Avoiding Litigation over Buy-Sell Agreements
Business Owners Need to Establish Clear Guidelines for Future Buyouts with Their Partners
John Markel explains that itâs critical for partners to put together a buy-sell agreement that establishes in specific detail the standard of value, the level of value, and acceptable methods for funding a buyout. Hereâs why.
It is mid-day, a late summer sky of hazy blue, stretching in all directions to the flat Carolina horizon. Â The water tower looms ahead at the outskirts of town. Â Tebbetts was right; I couldnât miss itâthe barbecue place in an old grove of pecan trees by the water tower. I open the car door and the hot air rushes in. My sunglasses, too long in the air-conditioned car, fog up. Â Tebbetts had set up the meeting here, saying it was a central location. Â I walk into the low, metal-roofed building. A blast of air-conditioned air hits me, heavy with the aroma of smoked pork.
Tebbetts spots me now from his corner table. ââBout time you showed up, son!â He gestures to his right. âThis is Brad Riggsbee, from Gaffney, but I think you probably already know each otherâŚGet you a plate of barbecue and sit down!â I go to the buffet, and a large plastic plate is soon filled with chopped barbecue, slaw, rice, and liver hash. I return to the table, where the conversation veers inevitably toward football, and to Judge âFreighttrainâ Jones, who still limps from his injury in the 1959 Clemson-Carolina game.
Seizing a lull in the give-and-take, I decide itâs time for my opening. âYou said you wanted to talk about buy-sell agreements. WellâŚhere I am.â Tebbetts turns serious. Itâs time for his opening argument. âAll of us are getting older, and so are our clients. Some clients have made arrangements with their co-shareholders to buy them out; others keep putting it off. We think itâs our duty to keep after them to do the right thingâŚto plan for the futureâŚBut we want to do it right; we know that some lawyers have put agreements in place that just didnât work out too well.â Riggsbee interrupts. âWork too well! Shoot, thatâs an understatementâ theyâre still fussinâ and fightinâ about that Smith deal, and itâs been goinâ on five years now. Why, I was in the Douglas County Courthouse last month, waiting to argue a pre-trial motion, and I heard Judge Stokes rail out ole Jack Smith…he said a buy-sell agreement should keep people out of court, not in itâŚâÂ
Tebbetts peers over his reading glasses. âHush now, Brad. Our friend Mr. Markel here agreed to sit down with us and share his thoughts from a different perspective on weaknesses in buy-sell agreements. Letâs just sit and listen for a change. We all like going to the courthouse to argue the law with our legal brethren. But I promise you, we donât like going there to be railed out by a judge. Nor do we want to commit malpractice.â âUs lawyers feel pretty durn confident that we can write a good contract. But what we donât always fully consider are the issues outside the four corners of the law. For example, the economics of the situation our clients find themselves in. Why, sometimes weâre all just like a mule with blinders onâŚâ  Riggsbee pipes up, âNow Tebbetts, you are free to compare yourself to a jackass, but leave the rest of us out of your clever and original metaphor.âÂ
I go back to the subject. âI see a lot of things that can make a buy-sell agreement go bad, but I see these most often. First, the standard of value is not carefully stated. Second, the level of value is not carefully stated. Third, the method of funding the buyout is not well thought out. Finally, failures can result from matters of economic housekeeping within the agreement.â âWhoa now, son. Youâre goinâ way too fast for us poor country lawyers.â
Tebbetts (with his degree from Princeton well-hidden in his resume) just canât resist putting forth his carefully-contrived and self-effacing persona as a humble country lawyer. A few judges and juries still fall for it. âOkay. When I say standard of value, I mean the precise definition of value that the agreement is meant to abide by. Iâve seen a lot of agreements that specify fair market value. Then, a non-standard definition of fair market value will be used in the next paragraph. The error is always unintentional. A disgruntled party to the agreement can exploit that nonstandard definition and create a conflict⌠just what a well-crafted buy-sell agreement should avoid.â âDisgruntled parties⌠thatâs a lawyerâs stock in trade,â chuckles Riggsbee. âWhen, for example, I say fair market value, the definition refers to a willing buyer and a willing seller. That is, the ultimate price should favor neither the buyer nor the seller.â âConflicts arise when a particular parcel of real estate is crucial to the ongoing business. Maybe it is part of the corporation, or maybe it is rented from a party under common ownership.â
“The buy-sell agreement does not specify a means for establishing a fair rent, and that will be used as a wedge issue by a disgruntled party.â âThere you go again with the disgruntled parties.â I take a few bites of barbecue. âLetâs talk about levels of value.â âWhatâs that?â says Riggsbee. âThe level of value refers to putting the concepts of control and marketability in perspective. Iâm talking here about discounts and premiums.â âNow I follow youâŚdiscounts. Thatâs easy; we just put in all our agreements that no discounts for control or marketability will be considered.â Riggsbee takes a huge bite of fried okra, temporarily handicapping his well-developed ability to talk. âNot so fast,â I reply. âPremiums should be addressed as well, especially if one block of stock has effective control, or if there is a class of voting shares as well as non-voting shares.The point is, the particular situation should be addressed by something other than a boilerplate clause. The buy-sell agreement should try to deal with a broader array of expected consequences.âÂ
âAnother area ripe for conflict is the funding of the buyout. I can understand why you wouldnât want to clutter the buy-sell contract itself with the details of the funding mechanism. The funding method could change year-to-year, anyway. But some built-in monitoring might be helpful. For example, if the buyout will be funded by life insurance proceeds, who pays the premiums? Also, as the value of the business changes over several years, whose responsibility is it to increase the insurance coverage? Or to make sure that the company has liquid assets and/or a credit facility to make up the shortfall?âÂ
âMost buy-sell agreements that I see are well-crafted for the particular set of facts in place at the time of drafting. Where most agreements fall short is that they donât fully consider the variables that will absolutely, positively, without a doubt change at some future point in time. For example, most businesses hopefully increase in value over time. A lot of buy-sell agreements donât contemplate changed circumstances or offer a mechanism to deal with change.â âIn these parts, weâre all conservatives. We flat donât believe in change.â Riggsbeeâs mustache is so bushy; itâs sometimes hard to tell when he is joking. Tebbetts smiles. âOnly an unrepentant Piedmont Republican would say such a thing. Tell me, Riggsbee, is your conservatism of the dry or wet variety?â
âAs a lifelong Democrat, I do like my toddy in the evening.â Riggsbee fires back. âOn that political point, Tebbetts, we can and must agree. I, too, like occasional toddy.â âOccasionally, you say. On special occasions in your life⌠like when itâs light outside, or when itâs dark outside.â I sense the discussion is veering away from its learning mode.Â
âI mentioned housekeeping earlier,â I say hopefully. âWhat I mean is that I see many buy-sell agreements with what everyone thinks is innocuous boilerplate. For example, statements like âa valuation shall be finished 30 days from the date of deathâ.  As a practical matter, things just donât move that quickly, and a missed deadline can just make a contentious situation worse.â âDisgruntled parties being contentious again, I suppose.â âAnother housekeeping-type failure concerns the actual triggering of the valuation process. Death of a shareholderâŚthatâs pretty easy. But, what about shareholder disability or mental incompetence? How well is that defined? What are the time parameters for establishing such a condition? Combine that with a company that is growing rapidly in value, and you have a recipe for contention; a controversy that could be averted, or minimized, with a more carefully crafted provision.â
âAnother housekeeping error concerns the appointment of the stock valuer. Some provisions say that if the first two valuers donât agree, a third will be appointed, and the three will be averaged. One side could, in effect, jigger the result upward or downward by introducing an artificially higher or lower result into the three-valuer mix.â
âThen thereâs contention over throwing out the âoutlierâ report.â âRelated to that issue is that many buy-sell agreements do not specify any minimum qualifications for the valuer. A substandard valuation will inevitably lead to conflict and to a great deal of additional expense for the parties involved⌠something that could be easily avoided by tightening up the provisions in the buy-sell agreement.â âTebbetts, after hearing all this unsettling talk about buy-sell agreements with which we were formerly comfortable, are we going to be able to sleep tonight? No indeed! I need a toddy. Now.âÂ
âLast but not least, many buy-sell agreements use formulas as a valuation mechanism. Formulas may have a place, for very small businesses or for very small ownership portions. But in most cases, formulas can yield a distorted value, and that means someone, either the shareholder departing or the shareholder remaining, gets short-changed. And thatâs another recipe for contention. Again, a formula approach just doesnât contemplate changed circumstances.âÂ
Another bite of barbecue. A small and unappetizing pool of grease has formed on my plate. Tebbetts smiles. âSo thatâs all we need to do then? Thatâs the wonderful thing about the law, solving problems for our clients before they happen!â Riggsbee snorts, âMore like running after folks with a shovel, cleaning up their messes.â Tebbetts smiles, even more broadly. âRiggsbee, I will heartily agree with you on one portion of your statement.â âAnd what portion is that, you bourbon-soaked old Democrat?â âThat, for you, a shovel is an especially appropriate tool to choose.â We depart into the hot afternoon.
John R. Markel, ASA, CPA,ABV, is Managing Director of Markel Valuation, P.C. in Greenville, South Carolina. He is a 1969 graduate of Duke University and received his Master of Accountancy from the University of South Carolina in 1974. Since 1996, his practice has been limited to business dispute resolution/litigation support, business valuation, and forensic accounting. He has testified more than 50 times as an expert witness in state and federal courts on issues including business valuation, lost profits, commercial damages, construction claims, business termination, anti-competitive practices, and shareholder disputes. He can be reached at (864) 370-8087. He can also be reached by e-mail at jmarkel@markelvaluation.com.