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How Do You Structure a Sale of a Corporation?

Practice Area:Corporate

A sale of a corporation involves the transfer of ownership and control of a business entity from one party to another, typically through the sale of stock or assets.

The transaction's legal structure depends on whether you are selling shares (stock sale) or the company's underlying assets, each carrying distinct tax, liability, and operational consequences. Viability hinges on proper due diligence, accurate financial disclosure, and clear title to assets or shares being conveyed. This article addresses the key structural choices, documentation requirements, regulatory compliance steps, and dispute resolution mechanisms essential to completing a corporate sale.


1. What Is the Difference between a Stock Sale and an Asset Sale?


In a stock sale, the buyer acquires the seller's ownership interest in the corporation itself, inheriting all assets and liabilities, including hidden or contingent obligations. In an asset sale transaction, the buyer purchases specific assets (inventory, equipment, intellectual property, contracts) while the seller retains the corporate shell and any undisclosed liabilities.

Stock sales are simpler from a transfer standpoint but expose buyers to unknown historical liabilities. Asset sales require more detailed negotiation and separate transfers of individual assets, but allow buyers to avoid inherited debt or litigation risk. Sellers typically prefer stock sales for simplicity, while buyers often prefer asset sales for liability protection. The choice directly affects indemnification obligations, working capital adjustments, and post-closing dispute posture.



How Does Tax Treatment Differ between the Two Structures?


In a stock sale, the seller recognizes capital gain or loss on the sale price minus the basis in the shares, while the buyer's basis in assets equals the purchase price paid. In an asset sale, the seller recognizes gain or loss on each asset category, and the buyer steps into a cost basis equal to the price paid for each asset class, potentially generating higher depreciation deductions.

Buyers often prefer asset sales because the stepped-up basis allows accelerated cost recovery. Sellers may resist asset sales due to double taxation at the corporate and shareholder level. Professional tax counsel should evaluate the specific entity structure before finalizing the transaction.



2. What Key Documents and Representations Must Be Prepared for a Sale of a Corporation?


Core transaction documents include a purchase agreement (defining price, terms, conditions, and representations), disclosure schedules (listing exceptions to representations), bills of sale or stock certificates (evidencing transfer), and ancillary agreements (employment, non-compete, transition services, or earn-out provisions if applicable).

The purchase agreement sets out representations and warranties by the seller regarding title to assets or shares, financial accuracy, litigation status, regulatory compliance, and absence of undisclosed liabilities. Accurate disclosure schedules are the seller's best defense against post-closing indemnification exposure, so thorough documentation of exceptions, pending disputes, and known risks is essential.



What Role Does Due Diligence Play in Structuring the Deal?


Due diligence is the buyer's systematic investigation of the seller's financial records, contracts, litigation history, regulatory status, employee matters, and asset condition. Thorough due diligence identifies deal-breaking issues early, allowing parties to adjust price, structure, or conditions before signing.

Sellers benefit from proactive due diligence preparation by organizing financial records, preparing a data room, and identifying likely buyer concerns in advance. Buyers who conduct incomplete due diligence often face difficulty establishing indemnification claims later if issues were discoverable pre-closing. Practical risk management requires the buyer to document what information was requested, what was provided or withheld, and what post-closing facts contradict pre-closing representations.



3. How Are Purchase Price and Payment Terms Typically Structured?


Purchase price can be fixed at signing, subject to working capital adjustments, or contingent on earn-out provisions tied to post-closing performance. Payment may be made at closing in cash, through seller financing, earnouts, or a combination of these methods.

Fixed price deals offer certainty but require precise working capital definitions to avoid disputes over what inventory, receivables, and payables transfer at closing. Working capital adjustments create post-closing true-ups if actual net working capital differs from a target amount agreed pre-closing. Earn-out provisions tie a portion of purchase price to the buyer's achievement of revenue, profit, or operational milestones post-closing. Seller financing exposes the seller to buyer credit risk and requires careful documentation of promissory notes, security interests, and default provisions.



What Payment Security Mechanisms Protect Both Parties?


Common protections include escrow arrangements (where a portion of purchase price is held by a neutral third party pending satisfaction of post-closing conditions), indemnification baskets and caps (limiting the buyer's recovery to claims above a threshold and capped at a percentage of purchase price), and survival periods (restricting when indemnification claims can be brought, typically 12 to 24 months for general representations and longer for tax or title matters).

Escrow funds are released once post-closing adjustments are finalized or indemnification claims are resolved. Indemnification caps protect sellers from unlimited liability, while baskets ensure buyers do not pursue trivial claims. Parties should negotiate these terms carefully, as they directly affect dispute resolution posture and enforceability of indemnification rights.



4. What Are the Procedural and Regulatory Requirements for Completing a Sale of a Corporation?


Regulatory requirements vary by industry and asset type. Sales of certain licenses, contracts, or regulated businesses (banking, insurance, healthcare) require government approval or notice. Stock sales require shareholder approval if the corporation's bylaws or applicable state law mandate it. Asset sales require board approval and often creditor notification or consent if material contracts are being assigned.

For example, a New York corporation selling substantially all assets typically must comply with notice-to-creditors requirements under state business law. Parties should conduct a regulatory checklist early in deal planning to identify third-party consents, government filings, or notice requirements that could delay or derail closing.



What Happens If Third-Party Consents Are Required but Not Obtained?


If material third-party consents (such as customer contracts, supplier agreements, or regulatory approvals) are not obtained before closing, the buyer may find itself unable to operate key business lines, and the seller may face breach-of-warranty claims. Many purchase agreements include a condition precedent requiring that all material consents be obtained before closing, allowing the buyer to terminate if consents are not secured.

Practical strategy requires identifying all material third-party consents early, requesting them during the due diligence period, and documenting any consent denials or delays in the disclosure schedules. If a major customer or supplier refuses to consent to assignment, the deal structure may need to change or purchase price may require adjustment.



5. What Post-Closing Obligations and Dispute Resolution Mechanisms Should Be Addressed?


Post-closing obligations typically include transition services (seller providing operational support during handoff), non-compete and non-solicitation covenants, cooperation on regulatory filings or litigation defense, and seller cooperation on earnout calculation. Dispute resolution provisions establish whether parties will arbitrate indemnification claims, pursue litigation, or attempt mediation before escalation.

Transition services agreements should specify the duration, scope, cost allocation, and performance standards for seller support post-closing. Non-compete provisions should define geographic scope, industry scope, and duration to be enforceable under New York law. Parties should also address how disputes over working capital adjustments or earnout calculations will be resolved, including whether an independent accountant or arbitrator will make final determinations. Early documentation of performance metrics and contemporaneous records of communication support either party's position in any dispute.

Deal ElementStock SaleAsset Sale
Buyer LiabilityAssumes all historical liabilitiesAcquires only specified assets
Transfer ComplexitySingle transfer, simplerMultiple asset transfers, complex
Tax BasisLimited depreciation deductionsHigher depreciation deductions
Seller PreferenceSingle-level taxation, preferredDouble taxation risk
Third-Party ConsentsFewer consents requiredConsent to assign each contract
Indemnification RiskBuyer bears broad riskSeller retains liabilities

The sale of a corporation requires careful alignment of structural choice, price and payment terms, regulatory compliance, and dispute resolution mechanisms. Buyers should prioritize thorough due diligence, detailed representations and warranties, and robust indemnification protections. Sellers should focus on accurate disclosure, clear title documentation, and negotiated caps and baskets to manage post-closing exposure. Transactions involving complex assets, regulated businesses, or multiple third-party dependencies warrant specialized counsel to navigate industry-specific requirements and contract negotiation. For transactions involving aircraft sale or specialized asset categories, additional regulatory and title verification steps may be required to ensure clean transfer and avoid post-closing title challenges.


02 Jun, 2026


The information provided in this article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. Reading or relying on the contents of this article does not create an attorney-client relationship with our firm. For advice regarding your specific situation, please consult a qualified attorney licensed in your jurisdiction.
Certain informational content on this website may utilize technology-assisted drafting tools and is subject to attorney review.

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