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Asset purchase transactions
We help Amherstburg buyers and sellers document which assets, contracts, equipment, inventory, goodwill, and liabilities are included.
Amherstburg Business Purchase and Sale Lawyer
Goldstone Law PC helps Amherstburg buyers and sellers work through asset purchases, share purchases, letters of intent, due diligence, purchase agreements, closing documents, and practical transition planning.
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How We Help
We assist with deal structure, due diligence, asset and share purchase agreements, closing deliverables, financing coordination, and practical risk review.
Buying or selling an Amherstburg business can involve more than a simple transfer of a name or customer list. The transaction should make clear what assets are included, which contracts or leases need consent, what happens with employees, how inventory and deposits are handled, and what each party must do before closing. When those items are not written clearly, small misunderstandings can become expensive late in the deal.
Goldstone Law PC helps Amherstburg buyers and sellers move through asset purchases and share purchases with organized documents, practical advice, and careful closing coordination. We review letters of intent, draft or revise purchase agreements, identify due diligence items, prepare closing deliverables, and help clients understand the difference between buying business assets and buying the corporation that owns the business.
For buyers, the work may include reviewing corporate records, contracts, leases, licences, employee matters, equipment lists, inventory, goodwill, intellectual property, financing conditions, and required consents. In a share purchase, the buyer may also need to understand historical liabilities, tax concerns, minute book issues, ownership records, and approvals before taking over the company.
For sellers, the legal work often involves preparing the business for review. That may include organizing corporate records, confirming what is included and excluded, dealing with landlord or supplier consents, preparing closing documents, coordinating payouts, and documenting any training, non-competition, or post-closing support obligations. Clear terms make the closing easier for both sides.
We also help Amherstburg clients coordinate with accountants, brokers, lenders, landlords, and other advisors where the transaction touches tax planning, financing, lease transfers, payroll, or transition steps. The goal is a transaction that clearly explains what is being transferred, what risks are being addressed, what documents need signatures, what funds are required, and what each party must do before and after closing. That practical structure helps the parties keep momentum when the file becomes busy.
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We help Amherstburg buyers and sellers document which assets, contracts, equipment, inventory, goodwill, and liabilities are included.
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We assist with share sale terms, corporate records, representations, warranties, indemnities, and closing deliverables.
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We review legal records, contracts, leases, licences, employees, corporate documents, and risk items before closing.
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We help organize signing, funds, consents, releases, assignments, transition steps, and final reporting.
What To Watch For
Amherstburg transactions may involve restaurants, tourism businesses, retail shops, trades, service companies, family corporations, or owner-operated businesses.
Equipment, inventory, supplier terms, customer contracts, leases, deposits, and goodwill should be clear before closing.
Share purchases require careful review of minute books, share registers, director approvals, liabilities, and historical company records.
Training, handover support, employee matters, non-competition terms, and post-closing obligations should be documented in writing.
How It Works
We review the proposed deal, identify legal and business risks, prepare or negotiate the documents, and coordinate the steps needed for closing.
Step 1
We review the letter of intent, draft agreement, business details, price, deposit, conditions, timing, and whether the deal is structured as an asset purchase or share purchase.
Step 2
We help identify corporate records, contracts, leases, employees, licences, assets, liabilities, financing, tax questions, and third-party consents that should be reviewed before closing.
Step 3
We draft or review purchase agreements, schedules, resolutions, assignments, releases, certificates, directions, and other closing deliverables.
Step 4
We coordinate signing, funds, consents, releases, records, handover items, and final reporting so the buyer and seller have a clearer closing path.
Documents We Review
Asset and share transactions are easier to manage when the deal structure, due diligence materials, agreement terms, and closing deliverables are reviewed together.
Buyers
Buyers need to understand what is included, what liabilities remain, what contracts or leases must be assigned, and what conditions should be satisfied before closing.
Sellers
Sellers need clear deal terms, proper disclosure, release and payout planning, transition obligations, closing documents, and coordination with accountants and advisors.
Structure
The structure can affect liabilities, tax planning, contracts, employees, licences, financing, and closing deliverables.
Serving Amherstburg
We assist Amherstburg buyers, sellers, shareholders, corporations, family businesses, professionals, and owner-managed companies with asset and share transactions.
Deal Clarity
A purchase agreement should explain what is being sold, what risks remain, what conditions must be satisfied, and what happens if something changes before closing.
Common Questions
It depends on tax, liability, contracts, employees, licences, financing, and the seller's goals. Legal and accounting advice should be coordinated early.
Yes. LOI terms can shape the whole deal, including price, structure, exclusivity, deposits, conditions, transition support, and closing timing.
A buyer should review corporate records, contracts, leases, employees, licences, assets, liabilities, financing conditions, tax advice, and transition obligations.
Yes. We help sellers organize corporate records, contracts, lease materials, employee information, closing deliverables, and disclosure items.
Closing may include transfer documents, resolutions, certificates, releases, assignments, consents, employment documents, and funds directions.
Usually, yes. Business purchases and sales often involve tax, HST, payroll, allocation, valuation, and planning issues that should be coordinated with accounting advice.
Some can, but many require consent from landlords, suppliers, franchisors, customers, or other third parties before closing.
Send the letter of intent, draft agreement, business details, asset list, lease or contract documents, financing notes, accountant comments, and target closing date.
Ontario Coverage
Goldstone Law PC supports clients across Ontario, including:
Next Step
Legal support is now more accessible and straightforward than ever. Our team guides you through every step with clarity, confidence, and care.