Successor Liability in Distressed M&A Transactions: Mitigation Strategies
Due Diligence, Entity Structuring, Contractual Indemnities, Insurance, Post-Closing Transition
A live 90-minute premium CLE video webinar with interactive Q&A
This CLE course will discuss strategies for mitigating the risk of successor liability in distressed M&A transactions. The panel will outline the sources of potential claims and the role of due diligence, indemnification and other contract provisions, insurance, and entity structure can have in limiting the buyer's liability post-closing.
Outline
- Special concerns with acquiring distressed assets
- General rule: liabilities do not transfer to the buyer in an asset sale
- Exceptions to the rule
- Express or implied assumption of liability
- Deemed merger
- The buyer is a mere continuation of the seller
- The transfer is a fraud on creditors
- Other
- Mitigation strategies
- Due diligence: environmental, employment claims, and tax liabilities
- Form a new subsidiary to acquire assets
- Purchase agreement: clearly delineate assets being acquired, liabilities being assumed
- Indemnity provisions; escrow or other security if available
- Insurance
Benefits
The panel will review these and other critical issues:
- What are the key successor liability risks in distressed M&A transactions?
- How are the exceptions to the “no liability in asset deals” rule evolving?
- How can counsel minimize exposure in a distressed transaction with deal structure, contractual diligence and insurance strategies?
- When does bankruptcy or a UCC foreclosure sale provide a superior liability shield?
- How can counsel for buyers and sellers balance risk mitigation against the realities of distressed deal dynamics?
Faculty

Michael Ott
Of Counsel
Ice Miller
Mr. Ott is an attorney in Ice Miller’s Bankruptcy and Financial Restructuring Practice, where he counsels banks,... | Read More
Mr. Ott is an attorney in Ice Miller’s Bankruptcy and Financial Restructuring Practice, where he counsels banks, financial institutions and other creditors in distressed situations. He is experienced in all aspects of the workout, restructuring and bankruptcy process, providing clients with thorough analysis and creative solutions.
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George H. Singer
Partner
Holland & Hart
Mr. Singer practices in the areas of corporate and commercial law, including finance, financial restructuring, capital... | Read More
Mr. Singer practices in the areas of corporate and commercial law, including finance, financial restructuring, capital recovery, and bankruptcy. He negotiates senior and subordinated financing arrangements and has experience with structuring credit facilities, perfecting finance documentation, and closing secured and lease finance transactions. Mr. Singer regularly represents lenders, lessors, funds, committees, business debtors, guarantors, and creditors in financial workouts, restructurings, distressed-sale transactions, intercreditor disputes, lender liability claims, successor liability issues, and preferential and fraudulent transfer litigation. He has been practicing for over 20 years and regularly advises publicly and privately held companies on corporate governance, debt and equity financings, licensing issues, and risk management. Mr. Singer serves as corporate counsel on behalf of buyers and sellers and venture capitalists in complex merger, acquisition, divestiture, and joint-venture transactions.
CloseEarly Discount (through 10/17/25)