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The
Selling Process - From the Offer
State Through The Close of Escrow
by Steven D. Zimmerman,
Restaurant Realty Company
January 2005
We thought it be helpful to discuss
the various stages of the selling
process as eventually most of you
will be selling your business some
day. In this edition we will cover
the following topics:
1)
receiving the offer,
2) responding
to the offer,
3) acceptance
of the offer, and
4) removal
of contingencies.
1) Receiving the Offer
– Once a business has been listed
and marketed and a buyer is
interested in acquiring the business
we will write up an Asset Purchase
Agreement Contract which the buyer
will sign to be accompanied with an
initial deposit check.. The Asset
Purchase Contract spells out the
terms and conditions of the sale and
contains an expiration date.
2) Responding to the Offer
- Upon receipt of the offer the
seller has three options: 1) he can
accept the offer by signing the
contract, 2) he can write a counter
offer changing the terms of the
offer or 3) he can reject the offer
by not responding to the offer.
Once the seller receives the offer
he will have a designated time
spelled out in the contract to
respond. If he doesn’t respond in
the designated time the offer will
terminate and any subsequent
response will be considered a
counter offer.
3) Acceptance of the Offer
– Once the offer has been accepted
by the seller the broker deposits
the initial deposit check into
escrow and the buyer has normally
ten days or more to remove the
contingencies described below.
4) Removal of Contingencies
– Conditions need to be satisfied by
the buyer before he increases his
deposit to normally ten percent of
the sales price and the actual
escrow process begins. The standard
contingencies include the
following: 1) review of the
businesses books and records, 2)
physical inspection of the premises
and 3) the landlords approval of
assignment of the existing lease,
modifying the existing lease or
negotiating a new lease with the
buyer. In some cases the transfer
of special licenses such as ABC
(Department of Alcoholic Beverage
Control) license, entertainment
license or approval of the
franchisor (if a franchise) are
required as additional
contingencies. In some cases there
may be a financing contingency where
the buyer has a certain time to
acquire necessary third party
financing.
THE ESCROW PROCESS
An escrow is a process whereby there
is a third party in a transaction,
(the first and second parties are
the buyer and seller), usually an
escrow company, which is a neutral
entity hired by buyer and seller to
hold and disburse all monies in the
transaction as well as to perform
title procedures to assure that the
sellers outstanding creditors will
be paid and that the buyer will
receive title free and clear of all
liens and encumbrances. The escrow
fees are usually paid 50/50 between
buyer and seller and average between
$1,200 to $1,500 depending on the
size of the transaction. As
provided by the Uniform Commercial
Code of California, all monies
(including consideration for stock
inventory) must pass through escrow,
and no monies can be released prior
to close of escrow.
The escrow process consists of the
items listed below:
1.
Escrow Instructions –
Once an offer is accepted, a copy of
the signed offer and the buyer’s
deposit is submitted to the escrow
company. Upon receipt the escrow
company sets up an escrow, issues an
escrow number, issues a receipt for
the deposit and generates escrow
instructions. Escrow instructions
must be signed by all parties and
delivered into escrow, together with
initial deposits, before the Notice
of Bulk Transfer is published or
recorded. The Notice of Bulk Sale
is a document which is part of the
escrow instructions authorizing the
escrow company to publish in the
newspaper an announcement regarding
the pending sale which gives notice
to the seller’s creditors to file
any outstanding claims they have
against the seller into escrow The
creditors have twelve business days
to file their claims against the
seller into escrow once the notice
is published. Any subsequent claims
are filed against the seller after
this period.
2.
Tax and Lien Clearances
– The escrow obtains clearance
certificates from the Employment
Development Department, State Board
of Equalization and Franchise Tax
Board thereby eliminating any seller
tax liability spilling over to the
buyer. Any secured liens against
the business such as equipment
leases, seller carry back notes,
etc. must be paid off by the seller
at the close of escrow
3.
Escrow Closing Papers
– The items listed below are
included with Escrow Closing Papers.
A. The Bill of Sale – This
document includes a list of all the
fixtures and equipment included with
the sale.
B. The Covenant Not to Compete
– This document, if applicable in
the transaction, prohibits the
seller from competing within a
certain radius of the subject
business for a given period of time.
C. Closing Statement – One
is prepared for the seller and one
for the buyer and each statement
breakdowns the total accounting of
the transaction and shows the total
debits and credits paid by each
party. On the closing statement the
following items are prorated:
unsecured personal property taxes
(taxes paid on the personal
property), rent and real estate
taxes, if applicable. The sales tax
on the fixtures and equipment is
paid by the buyer and the buyer
usually allocates the purchase price
subject to approval by the seller.
The only portion of the sales price
which is subject to sales tax is the
fixtures and equipment.
D. Promissory Note - If part
of the sales price is being carried
back by the seller in the form of a
note, escrow draws a promissory note
which is secured by a security
agreement (called a UCC1) which is
recorded with the Secretary of
State’s office and stays as a lien
on the buyers business until the
loan is paid off.
E. Inventory – Saleable
inventory includes food, beverages
(alcohol and non-alcoholic), paper
supplies and cleaning supplies.
These are paid for by the buyer
usually at the sellers cost and an
inventory is taken at the close of
escrow to determine how much the
buyer pays for these items.
F. Liquor License Transfer –
If there is a liquor license
transfer the escrow company must
confirm that all the money is in
escrow before they notify the
Department of Alcoholic Beverage
Control to complete processing the
license transfer. The escrow must
be notified that the liquor license
has transferred before the escrow is
closed. The escrow process is for
the protection of all parties
involved in the transaction and in
our opinion a necessity.
The final steps in the eight step
selling process are as follows:
1) obtaining licenses and
setting up tax accounts, getting
insurance in place, etc,
2) transferring licenses,
3) taking inventory and
4) closing escrow.
1. Obtaining Licenses, Setting Up
Tax Accounts, Getting Insurance In
Place, etc.–
The buyer needs to apply for the
following: a) resale permit from the
State Board of Equalization, b) an
affidavit of Fictitious Business
Name with the county clerk, c)
Business License with the local
governmental office and d) an
Employer’s Tax Identification Number
with the State of California
Employment Development Department.
Also the buyer is to get his
liability insurance in place and
arrange to have the utilities
changed to his name at the close of
escrow.
2. Transferring Licenses
– The ABC (Department of Alcoholic
Beverage Control License) is
transferred during the escrow
process and we handle this process
which normally takes about 6 to 8
weeks. We work closely with the
buyer and ABC investigator through
the entire process to assure that
the license will be transferred in
an expeditious manner. If there is a
club sale there are other licenses
such as entertainment licenses and
dance licenses which need to be
transferred and if there is a
brewpub sale there are special
alcohol manufacturing licenses which
need to be transferred which we
handle as well. Also if there is a
franchise sale we need to get the
approval of the franchisor of the
proposed franchisee.
3. Taking Inventory
– If salable inventory (food,
beverage, cleaning and paper
supplies) is being
transferred a physical inventory is
taken by the buyer and seller
immediately before the close of
escrow. Salable inventory is paid to
the seller at sellers cost in
addition to the purchase price. An
inventory of the fixtures and
equipment is also taken by buyer and
seller immediately before the close
of escrow to assure that all the
inventory indicated on the inventory
list given to the buyer when the
purchase contract was executed is
there. Also the buyer checks all the
equipment immediately before the
close of escrow to assure that it is
in good operating condition
4. Closing Escrow
– Once all of the above items are
complete the buyer calls us and
tells us he is ready to close escrow
and we call the title company and
tell them to close escrow. We
instruct the seller to give the
buyer the keys and instruct the
buyer to immediately change the
locks.
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