At MCIS Law, we aggressively protect the rights of business owners, working to ensure that their personal assets are shielded from liability incurred by the business. To schedule a confidential consultation, contact our offices online or call us at (346) 297-0121.
Personal liability means a creditor or plaintiff can reach beyond the business and come after your personal property to settle a debt. That could include your home equity, personal bank accounts, investment accounts, and vehicles.
Consider a common example: a sole proprietor running a small contracting business faces a negligence claim. Without a legal shield in place, the plaintiff can target both the business and the owner’s personal assets. One lawsuit can wipe out years of savings.
Certain types of business structure provide more protection from creditors who seek access to personal assets to satisfy a claim.
Creating a Texas Limited Liability Company (LLC) establishes a separate legal entity for the business, allowing you to distinguish your personal assets from those of the business. When maintained properly, an LLC allows only business assets to be exposed to business debts and lawsuits.
The protection of an LLC, however, isn’t automatic. Courts can allow a claimant to “pierce the veil” and reach personal assets when LLC owners mix personal and business finances, ignore company formalities, or use the entity for fraudulent conduct. The LLC must operate like a real business, with separate and proper banking, contracts, meeting minutes (if applicable), and records.
Texas corporations also provide protection from personal liability for the debts and obligations of the business. This structure requires more formality, but, when properly created and administered, protects shareholders from personal liability for business debts. There is a tradeoff, though—with a corporation, you must have bylaws, annual meetings, and documented resolutions, as well as other administrative requirements
If you haven’t formed an LLC or corporation, but you are operating your business as a sole proprietorship, your personal assets and business assets are equally accessible by creditors. Likewise, a partnership does not limit your personal liability unless it’s set up as a limited partnership. In fact, partners in a general partnership can potentially be liable for the debts of all other general partners.
Mixing funds is one of the quickest ways to lose liability protection. Courts view commingling as evidence that the business isn’t a truly separate entity. Avoid mistakes like using one bank account for everything, paying personal bills from a business card, or signing contracts in your personal name. These small lapses create big exposure.
Carefully prepared contracts do more than outline payment terms—they limit risk. Your agreements should include clear indemnification language, limitation-of-liability provisions, and defined scopes of work. Generic templates often fail under scrutiny. A Texas-specific contract built around your industry gives you better footing when disputes arise.
Liability protection is strongest when legal structure and insurance work together. A Texas business should consider:
Insurance doesn’t replace a proper business structure, but it can soften the blow when a lawsuit comes in.
Using these strategies correctly requires an asset protection lawyer who understands both Texas asset-protection law and the practical risks business owners face.
Read Also: Protecting Your Assets With a Trust
At MCIS Law, PLLC, in Stafford, we provide comprehensive legal guidance to families and business owners across southeast Texas. Our team advises on business succession, estate planning, and asset protection, helping clients design transition plans that preserve both wealth and family harmony.
For a confidential consultation with an experienced Texas business succession lawyer, email us or call our office at (346) 297-0121. We accept all major credit cards.