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- @141 CHAP 3
-
- ┌───────────────────────────────────────────────┐
- │ CLOSING THE DEAL -- TAX CLEARANCES AND │
- │ OTHER LEGAL REQUIREMENTS ON BUY OUTS: │
- └───────────────────────────────────────────────┘
-
- The legal procedures involved in buying an existing busi-
- ness can be quite complex. Even if you are the most self-
- reliant do-it-yourselfer, you should, in this particular
- situation, be sure to seek out the services of a competent
- business attorney to represent you. In order to ensure
- that you are protected under the law as fully as possible
- from liabilities you have not agreed to assume, you should,
- at a minimum, have your attorney take care of the following
- items in connection with the purchase:
-
- 1. Review the structuring of the deal, including the
- actual sale agreement documents. (If your attorney is not
- a tax specialist, it would also be wise to have a tax ac-
- countant review the terms of the agreement and advise you
- on possible ways to structure it better for tax purposes.)
-
- 2. Comply with the local Bulk Sale or Bulk Transfer
- Act. In some states, the buyer of a retail or wholesale
- establishment or certain other types of businesses must
- prepare a "Notice to Creditors of Bulk Transfer" and, us-
- ually, file it in counties where the business operates
- and, in some states, also publish it in a general circula-
- tion newspaper prior to the purchase of the business. If
- this is not properly done, the seller's unsecured creditors
- may be able to "attach" the property that you thought you
- were buying free and clear.
- @CODE: AL AZ
-
- Other states require that:
-
- . The seller must furnish you with a list of the names
- and addresses of all his or her creditors and those
- claiming to be creditors.
-
- . You and the seller must prepare a list of all items
- of property to be transferred.
-
- . You must notify each creditor in advance of the
- planned transfer, in person or by certified mail.
-
- . You must keep the property list on file and make it
- available to the public for at least 6 months.
-
- @STATE has adopted this latter set of requirements,
- as set forth in the Uniform Commercial Code.
- @CODE:OF
- @CODE: AK AR CO CT FL ID IL IA KS KY LA ME MN MS MT NB NV NH NM ND OR PA SD TX VT WA WV WY
-
- NOTE: The bulk sales laws are now generally considered
- to be a 19th century anachronism, an unnecessary burden
- on buyers of businesses, and of very limited benefit to
- creditors or anyone else. Thus, since 1988, many states
- have repealed their bulk sale laws entirely, including
- @STATE.
- @CODE:OF
-
- 3. Check for recorded security interests or liens. Be-
- fore closing the purchase, your attorney should check with
- the appropriate state office (usually the Secretary of
- State) to determine whether anyone has recorded a "security
- interest" (a lien or chattel mortgage) against the personal
- property of the seller's business. For a fee, the Secretary
- of State's office will generally provide a listing of any
- security interests that have been recorded as a lien
- against the assets of the business you are buying. Also,
- if the transaction involves a purchase of real property,
- you will also have to have a title search performed to see
- if the seller has good title and if there are any recorded
- mortgages or other claims against the property that the
- seller has failed to disclose to you.
-
- 4. Check on various state tax releases, including state
- employment taxes, sales and use taxes, and, if you are ac-
- quiring an incorporated business, you may also need to ob-
- tain tax releases for corporate income or franchise taxes,
- as well. Most states require you, as buyer of an ongoing
- business, to obtain one or more such tax releases, certify-
- ing that no delinquent taxes (of the various kinds indica-
- ted) are owed to the state by the seller. Otherwise, if
- you fail to withhold any such taxes owed by the seller from
- the purchase price, the state will be able to look to YOU
- for payment of such taxes, and you will have to try to get
- indemnity from the seller, who may by then be in Brazil
- or relaxing on the Riviera, enjoying your money. Your
- agreement of sale should, therefore, be conditioned on the
- seller first obtaining certifications or releases from all
- appropriate taxing agencies showing that the seller is not
- in arrears on any kind of taxes.
-
- 5. Review the terms of any important contracts, such as
- leases, that the seller is assigning to you, to make sure
- that such assignment is possible under the terms of such
- contracts, without any detriment to you. Similarly, if you
- are acquiring a business in certain kinds of regulated in-
- dustries, particularly relating to food, health, or liquor
- sales, make sure that proper legal steps are taken to trans-
- fer any federal, state or local licenses to you--otherwise,
- you may not be able to operate the business you have bought!
-
- 6. Look for environmental problems, and ways to protect
- you from them. If the deal involves acquisition of real es-
- tate, or of a corporation that previously owned real estate
- during its history, be aware that you may be subjecting
- yourself to virtually unlimited liability, far beyond the
- value of the property, if the the property is contaminated
- by hazardous waste substances, under the federal Superfund
- legislation. Thus, have your attorney include appropriate
- indemnity provisions in the agreement, in case such prob-
- lems come to light after the purchase. However, this is
- only a partial protection, since being entitled to indemni-
- ty and actually collecting it are two different things, as
- the seller may be long gone or broke by the time the EPA
- jumps down your throat, requiring you to spend astronomical
- sums to clean up the toxic waste on the site. Thus, you
- should also have an environmental consultant do soil sam-
- ples or other testing to attempt to determine if such con-
- tamination exists; or, in some cases, you should even in-
- sist upon having an "environmental audit" done before the
- transaction is consummated. In either case, you are much
- less likely to be held liable if a hazardous waste problem
- later shows up, if you can show you did "due diligence"
- (hiring experts, etc.) before acquiring the property, and
- that no problem was evident to experts at the time.
-
- Finally, note that in most states, you have only 90 days or
- so after acquiring an ongoing business to apply for the
- right to succeed to the seller's unemployment tax experi-
- ence rating, if you desire to do so. If the seller had a
- low experience rating, this may save you quite a bit in
- state unemployment taxes, since you will be able to "in-
- herit" the seller's lower tax rate, as a "successor em-
- ployer," rather than pay the regular unemployment tax rate
- that applies to a new employer. Be sure that you don't
- miss the deadline for making any required election to adopt
- the seller's experience rating.
-
- @CODE: CA
- @CODE:NF
-
- ┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
- │CALIFORNIA LEGAL REQUIREMENTS--PURCHASE OF A BUSINESS│
- └─────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
-
- State law requirements that your attorney needs to see to
- if you are acquiring a business in California include the
- following:
-
- . BULK SALE LAW. For many types of business that sell
- from stock, a sale of personal property (inventory,
- equipment) in other than the ordinary course of busi-
- ness, either by auction or conducted by a professional
- liquidator, or constituting over half of such seller's
- assets of that type, may be considered a "bulk sale"
- under California law. If so, you, as the buyer, must
- prepare a notice to creditors of the bulk transfer and
- file it at least 12 days before the sale with the
- county recorder in the appropriate county or counties.
- The notice must also be published in a general circu-
- lation newspaper in the judicial district where the
- property is located and in the judicial district in
- which the seller's main California office is located,
- also 12 days before the transfer, under the California
- Commercial Code. Notice must also be given to county
- tax assessors in all affected counties, and may need
- to be accompanied by a final personal property tax
- return if filing between certain dates. Other, special
- requirements may also apply to certain bulk sales of
- not more than $2 million, where substantially all the
- consideration is in the form of cash or a promise to
- pay cash. Bulk sale law requirements are very complex
- and technical, so consult a business attorney to deter-
- mine whether the bulk sale law applies, and, if so,
- what you must do to comply with it, in order to pro-
- tect yourself against creditors of the seller who
- don't get paid and who may come after you if you fail
- to dot the "i's" and cross the "t's."
-
- . RECORDED SECURITY INTERESTS. Check for the existence
- of any recorded security interests on personal proper-
- ty of the seller's business with the Secretary of
- State's office in Sacramento.
-
- . EMPLOYMENT TAX RELEASE. You should require that the
- seller of the business obtain a "Certificate of
- Release of Buyer" (Form DE 2220) from the California
- Employment Development Department certifying that
- all employment taxes have been paid by the seller.
-
- . SALES TAX RELEASE. Similarly, you should require
- that the seller obtain a "Certificate of No Tax Due"
- from the state Board of Equalization, verifying that
- all California sales and use tax payments have been
- made by the seller.
-
- . FRANCHISE TAX CLEARANCE. If you are acquiring a cor-
- poration, require the seller corporation to obtain a
- tax clearance certificate from the Franchise Tax
- Board, certifying that all state of California fran-
- chise taxes have been paid by the corporation.
-
- . ALLOCATE SALES PRICE TO MINIMIZE SALES TAX. In Cali-
- fornia, unlike most states, much of the purchase
- price of acquiring the assets of a business is typi-
- cally subject to sales tax to the extent that the
- sale includes tangible assets such as furniture,
- equipment or machinery (but inventory will usually
- be exempt, if it is purchased for resale). Thus,
- you and the seller may be able to reduce the sales
- tax on the transaction by allocating (within reason)
- more of the purchase price to inventory (or to real
- property or intangible property) and less to equip-
- ment and machinery, in your agreement of sale.
-
- . EXPERIENCE RATING. Check to see if the seller's
- experience-based unemployment tax rate is less than
- the new employer rate of 3.4%. If it is, you will
- want to file E.D.D. Form DE4453 within 90 days after
- the business changes hands, in order to succeed to
- the seller's unemployment tax reserve account (and
- tax rate).
-
- . REPORT CHANGE OF OWNERSHIP OF REAL ESTATE. If you
- are purchasing a business that owns real property in
- California, you must report the change of ownership
- to the county tax assessor on a timely basis. Note
- that this will trigger a reassessment of the property
- at its current value, rather than the usually much
- lower "Proposition 13" value on which the seller's
- property tax was based. Thus, you will pay much more
- real property tax than the seller did on the same
- property, in most cases.
-
-