Dow Schofield Watts llp
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Warranties and Indemnities The information in this note is general and not sufficiently detailed to apply to the circumstances of any particular situation.
When a business or a company is sold the Seller is expected to give and the Buyer expects to receive, in the sale agreement, warranties and indemnities. Warranties are statements made by the Seller that certain facts in relation to the business or the company are true. Should the Buyer later discover that a warranty was not true this should give rise to a claim for breach of warranty entitling the Buyer to damages. Indemnities are promises by the Seller to make good losses of the Buyer if specific events occur.
The Buyer wants to see warranties and indemnities included in the sale agreement because:-
They are potential "price adjusters". A Buyer is more likely to offer a "full price" for a business or company if, by virtue of the warranties and indemnities given by the Seller in the sale agreement, the hidden risks involved in buying it have been kept by the Seller.
In response to the warranties sought by the Buyer, the Seller and its advisers carry out a disclosure exercise which results in the preparation of a disclosure letter. The disclosure letter has two purposes in a business or company sale:-
Warranties are usually drafted in wide, general terms and disclosure is the mechanism by which exceptions or qualifications to them can be documented and agreed. If the Seller is asked to give a warranty in the sale agreement that the business or company is not affected by any legal dispute but this is not true, then instead of amending the terms of the general warranty, the Seller will, in the disclosure letter (with reference to that specific warranty), disclose details of all relevant disputes. If the Buyer accepts the disclosure, the disclosure will operate to exclude the Seller from liability under the warranty in respect of the specific disputes disclosed. The disclosure letter therefore provides the Buyer with details of known exceptions to the warranties which can be appraised whilst maintaining the protection of the general warranty in respect of other disputes. Disclosure in the disclosure letter lessens the Buyer's rights under the warranties (by excluding the matter disclosed from the scope of the general warranty) it effectively increases the Buyer's risk and for this reason the Buyer may not accept all disclosures which the Seller would like to make to it in the disclosure letter.
When buying a company, as well as expecting warranties about the past and present tax position of the company it is usual for the Seller to enter into a tax indemnity. This may be contained in a separate document or built into the sale agreement. The tax indemnity is an indemnity from the Seller in favour of the Buyer against any tax liabilities falling on the company prior to completion, apart from liabilities shown in the last audited accounts of the company and those arising in respect of ordinary business after the date of those accounts. The intention is therefore that the indemnity covers surprise tax liabilities which do not arise from normal business. Because it covers tax liabilities which may arise, but have not yet arisen, in relation to events prior to the sale, the indemnity is not usually qualified by matters disclosed in the disclosure letter.
Where there is more than one Seller the Buyer will usually want the Sellers' obligations under the warranties and indemnities to be "joint and several". This is the best position for the Buyer as it means that if it has a claim under the warranties or indemnities it can make that claim against all or any of the Sellers and can therefore select the Seller who is in the best position to pay or settle the claim. Whilst under English Law a Seller who satisfies a warranty or indemnity claim or who settles such a claim in good faith will usually have a right of contribution from his fellow Sellers under the Civil Liability (Contribution) Act 1978, this Act does not apply in Scotland. In any event what a court may consider to be fair contribution will depend on all the circumstances at the relevant time and it is therefore sensible for joint Sellers to formalise their own contribution arrangements when entering into the sale agreement. This is usually done in a contribution agreement.
Additional limits on a Seller's liability under the warranties (and in some cases indemnities) will often be negotiated into the sale agreement including:-
Where there is more than one Seller , the Sellers' advisers may also seek an individual maximum limit or cap on the total amount of claims which may be made against each Seller.
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