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    10841 Paramount Blvd.
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    Downey, CA 90241

    Phone: (562) 923-0971
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    Phone: (949) 756-0684
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    Phone: (562) 901-3050
    FAX: (562) 901-3051

    Tredway, Lumsdaine & Doyle was established in the city of Downey in 1961. The firm expanded with the opening of its Irvine office in 1989, and its Long Beach office in 2001. From our centrally located offices in Los Angeles and Orange County, the firm services clients throughout Southern California.

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May 2008

May 21, 2008

South Asian Bar Association of Southern California Public Interest Foundation Holds 5th Annual Banquet at Union Station

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The South Asian Bar Association (SABA) of Southern California Public Interest Foundation held its Fifth Annual Public Interest Foundation Banquet on April 24, 2008 at historic Union Station.  The banquet, which is the non-profit organization’s primary fundraising event, drew approximately 300 influential members of the Southern California legal community, business community, local state and federal judges, and elected officials.  Tredway, Lumsdaine & Doyle attorney Pamela Tahim is the Vice-President of the SABA Foundation and has been elected to be President for the 2008-2009 term.  The Foundation is a 501(c)(3) organization dedicated to supporting public interest projects which assist the South Asian communities in Southern California.  The Foundation provides grants to grassroots organizations that provide critical legal and social services to South Asian communities and fellowships to law students who wish to devote their careers to public service.

May 13, 2008

Asset Protection and Limited Liability Companies

I have had quite a few questions recently about "Asset Protection" and limited liability companies.  Many clients transfer a rental property into a California limited liability company, an "LLC", for asset protection purposes, without fully understanding what "asset protection" is and why an LLC can provide it.

The concept is simple.  Imagine you own a rental property in the name of yourself and your wife, as joint tenants.  You rent this property to a couple with one child.  You have a written rental agreement (good for you!) and collect rent on a monthly basis.  You retain a general homeowners insurance policy for the value of the home. One day, a guest of the renters' falls off the roof and suffers a tragic death (it is dramatic to make the point easier to comprehend). 

As the owner of the property, you and your wife will most likely be named in any litigation for recovery by the guest's widow.  If the widow is able to obtain a judgment against you greater than the amount of your homeowners insurance policy, she will be able to enforce this judgment not only against the rental property, but also your personal assets including your residence, bank accounts, etc.

If you had transferred the rental property into an LLC, the LLC would be named as a defendant in that lawsuit, as opposed to you and your wife.  If the widow was able to obtain a judgment, it would be against the LLC, which does not include your personal assets such as your residence, bank accounts, etc.  The widow will not be able to enforce the judgment against all of your personal assets. 

This is one way to limit the risk inherent in owning rental property, and to "protect your personal assets."  Remember, in order for the LLC to be considered a separate legal entity and upheld by a court of law, the formation, implementation and ongoing maintenance of the LLC must be correct.  There are also many property tax pitfalls with transferring property from an individual to an LLC.  If you would like more information about asset protection or LLC's and their formation, please call us.

Article Submitted By: Attorney Brooke Pollard

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