Business Dissolution and Bankruptcy
When a business ends, the legal path depends on whether it has enough assets to pay its debts. Solvent businesses dissolve voluntarily; insolvent ones either wind down through an assignment for benefit of creditors (ABC) or file for federal bankruptcy protection (Chapter 7 to liquidate, Chapter 11 to reorganize or sell). Personal guaranties on business debts often determine how much of this matters to the owners.
Choosing the right path
The threshold question: can the business pay all its debts? If yes, voluntary dissolution is the answer — pay creditors in full, distribute remaining assets to owners, file dissolution paperwork with the state. If no, the choice is among ABC, Chapter 7, Chapter 11, or workout (negotiating with creditors without formal proceedings).
Key factors:
- Asset value relative to debt. Solvent → voluntary dissolution. Insolvent with significant assets → bankruptcy or ABC for orderly liquidation. Insolvent with negligible assets → simple wind-up or abandonment, depending on personal guaranty exposure.
- Going-concern value. If the business is worth more sold as a going concern than its liquidation value, Chapter 11 (or pre-packaged sale or ABC sale) preserves that value.
- Personal guaranties. Owner personal guaranties typically aren't discharged by entity bankruptcy. Owner-side personal bankruptcy (often Chapter 7 personal) may be necessary.
- Litigation exposure. Bankruptcy's automatic stay halts litigation against the entity, providing breathing room. ABCs don't have this protection.
- Speed and cost. Voluntary dissolution: weeks, low cost. ABC: 1–3 months, moderate cost. Chapter 7: 4–6 months for simple cases. Chapter 11: 6 months to multiple years; expensive.
Voluntary dissolution
For solvent businesses, the path is straightforward:
- Board / member approval. Adopt resolutions authorizing dissolution per the operating agreement or bylaws.
- Shareholder / member vote. If required by the governance documents or state law.
- File Certificate of Dissolution / Articles of Dissolution. With the Secretary of State. Some states require tax clearance first.
- Notify creditors. State statutes typically allow a notice procedure that bars creditors from later asserting claims after a stated period.
- Pay debts and obligations. Operating debts, taxes, leases, employee obligations, contingent claims.
- Distribute remaining assets. To owners per their entitlements under the operating agreement or organizational documents.
- Final tax returns. Federal (final Form 1120, 1120-S, 1065, or Schedule C marked "final"). State equivalents. Final payroll filings and W-2s if any employees. Cancel EIN with IRS (optional but recommended).
- Cancel registrations. Sales tax permit, business licenses, foreign qualifications, registered agent services in each state.
- Statement of Termination. Some states require a separate filing once wind-up is complete.
The wind-up period (between dissolution and termination) can extend for months or years to resolve pending matters. The entity continues to exist for limited purposes (winding up business, defending and prosecuting claims) but cannot conduct new business.
State-law wind-up mechanics
State LLC and corporation statutes provide default wind-up procedures. Common elements:
- Notice to known and unknown creditors. Direct notice to known creditors with a claim-filing deadline; publication notice to unknown creditors with a longer deadline (often 3 years in some states, shorter with newspaper publication).
- Priority of distributions. Generally: secured creditors first, unsecured creditors (with statutory priorities — taxes, wages, etc.), then equity holders.
- Cut-off of liability. Following proper notice procedures, creditors who don't file within the deadline are barred from later asserting claims against distributed assets or against owners.
- Cancellation of state filing. The entity ceases to exist for general purposes after the wind-up is complete.
Skipping the formal wind-up by simply abandoning the entity is common but risky. The entity remains liable until properly dissolved; annual report fees accrue; eventually the state administratively dissolves the entity, but creditor claims and tax liabilities don't disappear. Owners can have continuing personal exposure for failure to follow wind-up procedures, particularly where they took distributions while leaving creditors unpaid.
Assignment for benefit of creditors
An Assignment for the Benefit of Creditors (ABC) is a state-law alternative to federal bankruptcy. The debtor transfers all of its assets to an assignee (a neutral third party, often a specialist firm) who liquidates the assets and distributes proceeds to creditors in order of priority.
ABC advantages over bankruptcy:
- Faster. 1–3 months typical, vs 4+ months for Chapter 7.
- Lower cost. Assignee fees are typically less than trustee fees plus bankruptcy court costs.
- More flexible. Sales can be structured to maximize value, particularly going-concern sales of operating businesses.
- No automatic stay. Creditors can still pursue collection — this is a downside in many cases.
- Less publicity. State law procedure rather than federal court docket.
- Insider-friendly for management transitions. Sometimes management can buy back the business through the ABC.
ABC disadvantages:
- No automatic stay (litigation continues; secured creditors can still foreclose)
- No discharge (the assignor entity continues to exist with unpaid debts)
- Less robust avoidance powers for assignees than bankruptcy trustees
- Treatment of leases and executory contracts is less clear than in bankruptcy
- Some states' ABC procedures are more developed than others
California, Delaware, Florida, New Jersey, and other states have well-developed ABC frameworks. Other states have less defined procedures.
ABCs are commonly used for asset sales of distressed technology or growth companies — speed and the ability to negotiate a going-concern sale to a buyer make ABCs attractive when the business has any continuing value.
Federal bankruptcy overview
The US Bankruptcy Code (Title 11 of the US Code) provides federal procedures administered by US Bankruptcy Courts (a unit of the US District Courts). The main chapters relevant to businesses:
- Chapter 7. Liquidation. Trustee appointed; non-exempt assets sold; proceeds distributed to creditors per statutory priority; entity ceases operations.
- Chapter 11. Reorganization. Debtor typically remains in possession (DIP); restructures debts through a plan of reorganization approved by creditors and confirmed by the court; or sells the business as a going concern through a Section 363 sale.
- Chapter 13. Individual reorganization (sole proprietors). Limited debt thresholds; not available to entities.
Filing for bankruptcy triggers the automatic stay (11 U.S.C. §362): an immediate halt to most creditor collection efforts, lawsuits, foreclosures, and repossessions. The automatic stay applies in any chapter and is a primary reason to file when collection pressure is intense.
Chapter 7: Liquidation
Used when a business is insolvent and either has no going-concern value or where management has decided to liquidate.
Process:
- Petition filed. Voluntary by debtor or involuntary by creditors meeting statutory requirements.
- Automatic stay. Creditor actions halted.
- Trustee appointed. US Trustee selects a panel trustee.
- Asset collection and sale. Trustee takes control, marshals assets, sells them (often by auction).
- Section 341 meeting. Meeting of creditors where debtor (typically through a principal) answers questions under oath.
- Claims process. Creditors file proofs of claim; trustee reviews and may object.
- Distribution. Proceeds distributed per statutory priority: secured claims (to extent of collateral value), administrative expenses, statutory priority claims (taxes, wages, employee benefits), general unsecured claims.
- Closing. Trustee files final report; case closed; business entity typically ceases to exist.
For a business with primarily encumbered assets (heavily collateralized debt), Chapter 7 often produces little or nothing for unsecured creditors. Equity holders typically receive nothing.
Discharge: entities don't receive a Chapter 7 discharge (only individuals do). The entity simply ceases. Pre-bankruptcy debts that aren't paid through the trustee's distribution remain technically owed but the entity is dissolved.
Chapter 11: Reorganization
Used when a business has going-concern value worth preserving — either to reorganize and continue operating, or to sell as a going concern.
Two paths within Chapter 11:
Traditional reorganization. Debtor proposes a plan of reorganization restructuring its debts (often impairing some claims, converting debt to equity, etc.). Creditors vote on the plan by class; court confirms the plan if statutory requirements are met. Post-confirmation, the debtor emerges from bankruptcy as a reorganized entity. Time-consuming and expensive but preserves the business.
Section 363 sale. Sale of substantially all assets to a buyer through a court-supervised auction. Increasingly the common Chapter 11 outcome for distressed companies — faster than traditional reorganization, produces value for creditors, transitions the business to a new owner.
Chapter 11 mechanics:
- Debtor in possession (DIP). Existing management typically continues operating the business as DIP. A trustee is appointed only for cause (fraud, gross mismanagement).
- Exclusivity period. First 120 days, only the debtor can propose a plan. Can be extended or terminated.
- DIP financing. New financing extended to the debtor post-petition, typically with super-priority over existing claims.
- Treatment of executory contracts and leases. Debtor can assume (and assign) or reject contracts and leases, subject to court approval.
- Plan voting. By class of claims; requires majority in number and 2/3 in amount of voting creditors in each impaired class.
- Confirmation. Court approves plan if voting requirements met and the plan meets statutory standards including the "absolute priority rule" (with cramdown exceptions).
Chapter 11 is expensive: legal and professional fees can run into millions for mid-size cases, tens of millions for larger ones. The exclusivity, ability to reject burdensome contracts, and ability to sell assets free and clear of liens make Chapter 11 powerful for the right situation, but the cost and complexity rule it out for many small businesses.
Subchapter V
The Small Business Reorganization Act of 2019 created Subchapter V of Chapter 11 for small business debtors. It provides a streamlined Chapter 11 process with several advantages:
- Debtor maintains greater control (no creditors' committee by default)
- Subchapter V trustee appointed to facilitate plan negotiation
- Faster timeline (90 days to propose a plan)
- Plan confirmation possible without creditor consent if equity holders contribute sufficient new value or commit to paying creditors their disposable income for 3–5 years
- Lower cost than traditional Chapter 11
Eligibility is limited to small business debtors with aggregate non-contingent liquidated secured and unsecured debt below a statutory cap (which has been temporarily raised then reset; check current threshold). Subchapter V has become a popular path for small business reorganizations since its adoption.
Chapter 13 (individuals)
Chapter 13 is for individuals (including sole proprietors) with regular income and debts below statutory limits. The debtor proposes a 3–5 year repayment plan; secured creditors are typically paid in full; unsecured creditors receive what's left from disposable income; discharge is granted at the end of the plan.
For sole proprietors, Chapter 13 can preserve the business while restructuring debts. For entity-owned businesses, Chapter 13 is only for the individual owner; the entity itself can't file Chapter 13.
Section 363 sales
Section 363 of the Bankruptcy Code allows the debtor to sell assets free and clear of liens, claims, and encumbrances with court approval. This is a powerful tool because:
- Liens attach to sale proceeds; secured creditors are paid from proceeds
- Buyer takes the assets clean — no successor liability for most pre-petition claims
- The sale is approved by court order, providing finality
- Higher and better offers can be solicited through an auction process
Section 363 sales typically follow a "stalking horse bidder" model: an initial buyer enters into an asset purchase agreement subject to higher offers; the court approves bidding procedures; an auction is held; the winning bidder closes after court approval. The whole process can run 60–120 days for a Chapter 11 363 sale.
Preferences and fraudulent transfers
Bankruptcy gives the trustee (or DIP in Chapter 11) power to undo certain pre-bankruptcy transfers:
Preferences (11 U.S.C. §547). Transfers to creditors within 90 days before bankruptcy filing (1 year for insiders) that allow the recipient to recover more than they would in Chapter 7. The trustee can claw back these payments and require the creditor to take in proportion with others. Defenses include ordinary-course-of-business, contemporaneous-exchange-for-new-value, and subsequent-new-value.
Fraudulent transfers (11 U.S.C. §548; state law). Transfers made with actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud creditors, or constructive fraudulent transfers (debtor received less than reasonably equivalent value and was insolvent or rendered insolvent). Look-back period is 2 years federal, 4–6 years under most state Uniform Fraudulent Transfer or Voidable Transactions Act.
Practical implication: Owners taking distributions or paying favored creditors in the months before filing should expect those transfers to be examined. Insider payments are particularly scrutinized.
Personal guaranty exposure
The single most important question for many small business owners considering wind-down: which obligations have I personally guaranteed?
Common personally-guaranteed obligations:
- Commercial bank loans and lines of credit
- SBA loans (typically required)
- Commercial leases (almost always for small business)
- Equipment leases
- Vendor credit lines
- Major customer contracts with prepaid commitments
- Credit card processing merchant agreements
- Utility deposits
An entity bankruptcy or dissolution doesn't release these personal obligations. Creditors who held personal guaranties will pursue the owner personally after the entity wind-down. Owners facing significant personal guaranty exposure may need personal bankruptcy (Chapter 7 or 13) in addition to or instead of entity-level action.
Trust fund tax liability (see business taxes) is personal regardless of guaranties and is generally non-dischargeable in personal bankruptcy.
Employee obligations
WARN Act: 60-day advance notice required for employers with 100+ employees facing mass layoff or plant closing meeting statutory thresholds. State mini-WARN acts may impose additional notice or apply at lower employee counts.
Final paychecks: state law sets the deadline (often immediate or next business day for involuntary termination; some states allow longer for layoffs vs terminations).
Accrued PTO: paid out per company policy and applicable state law.
COBRA notice: required for employers with 20+ employees if group health plan was offered.
Wage priority claims in bankruptcy: wages and benefits earned in the 180 days before petition (capped per employee) are statutory priority claims paid before general unsecured.
Employee benefit plans: ERISA-covered plans require specific termination procedures; defined benefit plans may have PBGC obligations.
Tax aspects of shutting down
- Final returns. Mark federal and state income tax returns "final" for the entity. Schedule C marked final for sole prop.
- Distribution treatment. Distributions in dissolution generally treated as sale of equity by recipients for tax purposes.
- NOL carryforwards. Lost when entity ceases unless preserved through asset sales or specific reorganization structures.
- Cancellation of debt income. Debts forgiven generate COD income, with exceptions for insolvency, bankruptcy, qualified business indebtedness, and others. Bankruptcy discharge typically avoids COD income.
- Payroll tax compliance through wind-down. Trust fund tax obligations continue. Personal liability for responsible persons doesn't disappear with entity dissolution.
- Sales tax compliance. Final returns in each registered state; cancel sales tax permits.
Common mistakes
- Abandoning the entity without formal dissolution. Annual fees accrue; the entity remains legally responsible; the owners can face personal exposure for failure to follow wind-up procedures while taking distributions.
- Paying favored creditors in the run-up to bankruptcy. Preferences and fraudulent transfers can be clawed back. Sometimes paying insiders or unsecured creditors over secured creditors is the wrong move.
- Distributions to owners while creditors remain unpaid. A path to personal liability via fraudulent transfer or veil-piercing claims, even outside bankruptcy.
- Failing to address personal guaranties. Owner planning that focuses on entity-level wind-down without considering personal guaranty exposure produces surprise personal lawsuits.
- Trust fund tax non-payment. Personal liability under Section 6672 doesn't disappear with entity dissolution or bankruptcy. Pay these first if cash permits.
- Inadequate WARN notice for mass layoffs. Federal and state WARN penalties accrue per employee per day for inadequate notice.
- Delay until creditors force the issue. Voluntary action (dissolution, ABC, Chapter 11) preserves more value and gives owners more control than involuntary proceedings.
- DIY when the situation is complex. Insolvency proceedings have many traps; restructuring counsel for any non-trivial wind-down is essential.
- Ignoring tax aspects of dissolution. Cancellation of debt income, distribution gain/loss recognition, and trust fund issues can produce surprise tax bills after the business is gone.
FAQ
Can I just close the business and walk away? Operationally yes; legally not without ongoing exposure. Annual report fees accrue; tax liabilities continue; creditors with personal guaranties pursue the owner; the entity remains until properly dissolved.
Does Chapter 7 bankruptcy let me start over? For entities: the entity ceases. For individuals: a Chapter 7 discharge eliminates most pre-petition debts (with exceptions for tax, student loans, fraud, etc.), allowing a fresh start.
How long does Chapter 7 take? Simple individual cases: 4–6 months. Business entity Chapter 7: similar to several months for asset disposition; can be longer for complex cases.
How long does Chapter 11 take? Traditional reorganization: 6 months to 2+ years. Section 363 sales: 60–120 days. Subchapter V: 6–9 months typical.
What does Chapter 11 cost? Professional fees (legal, financial advisor, accounting) commonly $500,000+ for mid-size cases; multi-million for larger. Subchapter V is much cheaper, often under $100,000 for the simpler cases.
Can I keep my house in personal bankruptcy? Depends on state homestead exemption, which varies dramatically. Some states (Florida, Texas) have unlimited homestead; others have modest dollar caps.
Does bankruptcy ruin my credit forever? Bankruptcy stays on credit reports for 7–10 years. Credit recovery is gradual but possible within 2–4 years for many post-bankruptcy individuals.
Should I file personal or business bankruptcy? Both may be needed. Entity bankruptcy addresses entity debts; personal bankruptcy addresses personally-guaranteed debts and personal obligations. Restructuring counsel will analyze.