Introduction: Your Exit Plan is Your Leverage
In a closely held Minnesota business, ownership and employment often overlap. When an owner retires, becomes disabled, dies, gets divorced, or the relationship simply breaks, the difference between an orderly transition and a scorched-earth “business divorce” is often a well-drafted buy-sell agreement (for corporations, usually embedded in a Shareholder Control Agreement; for LLCs, in the Operating Agreement).
This guide explains how buy-sell and operating agreements work under Minnesota law, the valuation choices that make or break a buyout, and practical drafting tips to prevent litigation.
Where Buy-Sell Agreements Live in Minnesota
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Close Corporations (Ch. 302A): Minnesota recognizes Shareholder Control Agreements (SCAs) that can override many default rules if adopted by all shareholders (see Minn. Stat. § 302A.457). A buy-sell is commonly embedded in or referenced by the SCA. Remedies for oppression remain available (§ 302A.751), but a clear buy-sell reduces the need to invoke them.
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LLCs (Ch. 322C): The Operating Agreement governs member rights, transfers, and exit mechanics. Judicial remedies exist (§ 322C.0701), yet a detailed buy-sell provision is the first line of defense.
Practical tip: Keep the buy-sell inside the governing agreement (SCA or Operating Agreement) or clearly incorporate it by reference to avoid “which document controls?” fights.
What a Buy-Sell Agreement Actually Does
A buy-sell is a pre-negotiated mechanism that answers four questions:
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When can/ must an owner’s interest be purchased? (Triggers)
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Who must/ may buy it? (Buyer hierarchy and options)
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For how much? (Valuation standard and methodology)
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How will it be paid? (Funding and terms)
Get those right and you’ve eliminated 90% of future litigation risk.
Common Triggers (Tailor These to Your Business)
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Death (mandatory buyout; often insurance-funded)
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Disability (define “disability,” waiting period, and verification)
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Retirement (age and service thresholds; phased buyout eligibility)
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Voluntary Exit / Resignation (notice requirements; non-compete interaction)
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Termination for Cause (define “cause” precisely; price adjustments)
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Divorce / Marital Dissolution (prevent transfers to non-owner spouses; spousal consent)
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Bankruptcy / Insolvency (prevent creditor seizure)
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Deadlock / Material Dispute (tie to a shoot-out or appraisal process)
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Breach of Fiduciary Duty / Covenant (forfeiture or discounted price, if enforceable)
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Failure to Meet Capital Calls (dilution vs. forced sale)
Drafting pointer: Separate “good leaver” and “bad leaver” schedules with different timelines and pricing adjustments. Define everything—especially “cause,” “competition,” and “disability.”
Valuation: The Clause Everyone Regrets (or Thanks You For)
Choose the Valuation Standard
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Fair Value (Minnesota litigation standard in many corporate buyouts): generally excludes discounts for minority status or lack of marketability unless owners explicitly agree otherwise.
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Fair Market Value: price between hypothetical willing buyer and seller; usually includes appropriate discounts.
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Book Value (rarely appropriate for operating companies).
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Investment Value (company-specific synergies; risky if not defined).
Minnesota note: If you don’t specify a standard, a court later deciding price (e.g., under § 302A.751 or § 322C.0701) may default to fair value concepts. If you want fair market value or discounts, say so clearly.
Pick the Methodology
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Fixed Price (update annually by written schedule). Clean when maintained; disastrous if it goes stale.
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Formula-Based (e.g., x times trailing twelve-month EBITDA; revenue multiple for certain practices). Be explicit about normalization, owner comp adjustments, PPP/one-time items, and working capital targets.
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Appraisal-Based
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Single appraiser mutually selected (or selected by firm’s accountant).
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Two appraisers, with a third if needed (median or average).
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Base-year template: define approaches (income/market/asset), weighting, and normalization.
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Fine-Tune the Adjustments
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Working Capital Peg (target net working capital at close; define components).
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Debt-free / cash-free (spell out lines of credit, shareholder loans).
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Key Person / Customer Risk (caps or collars).
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Non-compete assumptions (if the seller won’t sign one, price may adjust).
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Minority & Marketability Discounts (include/exclude explicitly; align with standard).
Practical tip: Add a short “Valuation Glossary” inside the agreement so future owners know exactly what EBITDA, net debt, and normalization mean.
Payment Terms: Avoid “Great Price, Impossible Terms”
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Down Payment: 10–30% at close for smaller companies; more with insurance-funded redemptions.
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Installments: 3–7 years typical; longer for capital-intensive businesses.
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Interest Rate: fixed or floating (e.g., WSJ prime + x%); interest-only grace period permitted.
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Security: pledge the purchased interest; UCC lien; personal guarantees (sparingly).
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Clawbacks / Earn-outs: consider for key customer retention or earn-out milestones.
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Acceleration: on default, change of control, or covenant breach.
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Setoffs: allow offsets for indemnity or undisclosed liabilities.
Banking reality: If a third-party lender will fund redemptions, pre-clear your buy-sell with that lender. Surprises kill deals.
Funding the Buyout
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Life & Disability Buy-Sell Insurance:
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Cross-purchase (owners own policies) vs. Entity redemption (company owns policies).
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Keep policy ownership/beneficiary schedules with the agreement, update annually.
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Sinking Fund / Redemption Reserve (tax-inefficient but predictable).
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Bank Financing (commitment letters are ideal but rare in advance).
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Hybrid (insurance for death/perm disability; installments for others).
Don’t let insurance drift. Annual coverage audit: face amounts, owners, beneficiaries, and policy status.
Transfer Restrictions (Keep Ownership in the Family—Your Business Family)
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No transfers without compliance with the buy-sell (and securities laws).
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Right of First Refusal / First Offer for voluntary sales.
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Permitted Transfers (estate planning trusts, family) with assignee/successor joinders.
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Spousal Consents acknowledging the restrictions (critical in marital-property states).
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Put/Call Windows for planned retirements.
Deadlock & Dispute Mechanisms (Design the Escape Hatch)
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CEO/Board Tiebreaker or Independent Director vote on enumerated issues.
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Baseball Arbitration for valuation disputes.
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Texas/Minnesota “Shotgun” (Buy-Sell) Clauses: one party names a price; the other must buy or sell at that price.
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Use with caution; add cooling-off periods, financing proof, and anti-abuse language.
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Mediation → Binding Appraisal/Arbitration path for speed and confidentiality.
Tax Essentials (Coordinate with Your CPA)
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Entity Type Matters: C-Corp vs. S-Corp vs. LLC taxed as partnership.
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Stock vs. Asset Economics: Redemptions vs. cross-purchases have different basis and earnings-and-profits effects.
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Installment Sales: interest is taxable; basis recovery rules differ.
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Insurance Proceeds: typically income-tax-free to recipients, but watch C-Corp AMT history and §101(j) compliance.
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Section 754 Elections (LLC/Partnerships): step-up for buyer; plan in advance.
Put a “Tax Coordination” clause requiring owners to cooperate on elections, allocations, and K-1 timing.
Minnesota-Specific Pitfalls (and How to Avoid Them)
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Stale Fixed Prices: If you use a schedule, require annual written updates; if not updated by a set date, fall back to appraisal.
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Ambiguous Standard: Say “Fair Value as defined herein (no minority or marketability discounts)” or “Fair Market Value (including appropriate discounts)”—don’t rely on courts to guess.
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Employment vs. Ownership: If employment ends, does that automatically trigger a buyout, and at what price? Spell it out.
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Competing Post-Sale: Tie restrictive covenants to consideration and Minnesota enforceability standards; carve-outs for passive investments.
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Inconsistent Documents: Align your SCA/Operating Agreement, employment agreements, and any phantom equity/option plans.
Model Clause Starters (Short, Editable Text)
Valuation Standard. “The Purchase Price shall equal the Fair Value of the Interest, determined by Independent Appraisal pursuant to Exhibit A, and shall not include discounts for lack of marketability or minority status.”
Appraisal Mechanism. “Buyer and Seller shall jointly select one ASA/ABV-credentialed appraiser within 15 days. Failing agreement, each shall select an appraiser; the two shall select a third. The final price shall be the median of the three conclusions of value.”
Payment Terms. “10% at Closing; balance over 60 equal monthly installments at the Prime Rate + 2%, secured by a pledge of the Interest. Prepayment permitted without penalty.”
Insurance Funding. “The Company shall maintain policies identified on Schedule I. Proceeds shall be applied first to down payment, then to accelerate installments.”
(These are examples only; tailor to your facts and have counsel review.)
Implementation Checklist (Use This Before You Sign)
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Confirm all owners and spouses sign (SCAs must be unanimous).
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Elect valuation standard & method; attach glossary and sample calculation.
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Identify triggers; define “disability,” “cause,” and “competition.”
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Align transfer restrictions and ROFR with buy-sell mechanics.
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Paper the insurance (ownership, beneficiary, amounts).
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Coordinate tax with CPA (elections, basis, redemptions).
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Add dispute path (mediation → appraisal/arbitration).
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Calendar annual review (price update, insurance audit).
FAQs
Q: Do we need a buy-sell if we “trust each other”?
Yes. Buy-sells protect families and estates as much as partners. They turn chaos into a checklist.
Q: Should our price be “fair value” or “fair market value”?
It depends on your goals. Minnesota courts often apply fair value in statutory buyouts; if you want discounts or a market-based price, say so expressly.
Q: Can the company afford a buyout?
Design funding and terms (insurance + installments) so the business survives the buyout.
Q: What happens if we never update our fixed price?
Courts may disregard stale numbers. Include a fallback to appraisal if a schedule isn’t updated.
Conclusion & CTA
A Minnesota buy-sell agreement is not a form; it’s a playbook for the most sensitive moments in your company’s life. If you set clear triggers, a defensible valuation standard, and realistic funding terms, you’ll minimize conflict and preserve enterprise value.
Want an attorney to draft or stress-test your current buy-sell (corporation or LLC)? MKT Law reviews, negotiates, and enforces buy-sell agreements for Minnesota business owners. Let’s make your exit plan your leverage.