1. Why Entity Structure Matters for Brooklyn Real Estate Ownership
Holding commercial or investment real estate as an individual exposes your entire personal net worth to liability claims tied to that property. A slip-and-fall accident, a lease dispute, or an environmental issue on the land can trigger a judgment that reaches your home, bank accounts, and other assets. When you place the property inside a properly formed corporation or limited liability company, that entity becomes the defendant in most lawsuits, and creditors generally cannot pierce the corporate veil to access your personal funds. This is not absolute protection, but it is a critical first layer of defense.
The choice between an LLC and a C-corporation or S-corporation involves trade-offs. An LLC offers pass-through taxation (income flows to your personal return) and flexible management, but it does not provide the same level of formality that courts sometimes expect for liability protection. A corporation requires more paperwork, annual filings, and board meetings, but the structure itself is more established in case law. As counsel, I often advise Brooklyn clients that the right entity depends on whether the property is held for investment or development, how many owners are involved, and what your long-term exit strategy looks like. These decisions should not be made in isolation from your estate plan.
2. Real Estate Corporation Formation and Governance in New York
New York law, codified primarily in the Business Corporation Law and the Limited Liability Company Law, sets out specific requirements for entity formation. You must file articles of incorporation or articles of organization with the New York Department of State, and you must maintain a registered agent and office in New York if the entity conducts business here. Governance matters because courts examine whether you have actually followed corporate formalities—holding shareholder or member meetings, keeping minutes, and respecting the separation between personal and corporate funds. If you treat the entity as a mere extension of yourself and commingle funds, a court may disregard the liability protection in what is called piercing the corporate veil.
One frequent mistake is failing to update the operating agreement or bylaws when ownership changes or when the property is refinanced. A Brooklyn property owner sold a stake to a family member but never amended the LLC operating agreement; years later, a dispute arose over whether the new owner had voting rights, and the court looked to the original agreement, creating unnecessary litigation. The governance structure you establish at formation should be revisited whenever significant changes occur.
New York Supreme Court and Entity Dispute Resolution
If disputes arise between members or shareholders of a real estate corporation, New York Supreme Court (the trial-level court in New York State) has jurisdiction over derivative suits, dissolution proceedings, and oppression claims. These cases often involve disagreements over distributions, management decisions, or whether a minority owner has been frozen out. The court applies the Business Judgment Rule, which generally defers to management decisions unless the plaintiff shows self-dealing or gross negligence. In practice, these disputes are rarely as clean as the statute suggests; courts must balance the intent of the founding documents against the evolving relationship between owners.
3. Tax Planning and Entity Selection for Real Estate Holdings
The tax implications of your entity choice can be substantial. An S-corporation allows you to avoid the double taxation that C-corporations face (tax at the corporate level and again when profits are distributed), but it has restrictions: only U.S. .itizens or residents can be shareholders, and it cannot have more than one hundred shareholders. An LLC taxed as an S-corporation offers flexibility; you can elect S-corp taxation for an LLC, which can reduce self-employment taxes on certain income. A C-corporation may be advantageous if you plan to reinvest profits in the real estate rather than distributing them to owners.
Real estate held in a corporation also affects depreciation deductions, capital gains treatment, and how the property is valued in your estate. If you die holding the property in an LLC, the entire entity passes through your estate, and the step-up in basis may or may not apply depending on how the entity is structured and whether it is held in a revocable trust. These issues require coordination between your real estate law counsel and your estate planning attorney. Real estate laws in New York also impose specific recording requirements and transfer taxes that depend on entity status.
4. Liability Protection and Ongoing Compliance
Liability protection is not a one-time benefit; it requires ongoing compliance. You must maintain separate bank accounts for the entity, carry adequate liability insurance in the entity's name, and ensure that contracts and leases clearly show the entity as the party, not you personally. If you sign a lease or a construction contract as an individual rather than as the representative of the corporation, you may have personally guaranteed the obligation, defeating the liability shield.
Courts in New York and across the country have found that even a properly formed entity loses liability protection if the owner fails to observe corporate formalities or if the entity is undercapitalized (meaning it was formed with insufficient funds to cover foreseeable liabilities). A Brooklyn landlord formed an LLC with only five hundred dollars in capital, collected rent for years, and then failed to maintain the building properly; when a tenant sued for injuries from a code violation, the court pierced the veil because the entity was clearly inadequate to cover the property's obligations. Proper capitalization and ongoing governance are not optional.
Transferring Real Estate through an Entity
When you want to transfer real estate held in a corporation to another owner or to your heirs, the mechanics depend on whether you are transferring shares or membership interests versus transferring the underlying property. Transferring the entity itself is often simpler and avoids triggering a new deed recording and transfer tax, but it also transfers all liabilities and obligations of the entity. Real estate civil lawsuit risks tied to prior tenants or maintenance issues come with the entity. Your estate plan and your real estate structure should work together; if you want your heirs to inherit the property cleanly, you may need to place the entity in a revocable trust or use a succession plan that transfers the shares before your death.
5. Strategic Considerations for Brooklyn Property Owners
Before forming a real estate corporation or restructuring an existing holding, evaluate three core questions: How much liability exposure does the property create? Are you planning to hold it long-term or sell within five years? Will multiple family members or investors own stakes? Your answers should drive the entity choice and the governance framework. If the property is high-value and generates significant tenant traffic, liability protection is critical, and a corporation with formal governance may justify the administrative burden. If it is a single-family rental held as a long-term investment with minimal tenant interaction, an LLC may offer sufficient protection with less overhead.
Also consider how the entity interacts with your overall estate plan. Real estate held in a corporation that is not in a trust may create delays in probate and may not avoid estate taxes. Coordination between your real estate counsel and your estate planning attorney is not a luxury; it is essential for avoiding costly mistakes after your death. The time to address these issues is now, while you can make deliberate choices rather than leaving your heirs to sort out a tangled structure.
04 Mar, 2026

