Wis. Admin. Code Department of Administration Adm 82.25 - Documentation of ownership
(1)
(a) An applicant shall submit documentation
showing ownership of at least 51 percent of the business by a disabled veteran.
This documentation may include, but is not limited to, the three preceding
years of business taxes, a current business financial statement, business
licenses, buy-out agreements and financial agreements.
(b) For a sole proprietorship, additional
documentation may include, but is not limited to, canceled checks used to
purchase ownership.
(c) For a
partnership, additional documentation may include, but is not limited to,
partnership agreements, purchase agreements, and salary and profit-sharing
records.
(d) For a corporation,
additional documentation may include, but is not limited to, articles of
incorporation, corporate by-laws, a corporate-borrowing resolution, stock
certificates, stock-affirmation forms, and salary and profit-sharing
records.
(e) For a joint venture,
additional documentation may include, but is not limited to, a joint venture
agreement that is written and signed by all of the joint venturers. Each joint
venture agreement shall specify all of the following:
1. The capital contribution made by each
joint venturer, the control each will exercise, and the distribution of profit
and loss. The agreement shall allocate the control and the distribution of
profit and loss in proportion to the contributions of the joint
venturers.
2. The useful business
function the joint venture will perform and the part of the work each joint
venturer will do.
(2) The department may require documentation
showing how and when the disabled veteran's interest in the business was
acquired.
(3)
(a) The department shall apply the following
rules in situations in which marital assets form a basis for ownership of a
business:
1. When marital assets other than
the assets of the business in question are held jointly or as marital property
by both spouses, and are used to acquire the ownership interest asserted by the
disabled veteran, the department shall conclude that the disabled veteran
acquired his or her ownership interest in the business with his or her own
individual resources, provided that the other spouse irrevocably renounces and
transfers all rights in the ownership interest in the manner sanctioned by the
laws of the state in which either spouse or the business is domiciled. The
department may not count a greater portion of joint or marital property assets
toward ownership than state law would recognize as belonging to the qualifying
member of the business.
2. The
application for DVB certification shall include a copy of the document that is
used for legally transferring and renouncing the rights as required in subd.
1.
(b) In instances
where a disabled veteran and a person who is not a disabled veteran are married
and the marital ownership is not clearly established, the department may
request a marital-property waiver form in which both spouses certify that only
the disabled veteran spouse or his or her duly authorized representative
controls and manages the business, or an affidavit stating that the spouses
have signed a marital-property agreement in which the spouse who is not a
disabled veteran relinquishes control and management of the business.
Notes
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