Ask HN: Misuse of corporate funds in a small business
I started a corporation with a couple of friends, and we made some money here and there. Not much, however it is enough to keep us afloat and out of the red. In the mean time we are having fun learning the ins-and-outs of owning a business.
However, recently we noticed that one of the founding members/board directors/officers of the corporation has been spending corporate money on little things like vending machine purchases, and gas. When asked about it he mentioned he was accidentally using the wrong card, we (the other founders) thought it would stop and the monies would be repaid to the corporation. Not only did it not stop it continued for a whole other month, and the monies to repay to the corporation has not been deposited.
The thing is that each of us has an equal share in the corporation, and we each hold our officers positions I am not sure how to approach the situation and/or reprimand this individual and make sure the money gets returned since officially he is listed as having access to the corporate account. How would it work if we did decide that he was dead-weight and wanted him out (no investors involved, we each gave ourselves 20% of the shares in the corporation)? Would we have to buy him out? Technically this is embezzlement, could we as a corporation take him to court? If this happened in your corporation how would you handle it? What would be your next steps in resolving the situation amicably?
I understand that the first response is going to be "find a lawyer", however when I mentioned that we are just making enough to stay afloat I really do mean that. The amount that has been embezzled is no small amount compared to our income, and will hurt us and keep us from doing R&D work for products we would like to develop and release to the consumer market.
18 comments
[ 3.3 ms ] story [ 51.4 ms ] threadIt sounds like its not quite to the point where it needs to escalate to the steps you're talking about in terms of buying him out, and this could be solved with a quick 15-minute company meeting about use of the company card/funds. Maybe there's something deeper there like he's having financial trouble that needs to be addressed. Or maybe he's just really bad with money, in which case maybe you should suggest someone else hold onto the company card.
I think as a whole, our culture is too quick to jump to getting lawyers involved, when you should at least try giving just talking to him a second shot. Even if you get lawyers involved and take care of taking him out of the company cleanly from a legal point of view, it's definitely going to be a HUGE distraction and morale killer to have a founder leave.
If he was having money troubles I would have hoped he would talk to one of us however that has not been the case. It is very disconcerting to us that he has pretty much gone quiet, it has been hard to get ahold of him. I don't know, but it just feels like things have changed since we first started the corporation 2 years ago.
If he is clearly avoiding you guys while continuing to misspend company money, then I would talk to a lawyer. Did you guys set up any kind of vesting schedule for each of your 20% of the company? It's a fact of startup life that founders will sometimes leave, and vesting schedules help ease the legal mess that ensues.
If he is not communicating, then perhaps put a hold on or cancel the company credit card he carries? I'd only do this if he is avoiding you while continuing to use the card for person expenses. What do your other founders think about this? Are they willing to cut him more slack than you? Are you over reacting? Hard to tell with out more details, but I would push to resolve the issue quickly.
We are definitely trying to cancel the corporate card, however Wells Fargo is giving us the run-around.
The other founders are unhappy with the situation and are on new territory as well, so we are all unsure as to how to proceed. No, we are all pretty much together that something has to be done, we cut him slack when we noticed it and talked to him about it, now it has become an issue of how is the corporation to survive if frivolous spending becomes the norm?
Am I overreacting, possibly, but if that is the case we (as in the other founders) are all over-reacting.
Yes, we are trying to get the issue resolved as soon as possible, however I know HN is an extremely smart group of individuals and advice is always wanted from people that may have gone through something like this before.
random ideas:
-- get a new card account, then use up available credit on the old card with a cash advance or some other reversable transaction. -- report the card as lost. -- send him a letter/email explaining (nicely) that he has until X date to repay the money or you will go to small claims court. There you wouldn't need a lawyer -- you'd only have to pay a filing fee, and a judgement in your favor could affect his credit rating, and give you a tool to force repayment.
Seriously, this guy has shown himself to be fundamentally dishonest (both for starting this behavior after the rules of the game have been well established over a couple of years and then by neither stopping his theft or repaying as he promised). You're just not going to make things work with this guy and it's a lot broader than him taking money from the company that can't afford it, he's demonstrated that you can't trust him at all.
As philiphodgen says, either you remove him from the company (and don't delay) or you remove yourselves from it and let it die. You've given him the one chance he deserves, now is not the time for half-measures, including any compromise that includes him continuing to work with you in any way.
My father once worked at a very high level for a company where one of the founding partners started helping himself to anything he took a fancy to. The company was very profitable so it's not quite the same thing; getting rid of this partner was intensely painful and expensive (e.g. his demands for immediate cash when it came time for investment limited the options and caused everyone to take a needlessly big tax hit).
One lesson from the above is that if you do become successful the pain and difficulty is only going to be greater. If you were making 10/100/1000 times as much money how much might he be helping himself to? He feels entitled to the money....
What you have now is the situational equivalent of the Kubler-Ross stages of death. Your brain needs to cope with this. Your brain isn't coping yet.
What you do next will affect your future. Not because of this thief. Because your action will demonstrate to yourself that you can be jerked around and you will let people steal from you. OR NOT.
I had an employee embezzle from me. Not exactly the same but similar. I was ashamed and embarrassed. I'm a tax lawyer FFS. I should be smarter than that.
I had her arrested. It was time to stand up for myself. I suspect it is time for you to stand up for yourself.
Your company may be dead as a result of this. You don't have total control over that result. Your next business will do well if you insist that you be treated honorably and not be stolen from. As soon as you're willing to let _this_ company die for reasons beyond your control, you'll take action. Because you already, in your heart, know what to do.
There may or may not be ways to evict him and keep the company going. Don't hold onto this company at all costs. But do stand up for yourself here. If you don't the wheel will come around again and someone else will steal from you. And again until you insist that it stop. Then it will.
Then, set up a policy requiring 2 people to sign for all purchases, and pay for things by company check only. Establish a formal expense reimbursement process. You can probably get an accountant or bookkeeper to help you set this up.
If this person was initially a friend and productive, and suddenly started behaving differently, there are three possibilities.
1) He was always a bad person, and you just didn't notice.
2) He has given up on the company for some reason related to the company, and is being passive-aggressive, plus inherently somewhat dishonest.
3) He is having personal financial/emotional/etc. problems.
Not sure how you would determine which of the above it is, or how best to respond.
I've had embezzlement happen at a company I owned, and it ended up killing the company (the scale of embezzlement was high, and it wasn't a normal tech company). Ultimately, the problem is a lack of process/controls, adequate enforcement and supervision, and hiring immoral people. As a result, I am much more cautious with all of those things now.
I think you're more doomed due to lack of founder vesting than anything else.
Also, from a tax standpoint, your business will need to account for his expenditures. Depending how how he's spending the money, and how it's accounted for, it could create some problems down the road.