Unnecessary
Senator Levin first introduced ITLEAA in 2006, and the same bill
was reintroduced in May 2009. The legislation uses existing
homeland security grants as a lever to force states to amend their
corporation law to comply with new federal requirements. In
particular, these amended laws would require those forming new
corporations and LLCs to provide to the state where the formation
is occurring a list of the "beneficial owners" of the business.
"Beneficial owners" are defined as any individual "who has a level
of control over, or entitlement to, the funds or assets of a
corporation or limited liability company that, as a practical
matter, enables the individual, directly or indirectly, to control,
manage, or direct the corporation or limited liability company."[6]
The information required on the beneficial owners would include
their names, addresses, and means of control over the business,
such as through a partnership or trust. This information would have
to be updated annually in states that require annual filings, or at
the time of changes in beneficial ownership in states that do not,
and would have to be maintained for five years after the entity
terminates.[7]
The legislation demands even more information of foreign owners
of U.S. businesses. Individuals forming businesses would be
required to certify that they have verified the name, address, and
identity of each owner who is not a citizen or permanent resident
and that they have obtained a copy of the photograph page of each
foreign owner's passport.
This information would have to be disclosed "upon receipt of a
written request" from a federal agency on behalf of another country
under an international treaty, agreement, or convention, or under
28 U.S.C. 1782 (assistance to foreign and international tribunals).
It would also have to be disclosed in response to a subpoena or
summons from a state or federal agency or a congressional
committee.[8]
Finally, the law would impose additional requirements on
individuals forming new corporations and LLCs. It amends the United
States Code to include these "formation agents" in the definition
of "financial institutions"--along with banks, credit unions, and
the like--thereby subjecting them to a variety of recordkeeping and
reporting regulations under existing federal law.[9]
Violations of any of these requirements would carry harsh
penalties. ITLEAA provides no additional funding for states to come
into compliance and most existing DHS funding is already earmarked
for specific purposes at the county and local levels. Individuals,
meanwhile, would face civil and criminal penalties for failure to
comply. Specifically, providing incorrect beneficial ownership
information or intentionally failing to provide updated ownership
information would be punishable by civil fines up to $10,000,
criminal fines, and imprisonment up to 3 years.[10] Despite the fact
that ITLEAA's requirements would be implemented through state law,
civil and criminal fines would be paid to the federal government
for violations--a reflection of the legislation's dismissive
attitude toward federalism and state sovereignty.
Formation agents would additionally face civil and criminal
liability for violations of Treasury recordkeeping and reporting
regulations applicable to financial institutions. Even accidental
errors and omissions could, in some circumstances, be subject to
large civil penalties.[11] Willful violations would be punishable by
fines up to $250,000 and imprisonment up to five years.[12]
Unanswered Questions
ITLEAA promises to impose massive burdens upon the states. To
begin with, it would upset and preempt states' existing
registration systems. Registration processes that have evolved over
decades to meet the needs of businesses and the public would not be
in compliance with ITLEAA's alternatively vague and detailed
requirements. Replacing these systems with ones that comply with
ITLEAA's complicated filing and retention requirements promises to
be both disruptive and expensive. The expense would be particularly
high in states that do not impose annual filing requirements--those
states are required by the bill to update records on a real-time
basis.
Compounding these difficulties is the challenge of administering
ITLEAA due to its fundamentally vague definition of "beneficial
owner." ITLEAA's definition raises more questions than it answers.
Because it does not contain a clear-cut definition of
ownership--for example, possession of more than 10 percent of the
stock of a corporation--it requires a looser, more subjective
analysis to determine legal requirements. For example, the
definition requires reporting on anyone who "directly or
indirectly" controls, manages, or directs the corporation--even
family members who exercise informal control over a closely held
corporation could be considered "beneficial owners." Thus, the
owner and president of a closely held corporation could be
compelled to report the extent of informal control that his wife
and mother-in-law exercise over his decisions.
ITLEAA's definition of "beneficial owner" would also require
"piercing" the ownership structures of non-individual entities. For
example, a corporation that is partly owned by a trust would be
required to report changes in the ownership of the trust, both in
terms of rights to distribution and rights to control. And if an
entity that owns part of a corporation or LLC is, in turn, owned by
another entity (hardly an unusual occurrence), the corporation or
LLC would be required to trace the rights to distribution and
control all the way up the chain until they reach individuals--an
extremely arduous, and potentially impossible, task.
Moreover, the corporation or LLC would be required to monitor
the ownership and (direct or indirect) control structures of all
the entities in that chain for changes, which it would be required
to report annually or, somehow, as they occur. It is, at the very
least, unclear as to how corporations and LLCs are supposed to know
about ownership changes in legally distinct entities, especially
when the changes they are required to report do not coincide with
and are far broader than, notions of legal ownership in other areas
of the law. So an LLC owned, in part, by a partnership might be
required to report that the partnership has lately been subject to
greater control, "as a practical matter," because one of the
partners got married and the new husband has taken an active, even
if technically informal, role in the partnership. The partnership,
on the other hand, would not be required to report anything at
all.
ITLEAA's "beneficial owner" definition leaves many basic
questions about determining ownership unaddressed, including:
- Does any percentage of ownership, no matter how small, render
an individual a beneficial owner?
- Does contingent ownership, such as stock options, confer
ownership? Does it matter whether the options are "above
water"?
- Does non-voting stock confer beneficial ownership?
- Are creditors beneficial owners? Does it matter whether a
creditor is able to exercise control over aspects of a business's
operations? What about whether a creditor is able to exercise a
degree of control over a corporation or LLC's actual owners?
- Are all board members of a closely held corporation, regardless
of their ownership interests, beneficial owners due to the control
that they potentially exercise over the corporation? Does it matter
whether the board's powers are restricted in the corporation's
charter or otherwise?
- Do the rules adopted by a corporation for the election of its
board figure into determining beneficial ownership? For example, if
unanimity is required to elect a board member, does that render any
shareholder, and all those who may in some way "control" him, a
beneficial owner?
- Are all family members of individuals who are beneficial owners
themselves also beneficial owners--or at least those who may be
said to practically exercise some control over the business entity,
even in the absence of any formal holdings in the business?
- Are managers considered beneficial owners, even if they possess
no equity stake in the business? If so, which managers? Does it
matter that the Vice President for Operations may have more
responsibility for managing the business as a whole than the Vice
President for Personnel?
- For a business owned in part by a trust, does it matter whether
the trust is revocable or irrevocable?
- Is a trustee who is not a beneficiary of a trust that owns, in
part, a corporation, a beneficial owner?
Under ITLEAA, states would face an unattractive choice: live up
to the letter of this invasive federal law and require small
businesses to file excessive and meaningless reports, or cut
corners and risk falling out of compliance.
Big Burdens on Small Businesses
ITLEAA will have a significant and negative effect on
small-business formation and survival. Businesses that today are
exempt from onerous reporting requirements would see their
paperwork burden multiply. Entrepreneurs would spend more time
complying with red tape, and have less time to ensure the success
of their businesses.
Under current law, two entrepreneurs starting a small business
can fill out all of the required paperwork to form an LLC in a
matter of minutes. Pennsylvania, whose requirements are typical of
most states, requests only the following information: the name of
the business (which must reflect its status as an LLC), an address
for official correspondence, the names and addresses of its
organizers, and the date the certificate is to go into effect.[13]
The filing fee is $125. The state requires an annual filing--a
one-page form requesting the business's current address--to
maintain the LLC.[14]
The simplicity of current law gives entrepreneurs the power to
form businesses quickly and with little expense or confusion.
Do-it-yourself kits, containing the forms, standard legal advice,
and draft contracts are available online for less than $100, and
many attorneys offer formation guidance for a flat fee, usually
around $500 for simple cases.
Under ITLEAA, however, forming a small business would be far
more complicated. For example, an entrepreneur seeking to form an
LLC would be required to ascertain the beneficial owners of the
business, a potentially difficult task for even a small business
that is being funded by family members or with an investment from a
family trust. Businesses relying on foreign funding, such as from
family members living abroad, would have to collect even more
information. Registration forms that previously took minutes would
take hours, days, or weeks. Many individuals would also require
legal advice to ensure that they are fulfilling all of the law's
specific requirements.
The complexity of the regulatory scheme would render it highly
risky and irresponsible, if not impossible, for entrepreneurs to
register limited liability businesses without consulting an
attorney, an accountant, or both. But at the same time,
professionals assisting in business formation, particularly those
who qualify as "formation agents" under ITLEAA, would demand
greater fees than they do today for their services. Registering a
business under ITLEAA would simply require more work and place
formation agents at greater risk of legal sanctions.
In addition to expenses, ITLEAA would also present enormous
risks to those forming businesses. The managers of businesses that
knowingly fail to comply with the law--for example, giving up on
tracing ownership past a certain point-- would face the risk of
civil and criminal penalties, as described above, including
imprisonment. The businesses themselves could also face dissolution
if states implement ITLEAA's requirements as addendums to their
existing entity formation laws. In such instances, entrepreneurs
could find themselves without the protection of limited liability
and personally responsible for business debts that they never
expected to fall upon them directly. Thus, the ITLEAA would put
individuals going into business at the risk of personal financial
ruin.
The higher costs and higher risks imposed by a greater (and more
confusing) regulatory burden will result in less business activity
and less job creation. At a time when unemployment is reaching a
26-year high, the last thing the federal government should be doing
is implementing new legal requirements that will make it even
harder for entrepreneurs to start new businesses.
Big Loopholes and Even Bigger
Burdens
While ITLEAA would impose enormous costs and risk on small
businesses, it would do little to prevent determined criminals from
forming business entities. A criminal intending to launder money or
finance terrorism could form and conduct criminal activities under
a sole proprietorship, general partnership, limited liability
partnership, or some other business association that is not covered
by ITLEAA. A criminal operating under one of these alternative
forms would, necessarily, forgo some of the benefits of the
corporate and LLC forms, including perhaps limited liability, but a
criminal is going to be less concerned about these benefits than
individuals operating legitimate businesses who actually have a
need for limited liability and flexibility in governance. Thus,
ITLEAA will disproportionately burden legitimate entrepreneurs over
those intending criminal ends.
Perhaps for this reason, ITLEAA would commission the Government
Accountability Office to study the possibility of expanding its
grasp to encompass partnerships, trusts, and other business
entities. This step, if it were ever taken, would radically change
the law of all 50 states. The United States has a long history of
easy formation of simple businesses; indeed, two individuals can
form a partnership merely by going into business with each other,
without any forms or filing requirements. State law, developed
through experience, supplies the default terms of these agreements,
reducing the legal expense of starting a simple business to
effectively zero.
Carried out to its logical end, ITLEAA would upend the policy of
easy business formation that has made America the world's most
entrepreneurial society. Individuals intending to start small
businesses on shoestring budgets could no longer simply open for
business; instead, their first step would be to put their paperwork
in order to meet federal and state regulatory requirements. Many
would be forced to hire attorneys, and those that do not would face
legal consequences (including prison) down the road in the case of
errors or omissions. These added costs would make some business
activities--such as a temporary partnership to sell products at a
single event--impractical and others impossible to get off the
ground. Worse, such requirements would have the greatest impact on
low-income individuals seeking to start their own businesses.
Privacy Concerns for All Privately
Held Corporations
ITLEAA also raises significant privacy concerns because it
requires detailed disclosure of information on privately owned
businesses--businesses that are not listed on stock exchanges and
whose shares are generally not open to purchase by the general
public. Thus, the reasons justifying disclosure of private
information about corporations that are publicly traded--namely, to
ensure that potential buyers and investors are fully informed
before they purchase shares--simply do not apply to private
entities. And as previously stated, ITLEAA is unlikely to achieve
its putative purpose of significantly impacting criminal or
terrorist activity undertaken through the corporate form--the only
conceivable rationale for ITLEAA's onerous disclosure requirements
of otherwise private information.
The breach of privacy is likely to have similar negative effects
as those previously listed. Those concerned about privacy may forgo
certain business opportunities, thereby taking their funds-- and
possible jobs--out of the stream of commerce. Others concerned with
privacy may shift to sole proprietorships or partnerships in order
to avoid being swept into the disclosure rules, while still others
may conduct their business in foreign jurisdictions with less
onerous rules.
Conclusion
Since the passage of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, "small and
mid-sized public companies have struggled to comply with its
onerous provisions, which created an enormous and disproportionate
regulatory burden."[15] In fact, a growing body of evidence shows
that the law is "harming the U.S. economy and its financial
industry."[16] Even the GAO reported in 2006 that the
cost of compliance with the law had been "disproportionately
higher" for smaller public companies."[17]
ITLEAA would do to private, nonpublic companies the same thing
that Sarbanes-Oxley has done to publicly traded companies--impose
significant new regulatory costs and liability risks. And the
literally millions of privately held companies have even less
financial ability to absorb such costs than the (generally) larger
public companies.
Finally, under the U.S. system of criminal justice, government
investigators have the ability to investigate companies and other
businesses that are suspected of engaging in money laundering, drug
trafficking, terrorism, and the other criminal acts listed in the
"Findings" clause of ITLEAA as a basis for this legislation.
However, America's constitutional system requires investigators to
meet certain legal standards to convince courts or grand juries to
issue subpoenas or summonses intended to obtain information needed
for a criminal investigation--such as details about who are the
"beneficial owners" of a suspected business. There is no valid
reason to circumvent these well-functioning rules, and there is no
reason that the vast majority of legitimate, privately held
businesses should have such a regulatory burden imposed on them
because of concerns over the comparatively small number of
criminals who use businesses to facilitate criminal acts,
particularly when there is no legitimate claim that the law will
prevent criminals from engaging in such acts.
Hans A.
von Spakovsky is a Senior Legal Fellow in the Center for Legal
and Judicial Studies at The Heritage Foundation and Manager of the
Civil Justice Reform Initiative and Andrew M.
Grossman served, until recently, as Senior Legal Policy Analyst
in the Center for Legal and Judicial Studies at The Heritage
Foundation.