Originally posted by Wanderer
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Previously on "tax benefit of having Wife as employee/shareholder"
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Originally posted by oldtimer45 View PostAs you say, I will take it as a lesson learnt and try to persuade my Wife to become an employee and/or director
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Thanks for all the advice
As you say, I will take it as a lesson learnt and try to persuade my Wife to become an employee and/or director
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Originally posted by northernladuk View PostIt is fudged as we know full well it isn't a directors loan.
I read the original post again and all the OP says is that he "took the money". Why should we presume that he has not taken it as a director's loan? In any case, if he doesn't have minutes of the directors meetings and dividend vouchers then it's legally a loan not a dividend isn't it? So the director who just takes money out of the company bank account is actually taking a loan unless they go to the trouble of properly declaring a dividend.
Originally posted by northernladuk View PostThe OP has admitted he has messed up and trying to sort out things retorspectively.
Originally posted by northernladuk View PostGranted it won't seem fudged to the account as long as the OP doesn't screw up when talking to him as you say. Flaws are if it is over 5k or the OP messes it up with the accountant and he gets suspicious. Other assumption is that you have 5k to bang back in to your account quick.
Originally posted by downsouth View Postsince when has it been illegal to take a DL over £5K????
*(Edit to say that the law did indeed change in the Companies Act 2006 it is now legal if "the transaction has been approved by a resolution of the members of the company")*
My impression was that if there are no shareholders to complain then the "crime" will never be investigated and no action will be taken. In reality, directors of close companies can and do take loans. I think this is more to protect the shareholders of larger companies.
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Originally posted by Wanderer View PostNot fudged at all, it was a director's loan. Nothing wrong with that, I'll pay it back. (Well, it's actually illegal if it's over £5k but that law is to protect shareholders and since the director is the sole shareholder no action is going to be taken)
Without getting in to the details of a horrible mess Dearnla hit it on the the head. The only thing I would add is be honest with the accountant and ask him to help you in a proper and correct way and then........
Pay the bill. Learn lesson. Set up Wife as Shareholder/Employee next tax year.
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Pay the bill. Learn lesson. Set up Wife as Shareholder/Employee next tax year.
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Originally posted by northernladuk View PostBut you accountant would consolidate your figures against your bank statement? No decent accountant would overlook outgoings to a personal account and then take a fudged excuse and action knowing full well in his professional opinion you are pulling a fast one surely?
Originally posted by SueEllen View PostI'm sure the original poster worked out what was implied was illegal anyway and aren't encouraging him to do anything, so I don't think your post above this is needed.
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Originally posted by northernladuk View PostBut you accountant would consolidate your figures against your bank statement? No decent accountant would overlook outgoings to a personal account and then take a fudged excuse and action knowing full well in his professional opinion you are pulling a fast one surely?
I would say your analogy was flawed as you don't include the accountant.
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Originally posted by Wanderer View Postyou beat me to the answer by two minutes.
What if you are the sole director and shareholder so there was no one else present at the board meeting to witness you declaring the divided and the minutes/dividend voucher (if any were ever created) quietly disappear.
Was a dividend actually declared? Did the meeting even take place? Perhaps it was a loan all along? If no one outside the company knows that this was supposed to be a dividend then what happens?
Or as an analogy: If a man walking alone in the forest says something and his wife isn't around to hear him, is he still in the wrong?
I would say your analogy was flawed as you don't include the accountant.
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you beat me to the answer by two minutes.
Originally posted by Old Greg View PostI expect this is illegal as you have already declared a dividend.
Was a dividend actually declared? Did the meeting even take place? Perhaps it was a loan all along? If no one outside the company knows that this was supposed to be a dividend then what happens?
Or as an analogy: If a man walking alone in the forest says something and his wife isn't around to hear him, is he still in the wrong?
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Originally posted by Old Greg View PostWSS - you can't do things retrospectively. If only it were legal, you could make out that your dividends to date were not dividends but a large director's loan (which there may be some interest at commercial rate on or BIK taxation due, I wouldn't know). You could then gift your wife shares and then declare a dividend while paying back the director's loan. Unfortunately, I expect this is illegal as you have already declared a dividend. Your accountant is your best bet.
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