Ask HN: Using an LLC to protect side project IP
Suppose you had an LLC or could form one whilst employed by another company and you have signed an assignments clause.
Could one create own IP under the LLC (owned by the LLC) to protect the IP from that assingment clause, whilst being employed by the second company?
I apprecitate that this is probably one for a lawyer, but wanted to get some thoughts on this approach for protect one's side projects.
49 comments
[ 3.2 ms ] story [ 100 ms ] threadThe proper answer is, consult the precedent of prior cases in your state, that will tell you how strong the LLC holds up in any particular jurisdiction. A lawyer in your area will also know this better than a lawyer in other areas. It’s not a one-size-fits-all answer, and in general the LLC typically holds up well. Regardless of the number of members.
> You seem to be looking for a doctor/lawyer/teacher/statistician/psychologist/sysadmin/_____. Asking concrete _____ questions on a public forum is not a substitute.
Does that really have a positive effect, though? In my opinion, it's not a good thing for people, especially those who aren't wealthy to enough to pay every time there's something they want to learn.
They probably know that paying someone hundreds of dollars an hour is the surest way to get a good answer but lack either the ability or the will to pay it.
And getting a shit answer on an anonymous forum that is not remotely tailored to personal circumstances is an acceptable substitute ?
Especially as the answer will no doubt come from some John Doe who isn't even qualified in the topic at hand but is just regurgitating some heresy they read on the internet or heard from "a friend".
I mean, nobody here has said "I can't comment until I've seen your contract with your employer, can you email it to me ?" .
There are some things that require the services of a professional and tailoring to personal circumstances.
Sure you can go watch videos for free on YouTube that show you how to do open heart surgery, and you can probably buy medical scalpels cheaply on eBay.
But frankly I'd rather pay up and get an experienced surgeon to do it for me.
Most ailments don't require a surgeon and most people don't have access to one.
Medical advice is one of the most frustrating things to google for. Far too often, the only advice to be found is to "see a physician". This is often good advice but not everyone can and I'm pretty sure that the lack of additional advice results in people improperly treating injuries, misdiagnosing ailments more often than necessary and sometimes dying.
I don't say this out of a dislike of medicine! My mother is a doctor and spent years working in Kenya a couple of decades ago and saw many, many instances of suffering that could have been avoided with today's wireless internet and some good online medical advice.
It's not worth nerfing free online advice for the benefit of people can afford to spend on advice tailored perfectly for their own situation.
If it were me, I’d simply speak with the first company to get my side project exempted.
I tried googling this, but the SEO spam is so bad I always converge to the same damn sites. Maybe google search for legal layperson questions is the next big thing?
For context, as a layman, when I Googled this a while ago, the understanding I came away with was that while there can be some benefit to form an LLC in this regard, in reality it's Very Hard (TM) for a 1-person company to truly avoid the risk of the corporate veil getting pierced (regardless of the kind—LLC or whatever). The way I understood it, the entity suing you will look for any and all excuses in your records to try to pierce the corporate veil—and these can include anything from "mixed personal & corporate funds" to "did not properly keep detailed minutes of corporate actions", to other things I'm not aware of. And when there's only 1 person in the company, it's generally more difficult to abide by all the formalities in practice and keep proper documentation of them and convince others that you are indeed keeping doing things properly, whereas with 2+ people, it's much easier, and as a result of that fact (IIRC) judges are apparently much less likely to pierce the corporate veil when there are multiple people in a company.
But as I mentioned, I'm a total layman here, and I would love more info from someone who actually has any legal experience with this kind of concern.
It's not just a question of formalities, it's a question of general intent.
The Wikipedia article on "Piercing the corporate veil"[1] provides this example:
> A simple example would be where a businessman has left his job as a director and has signed a contract to not compete with the company he has just left for a period of time. If he sets up a company which competed with his former company, technically it would be the company and not the person competing. But it is likely a court would say that the new company was just a "sham" or a "cover"; and that as the new company is completely owned and controlled by one person that the former employee is deliberately choosing to compete, and so is in breach of that non-competing contract.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piercing_the_corporate_veil
I’m just someone who has taken law courses in undergrad, not a lawyer, and you really should talk to one if you are seriously considering this. They will have much better feedback for your particular situation and questions like this will not be expensive to have answered.
[0]: https://www.nolo.com/legal-encyclopedia/limited-liability-pr...
States like Wyoming, Nevada, and New Mexico generally have a good reputation as private and good for asset protection.
Of course, it's always a challenge to incorporate out of state, and do everything "remote".
Ideally, the IP agreement with the employer is limited in scope so that the only IP assigned is that which relates to the employer’s products (e.g., a company that develops medical records software might not claim IP rights to a game the employee develops on the weekend). Unfortunately, many employers use overly-broad agreements, so it’s important to review the agreement. Even if the agreement is broad, the employer may be willing to amend it if the employee is working on something unrelated to the employer’s business and the work won’t affect the employee’s performance. Talk to an attorney in your state before you do anything that jeopardizes something of value to you, and definitely talk to an attorney before you concoct a scheme that opens you up to legal problems ;-)
Source: Attorney / software developer.
My guess is your company will never know just use different github accounts. If they find out they may fire you but to bring a lawsuit to take the ip would be costly and rarely worth it.
You can't sign two simultaneous agreements assigning your IP to two different companies. Imagine Amazon hires you and has you agree to assign any IP to them. You then get a second (simultaneous) job with Apple and you agree to assign any IP to them. At some point, a court is going to step in if there's a problem and figure out how to unwind the mess. If the second company is an LLC that's owned by you, the court isn't going to be amused and say "well, it's clearly not a scheme by the owner to get out of an assignment clause."
If you've signed away your IP as part of your employment, there isn't going to be One Simple Trick™ to get around that. Even if the court decided "yes, we have to treat this as if you were employed by two companies that have no relation to you," EmploymentCorp could simply sue you for not assigning them the IP, win, and then take your assets as compensation - including your ownership of the LLC.
You personally are still liable for complying with your agreement. If you violate that, your employer might sue you for breaching the agreement. Given that one of your assets is the LLC that "owns" the IP you didn't assign to your employer, that kinda makes it easy. If lots of other people owned a part of the other LLC/company, that makes it harder to unwind, but that doesn't let you or the LLC off the hook. Did the LLC's management know that you had an agreement with EmploymentCorp to give them the IP you were creating? Assuming you're the majority shareholder and/or otherwise in charge, yes. So the LLC knowingly entered into an agreement to "steal" EmploymentCorp's IP (using the word steal a bit loosely here, but it fits enough).
You're basically talking about signing an agreement with your LLC that you know violates your employment agreement and signing the agreement as an officer of the LLC that the LLC knows violates the employment agreement of the person (you). Seems like that creates plenty of liability on both sides of the coin.
Not only that, but it very quickly moves the nature of the liability from civil to criminal, which then has potential further impact on you in the future.
So it really depends on details about what exactly the agreement says and what domain they work & generate IP on.
Most employers, especially ones with IP assignment rules, don't allow working for another company at the same time. So off the bat you're going to be having a bad time there.
Next if your employer has an IP assignment section in your contract, assuming you use none of their time (I'm going to bet lawyers will have fun with what that means), and none of their equipment, some states and some countries do not consider such terms enforceable. But in that case you don't need an LLC (and making an LLC puts you in the "don't work for another company" bucket)
The obvious question (for your lawyer, I am not your lawyer, this is not legal advice) would be whether you could even assign your IP to the LLC, if the terms of your contract are enforceable and say your spare time IP belongs to your employer, then that IP is not yours to give to the LLC.
Of course the real think you should be doing is talking to an actual lawyer rather than asking random people on the internet.
The best thing you could do to protect IP for your side project is to talk to your employer and tell them what you want to work on and get a written exception for it.
*This like everything on this thread is terrible advice. You need a lawyer.
I think it's safe to assume that any such absurdly-wide assignment clause would end up unenforceable in a court of law and can thus be safely ignored.
Since you're apparently not a lawyer, you haven't read the employment contract and you don't even know what state this person lives in, telling them they can safely ignore a contract that they signed seems rather irresponsible.
The only reasonable advice to give here is the usual: Consult a lawyer who is licensed to practice in your local jurisdiction.
> I apprecitate that this is probably one for a lawyer, but wanted to get some thoughts on this approach for protect one's side projects.
Also, I wonder how useful "company working hours" is, when many companies push for more than 8 hours in a day.
When starting my company (which started as a side project while working for another company), I sat down with my boss and asked if he would agree to acknowledge in writing that the company will claim no right to IP relating to my side project.
I drafted an email stating that, sent it to him, and he replied in agreement. That turned out to be sufficient enough for me. A few months later I quit when my side project turned into a full time job.
There is a lot of subjectivity and interpretation when it comes to law and lawsuits.
If you went to trial, you would be showing the jury your employment agreement saying all IP belongs to the company, right before showing the jury a print out of the email saying the exact opposite. I think most jurors would side with the employee if the employer agreed to exclude IP assignment for a specific side project in writing.
That doesn’t mean your company can’t still sue you (anyone can sue anyone for nearly anything). But doing so costs everyone money (and reputation), so it’s rarely in the best interest of the company to sue employees - especially if you have a paper trail indicating your employer is aware of what you’re doing outside of work and has given you written permission.
All of the above assumes that the IP you’re creating is not something that would be competitive or damaging to your employer’s business. And that you’re acting in good faith and not misleading or somehow screwing over your employer in the process.
IANAL but I feel like there must be a better solution here? Maybe something like how the FSF requires a CLA on some projects, so any commits with proper --sign-off count as me as me giving permission to the company?
Get your current employer to approve your project through an addendum or find other employment, and in the future do not sign contracts you do not want to follow by the letter.
> signed an assignments clause
Only the entity with a copyright to a work can license it.
If that assignment clause is valid for this work, then whoever they assigned it to (i.e. their employer) has the right to license it.
For example, some states have laws saying IP assignments in employment contracts aren't enforceable for work done on your own time and equipment if it's unrelated to your employer's business (e.g., California[0], North Carolina[1]). Depending on your situation, you'll want a professional to assess whether your plan qualifies for that.
A lawyer can also help assess your risk level. Just because your employer would probably lose a lawsuit doesn't mean they couldn't cause you a lot of trouble suing you anyway.
In my IANAL opinion, the answer by @greenyoda[2] indicates an LLC is probably not appropriate protection for this specific concern. An LLC only protects you if you don't "pierce the veil"; that is, if you can show in court that you as a person and you as a company deserve to be treated as legally separate entities. There are lots of ways to mess that up, especially for one-person LLCs.
I'd expect that if you work for a small company, your risk level is low in any case unless you're directly competing. A tiny company has better things to do than pay for lawyers trying to seize an app that has nothing to do with their business. But BigCo, with an on-staff legal team, may be less reluctant.
You can also consider just asking your boss if the company would agree agree, in writing, that the company releases all claims to your side project.
[0] https://law.justia.com/codes/california/2011/lab/division-3/... [1] https://law.justia.com/codes/north-carolina/2005/chapter_66/... [2] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=30660160
I have established a LLC before I was employed by another company. The company was fine with me having both a job with them plus running my LLC after checking with legal. The IP assignments clause was a little murky hence the original question.
I knew I should have requested a contract amendment but I was desperately trying to get a job at the start of the pandemic.