What Your Attorney Will Never Tell You About Protecting Your LLC

The single most effective way to shield yourself from personal liability has nothing to do with hiring a better lawyer. It has everything to do with your company’s records.

Minutes.llc · 7 min read

Let’s talk about something your attorney has no financial incentive to explain to you.

When a lawsuit names you personally — not just your LLC, but you — there’s really only one question that matters early on: Can they pierce your corporate veil?

If the answer is no, you’re out. The case proceeds against the company, not against your house, your savings, or your personal assets. If the answer is yes — or if the court can’t tell — you’re stuck in litigation for months or years, bleeding legal fees the entire time.

Here’s what your attorney won’t volunteer: the fastest way to get yourself dismissed from a case is to prove your LLC operates as a separate entity. And that proof isn’t complicated. It’s paperwork.

The Incentive Problem

Attorneys aren’t villains. But they are businesspeople. Their revenue model is built on billable hours. The longer your case runs, the more they earn.

That creates a structural misalignment. You want the fastest possible exit from personal exposure. Your attorney’s income depends on the case continuing.

No one’s going to sit you down and say: “You know, if you had kept proper governance records, we could have filed a motion to dismiss you personally in the first 60 days.” That conversation doesn’t generate revenue.

The hard truth

An attorney who resolves your personal liability in 60 days earns a fraction of what they’d make litigating for 18 months. The system doesn’t reward the fastest outcome — it rewards the longest engagement.

What Courts Actually Look For

When a plaintiff tries to pierce the corporate veil — to hold you personally responsible for your LLC’s obligations — the court examines whether your company was a real, separate entity or just a shell you hid behind.

The evidence that protects you isn’t exotic. Courts look for a handful of concrete, documented indicators.

The records that get you dismissed:

None of this requires a law degree. None of it requires a $400-an-hour attorney. What it requires is consistency — generating and storing these records as a normal part of running your business.

The company that keeps its own records is the company the court treats as real.

Why Most LLC Owners Are Exposed

The reality is that most solo LLC owners have an operating agreement filed somewhere and a bank account. That’s it. No annual consent. No resolutions. No documented authorization for the lease they signed, the contractor they hired, or the distribution they took.

This isn’t negligence. It’s a gap in the market. Formation services get you set up and disappear. Attorneys only enter the picture after something goes wrong. Nobody sits in the middle and says: “Here — document this decision, store it, and you’re covered.”

That gap is exactly where the risk lives. A single-member LLC with no governance records looks, to a court, like a person using a business name. And courts treat it accordingly.

The Two Versions of a Lawsuit

Consider two LLC owners facing the same breach-of-contract claim. Same facts, same dollar amount, same plaintiff.

Owner A — No Records Owner B — Records in Order
No resolutions authorizing the contract Written resolution approving the contract, dated before execution
No annual consents on file Annual written consent for each year of operation
Personal and business expenses occasionally mixed Banking resolution on file, separate accounts documented
Attorney has to build the defense from scratch — billable hours accumulate Attorney files motion to dismiss the owner personally — supported by an organized governance trail
Stays in the case 12–18+ months Dismissed from personal liability early

Same company. Same dispute. Entirely different outcomes — determined not by the quality of the lawyer, but by the quality of the records.

What “Good Records” Actually Means

This doesn’t mean drowning in paperwork. For most LLCs, defensible governance comes down to a small set of documents generated at the right moments.

At minimum, every LLC should maintain:

An operating agreement. A banking resolution. An annual written consent each fiscal year. A written resolution for every material business decision — contracts, leases, distributions, expenses, new accounts, hiring, loans.

Each document should include authority language, ratification language, and separation-of-entity language. Each one should be dated, signed, stored, and retrievable.

The standard for “defensible” isn’t perfection. It’s consistency. A court doesn’t need to see a flawless corporate record. It needs to see a pattern of behavior that says: this company operated as its own entity, made its own decisions, and kept its own records.

Why Attorneys Won’t Build This for You

Ask your attorney to draft a banking resolution and they will — for $300 to $500. Ask for an annual written consent: another $400. Approve a contract? Another resolution, another invoice.

At that rate, most business owners stop asking. They skip the resolution. They skip the annual consent. They save $400 in the moment and create thousands of dollars in exposure later.

Attorneys aren’t set up to be your ongoing governance partner. They’re set up for transactional work and litigation. The boring, repetitive, ongoing discipline of keeping records current? That’s not their business model.

Which means it falls on you. And until now, doing it yourself meant either learning legal formatting or paying every time.

A Better Way to Stay Protected

This is the problem Minutes.llc was built to solve. Not to replace your attorney — you’ll still need one if things go wrong. But to make sure that when things go wrong, your attorney has something to work with.

Minutes.llc generates court-ready, bank-ready governance documents through a guided workflow. You answer a few questions. The platform assembles the document from structured legal language blocks — the same authority statements, ratification clauses, and separate-existence language that attorneys use. Every document is timestamped, hashed, and stored with an immutable audit trail.

What you get in about 60 seconds:

A properly formatted resolution, annual consent, or banking authorization — with built-in defensibility language, a digital signature, SHA-256 hash verification, and secure storage in Swiss jurisdiction. No legal knowledge required.

The goal is straightforward: when someone tries to pierce your veil, your records speak for themselves. The company kept its own minutes. The company authorized its own decisions. The company is real.

And your attorney? Instead of billing you for 18 months of discovery, they file a motion supported by your governance trail — and get you out.

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Minutes.llc is a document automation platform. It is not a law firm, does not provide legal advice, and no attorney-client relationship is created by using this service. Consult a licensed attorney for legal questions specific to your situation.

Protect Your LLC — Download the Free Checklist

Most LLC owners have zero governance records. This checklist shows you the 7 documents courts and banks expect.