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Steve Windhaus Ask the Small Biz Adviser

Debt to a vendor could lead to default

Dear Small Biz Adviser:
We own a small manufacturing company, an S corporation started in 1998 with a SBA loan. We were underfunded and incurred a $30,000 debt with one vendor. All other vendors are current. This one vendor is suing for money. We have tried to obtain further financing but have been turned down by several banking institutions. We have $40,000 equity in our house, and are rying to determine if we should borrow on equity and pay debt or check into bankruptcy and reorganize. Can you file bankruptcy and keep the relationships with other vendors? How would this affect personal credit? Borrowing personally scares me. Please help.
Tracy

Dear Tracy:
I'm going to make two assumptions:
1. That except for this debt, you're a profitable business with solid cash flow.
2. You have thoroughly examined ways to settle the suit.

If yours is a typical subchapter S situation, personal assets are not subject to the lawsuit. Given that same assumption, the personal credit record is not subject to the results of the lawsuit at hand.

However, your problem could be more complicated than you suspect. The outcome of this matter with the vendor could rely heavily on your Small Business Administration-backed loan. Read the online copy of SBA Form 148. (You'll need the free Adobe Acrobat Reader to view it.)

It is very likely that you signed that document when securing the SBA loan. This unconditional guarantee makes you and any other individual signer to the loan personally liable in the case of default. Unless you and the vendor reach an amicable resolution, the courts could move to force immediate payment of the indebtedness. In turn, unless you acquire the funds, the business could be in jeopardy and, logically, the SBA loan.

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This leads me to believe the vendor may be aware of your SBA loan and the guarantee associated with it. The vendor may recognize that a demand for total and immediate payment may force you to default, liquidate and then pay the debt. Depending on the amount of business and personal assets in that liquidation, the vendor may or may not get full payment.

On the other hand, if the vendor is attempting to leverage your SBA guarantee, it could come back at the vendor in a negative way. SBA loan guarantees are there to make certain that the lender gets back its money, plus liquidation costs. Any outstanding payments to vendors come from whatever amount is left over. The only exception to that would be any state or local jurisdictions that override that condition. However, I would consider that very unlikely.

Regarding the equity in your house, I am aware that home equity lines of credit are fast becoming a more popular financing instrument that the more traditional second lien loan process. In deciding whether to extend a loan, and at what rate, the lender will weigh your credit record, IRS returns of the business and amount of equity in your house.

As for bankruptcy, it will not be a means to avoid the liability and default liquidation process on a SBA loan. What you need at this moment is the advice of a good, qualified lawyer to help make the best decision for you personally and the business.

-- Posted: May 8, 2001

 

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How to find a lawyer for your business
Relying too much on credit cards
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