When A TP Purchased a C-Corp, he invested into the company his own monies through the years. Now that he is thinking of selling the C-Corp, he wants to get his personal invested money back out of the company that is not a part of the sale. How do I handle this transaction? Technically, through the years he "loaned" his personal money to the C-Corp, now he is thinking of selling the C-Corp someday down the road, so he wants to get his money back. Can this be done?
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Before closing, the corporation repays the loan.
"Technically, through the years he "loaned" his personal money to the C-Corp"
What to you mean by "technically". Is the money showing up as a loan or did it get coded as equity?
Yes I believe it did
It did which?
the bookkeeper put the money in the equity account in QB.
Then he didn't "loan" the money. He invested the money and he will get it back once he sells the business - the money is part of his basis in the corporation's stock.
Do I handle it that way even though it was a mistake which was caught when I was asked ti prep the books for sale?
Are there signed loan agreements indicating that the money was loaned to the business?
No sir, this is a very small corp. when the money was needed, he would just transfer into the bank account.
If it was reported as equity on prior tax returns and there aren't any documents indicating that they were loans, I think he is stuck with equity.
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