Buying or selling a business can be complex, and different things are important in different industries. While it’s not remotely possible to discuss all matters that should be considered, here are some of the major issues to keep in mind including valuation, types of transactions, sales taxes, allocation of asset purchase price, various contract provisions, and bulk sales laws.
Confidentiality
The seller should be sure to have all potential buyers sign a confidentiality agreement before providing proprietary information.
Valuing a business is somewhat subjective and is always the subject of negotiations. Valuation methods include:
In order to limit their risk, buyers may want to include a performance clause in the purchase agreement.
In asset sales (but not sales of stock), sales tax is generally imposed on the sale of tangible personal property unless the company being sold is a service business (where the “occasional sale” exemption may apply).
The parties should agree on the allocation of the purchase price to various categories as part of the purchase agreement.
If the buyer is continuing the seller’s business, the buyer may be liable under a “successor liability” theory for any product-liability suits brought by pre-closing customers. It’s a good reason to have an indemnification clause running from the seller in favor of the buyer, and to check out the business’s insurance as well.
In addition to many other warranties (and indemnification provisions), if intellectual property is being transferred, the buyer generally will want the seller to warrant that the seller owns the intellectual property and will indemnify the buyer for any third-party claims of infringement.
It is important that this document be specifically tailored to your needs to protect your interests as a buyer or seller. For example, most business purchase agreements contain a liquidated damages provision that allows a party to collect damages if the agreement is breached. In Illinois, a liquidated damages provision must be reasonable and must not be a penalty for breach of contract but rather compensation for damages incurred. It is important for both buyers and sellers to understand the implications of such liquidated damages provisions before signing the agreement.
The seller has the responsibility to provide thorough information to the buyer in a timely fashion and the seller has the right to demand that all information learned in due diligence is kept confidential. The buyer has the responsibility to honor a confidentiality agreement and conduct due diligence in a timely fashion so that the parties can decide whether or not a sale should take place. After expiration of the due diligence period, a buyer’s initial deposit will usually become non-refundable to the seller.
The steps outlined above are important protections to you if you are buying or selling a Illinois business. However, there is no standard form that will maximize the protections for every buyer and every seller. Each step of the transaction, and each legal document, should be customized to make sure that it covers your needs and maximizes your legal protections.
Once you have decided to sell your business or identified a business to buy then you must familiarize yourself with all of the steps necessary to complete the transaction. Specifically, the process will usually involve the following:
It is important that this document be specifically tailored to your needs to protect your interests as a buyer or seller. For example, most business purchase agreements contain a liquidated damages provision that allows a party to collect damages if the agreement is breached. In Illinois, a liquidated damages provision must be reasonable and must not be a penalty for breach of contract but rather compensation for damages incurred. It is important for both buyers and sellers to understand the implications of such liquidated damages provisions before signing the agreement.
The seller has the responsibility to provide thorough information to the buyer in a timely fashion and the seller has the right to demand that all information learned in due diligence is kept confidential. The buyer has the responsibility to honor a confidentiality agreement and conduct due diligence in a timely fashion so that the parties can decide whether or not a sale should take place. After expiration of the due diligence period, a buyer’s initial deposit will usually become non-refundable to the seller.
The steps outlined above are important protections to you if you are buying or selling a Illinois business. However, there is no standard form that will maximize the protections for every buyer and every seller. Each step of the transaction, and each legal document, should be customized to make sure that it covers your needs and maximizes your legal protections.
Mansoor Ansari J.D., LL.M. (TAX)
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Ansari Law Firm is a multi-state business and state tax law firm, with offices in Texas (Dallas, Fort Worth, San Antonio & Houston), Georgia and Illinois.
Ansari Law Firm is a multi-state business and state tax law firm, with offices in Texas (Dallas, Fort Worth, San Antonio & Houston), Georgia and Illinois.
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