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Four friends went into business together operating a night market, holding big events in a local city every two weeks. Each of the friends contributed $2,000 in cash for start-up capital, expecting a

Four friends went into business together operating a night market, holding big events in a local city every two weeks. Each of the friends contributed $2,000 in cash for start-up capital, expecting a 25% interest in the company.

– Adam had the business idea and asked Betty, Camala, and Duane to be part of the business. Adam was unemployed at the time and was available to work on the events 100% of the time.

– Betty had a part-time job, but quickly decided to quit and work for the company full time.

– Camala was 6 months pregnant and was available to help when the company started but

soon had the baby and plans eventually to go back to her job as an independent

contractor.

– Duane had a full-time job and would only be able to provide limited support, mostly in

marketing the events.

The friends used a generic online legal form to create an LLC as equal members but did not

create an operating agreement because the state didn’t require one.

By the third event the markets had already become popular and were bringing in a lot of money.

Adam and Betty started to push “buyouts” on Camala and Duane, suggesting that Camala and

Duane were somehow bad friends to expect 25% of a company they were not going to work at.

Adam and Betty have now basically hijacked control of the company, blocked access to bank

accounts, business documents, accounting, and funds to anyone but themselves. Camala and

Duane have not seen a dime of the profits. Adam and Betty seem to only want to talk about their

original buyout offers of $5,000 for Camala, and $8,000 for Duane, with no ongoing ownership.

While the facts may vary, such casual business startups among friends or family are common.

This scenario demonstrates all the things that can go wrong without proper planning.

Question:

If these friends had come to you before starting the business, how would you have advised them?

Include in your analysis:

– What steps should have been taken before money changed hands?

– Is an LLC the best option? Some form of partnership? Other options? Explain your

choice thoroughly.

– While the friends each initially contributed cash, how should they value the non-cash

contributions of time and labor in determining ownership shares, distribution of profits,

etc.?

– Was an operating or partnership agreement necessary? What should have been included?

Support your analysis with at least 3 scholarly sources other than the course materials, cited in-

text and in a reference list. You must also integrate Biblical worldview analysis.

This paper must contain at least 800 words and follow current APA format but does not require

an abstract. The title page, abstract (if you include one), and reference list do not count towards

the length requirement. Submit your paper as a Word document.

Note: Your assignment will be checked for originality via the Turnitin plagiarism tool.

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