Ohio Admin. Code 122:24-1-11 - Maintenance of records
(A) Both
eligible investors and small business enterprises shall be
are required
to maintain records necessary to prove that they meet the various requirements
of section 122.86 of the Revised Code. The
burden of proof rests with the eligible investor and the small business
enterprise and compliance with the suggestions below does not shift the burden
of proof to the state, the director, or the tax commissioner.
(B) All records must
are to be
preserved for a period of five years from the completion of the applicable
holding period for the qualifying investment, as described in division (A)(4)
of section 122.86 of the Revised
Code.
(C) Each eligible investor
intending to claim the nonrefundable investment credit
must
is to
maintain, among other things, complete and accurate records to establish the
time of investment and amount of their qualifying investment in a small
business enterprise. This documentation could include:
(1) Records establishing an equity interest
such as stock certificates, membership certificates, partnership agreements,
corporate minutes, documentation of the entity's ownership structure
immediately before and immediately after the investment, or other legal
documents;
(2) Records establishing
the date and amount of the investment such as cancelled checks, wire transfer
authorization, journal entries of the small business enterprise, or the equity
accounts of the small business enterprise.
(D) Each small business enterprise
must
is to
maintain, among other things, complete and accurate records to establish its
qualification as a small business enterprise. This documentation includes:
(1) Payroll policies establishing the
entity's criteria for an employee being full-time, as well as payroll records
showing names and hours of all employees both in Ohio and in the United
States.
(2) Records necessary to
establish and validate the date, amount and location of the investments
described in division (A)(1)(d) of section
122.86 of the Revised Code. This
could include contracts, purchase invoices, sales invoices, cancelled checks,
wire transfer authorization, bank records, or registration documents.
(E) The failure to maintain
complete records which may be used in verifying the accuracy of the figures
reported by the investors or small business enterprises may result in the
disqualification of the small business investment certificate, or the
nonrefundable investment credit being denied.
Notes
Promulgated Under: 119.03
Statutory Authority: 122.86
Rule Amplifies: 122.86
Prior Effective Dates: 11/08/2011 (Emer.), 03/29/2012
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