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Archive for 04/12/2009Delays in completion – whose fault is it anyway?04/12/2009 by info.
One of the most frustrating aspects of any sale is perceived and unnecessary delay after solicitors have been instructed. I am sure that many of you who have not sold a business but have been though the process in the sale of a residential property can recognise this feeling. But if there is any fault whose it is? There may be a number of reasons for a delay and the simplest one is that either a buyer or a seller is deliberately slowing down the sale process for personal reasons. Perhaps buyers are not ready to buy because they are waiting for a sale of their own to complete or the seller wishes to take advantage of seasonal profitability. There may be issues that arise that neither party was aware about or one side wishes to try to hide and hoped that due diligence would not uncover the truth. Sometimes the parties are at fault by instructing the wrong solicitor for the job. A solicitor without significant experience in business transfers can often stress and want answers to unimportant issues in the sale. If a lease is being transferred the fault can lay with the landlord or landlords solicitor who have no incentive to hurry the process along. Often for them it is the better the devil you know. Most of the time it is the fault of the buyer, seller or both for not managing their solicitor allowing them to sit on and not deal with paperwork when they receive it; the solicitor as a result with deal with matters when they have the time, so if you want a speedy conclusion you should be more proactive. So is it ever the agent’s fault? Well there are a good number of private sales where the seller and buyer conduct a good proportion of sales negotiations directly so an agent never gets involved in the process at all. If an agent is involved they should provide comprehensive head terms for each sides solicitors and apply for references on behalf of the buyer, however when solicitors are instructed the agents job, that of finding a buyer, is technically over. An agent may act as a go-between to communicate to both sides who is at fault in slowing the process down. But finding a buyer is what an agent is paid to do, not to try to hurry along professionals whom they have no power over. Posted in Selling Your Business, Buyers, Business transfer agents, General | No Comments »
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