Small Business Divorce

Navigating a small business divorce? Learn how to protect your assets, value your company, and resolve ownership disputes with expert family law guidance.

Every couple that gets married starts with plans for a future together. Those plans can involve raising a family, traveling, and being involved in the local community.

At some point, it might also mean starting a business together. While there have been many successful husband-and-wife businesses, there are plenty of examples of couples who worked together and were driven to divorce. That is where the marital dissolution gets especially complicated.

Along with dividing the marriage assets, such as homes, cars, furnishings, art, etc., deciding “who gets what” in a business will require a deeper analysis of the financial investments into the business, what the responsibilities of each partner are, and whether or not one spouse wants to continue the business or buy out their partner.

There is a lot at stake with a small business divorce. If you’re involved in this type of situation, you need to have a strong advocate on your side to protect your interests. The experienced divorce attorneys at Davis & Associates understand the complexities of dissolving a marriage alongside a business. We provide strong support for our clients and ensure every decision they make is informed.

It will help if you have an appreciation for what is involved in a small-business divorce. The following guidelines will provide you with a foundation of understanding.

The Small Business Divorce Process

The small business divorce process begins with a deep dive into all the parameters surrounding the business as they relate to the married couple’s involvement. In the eyes of the divorce court, a business is treated as an asset no different from a family home.

The first step is to determine the business’s classification. Is it marital or separate property?

Next, financial experts will evaluate the business to determine its worth. After that, you have to decide whether to sell the business and split the proceeds or set up a structured buyout. With all of that information, you and your divorce attorney will go through the negotiation process to resolve ownership disputes.

If you can’t resolve these disputes, it will fall to your divorce judge to make the final decision. That is why it is important to try to work things out with your ex before you both go before the judge.

What Is Permanent Alimony?

Determining If Your Business Is Marital Property

As you begin the small business divorce process, the answer to one question will determine a lot of how it is divided. Is your business marital property? That means it has to be classified, assigned a value, and equitably divided in accordance with the laws of your state.

For example, Texas, Nevada, and Wisconsin are among the community property states.

That means a business started after the marriage is presumed to be jointly owned and must be divided 50/50. In states such as Florida, Illinois, Missouri, Ohio, and Oklahoma, the equitable distribution approach means dividing marital property based on fairness.

That’s where things can get contentious because what one spouse thinks is fair, the other might not.

Methods for Accurate Business Valuation

All of your assets, including your business, will need to be assigned a valuation. Your divorce judge will rely heavily on the results provided by independent financial experts and their forensic analysis.

These are the common valuation methods they could utilize:

Income Approach

This will be a calculation of the business value based on its projected future earnings and discounted cash flow.

Market Approach

Just as with comparing home listings to value a property, your business will be compared to similar businesses that recently sold.

Asset-Based Approach

The valuation will also include all the business’s tangible and intangible assets, minus liabilities.

An accurate valuation ensures fairness and prevents undervaluation or inflated estimates that could upend your settlement negotiations.

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Options for Dividing Business Ownership

In practical terms, dividing a business during a divorce does not always mean physically splitting up the company. You will consider the following four options for dividing up your business:

Buyout Agreements

A buyout agreement has one spouse purchase the other’s interest in the business. That buyout can be made in cash, through structured payments, or through asset offsets.

Asset Offset Method

With this approach, one spouse will retain the business while the other spouse receives different marital assets of equal value.

Co-Ownership Arrangement

If your divorce is amicable, you can continue running the business together.

Sale of the Business

If no agreement can be reached, the court may order the liquidation of the business and the division of the proceeds.

It really comes down to whether you want the business you started to continue and what role you want in it.

How High-Value Assets and Businesses Are Valued

Frequently Asked Questions

Whether a spouse is entitled to half of a business depends on whether the business is classified as marital or community property. If the business was started or grew significantly during the marriage using marital funds, a court may award a portion of its value or ownership to the other spouse. Consulting a family law attorney can help you determine your specific exposure and explore buy-out options.

Business valuation typically involves a forensic accountant who analyzes the company’s financial records, cash flow, and market position. Common methods include the ‘Income Approach,’ which considers future earnings potential, and the ‘Market Approach,’ which compares the business to similar companies that have recently sold. An accurate appraisal is critical to ensuring a fair division of assets and to basing it on real-world data.

hen spouses are co-owners, they must decide whether to continue operating together, have one party buy out the other’s interest, or sell the business and split the proceeds. If an amicable agreement cannot be reached, the court may order a sale or award the business to one spouse, offsetting the other spouse’s share with other marital assets. Most experts recommend a structured buyout to prevent the total dissolution of a profitable company.

Protect Your Business and Financial Future with Experienced Divorce Counsel

There is no escaping the fact that ending a marriage and a business at the same time is going to be emotionally draining.

However, when you consider the strife that led you to this decision, you know this is the right thing to do. The challenge is whether you’re willing to walk away from the company for a price or stay and continue building the business.

The divorce attorneys at Davis & Associates can help you come to those decisions.

Davis & Associates understands the unique challenges of a small-business divorce, including business valuation for divorce, equitable distribution of business interests, and protection of ongoing operations.

Our team works proactively with financial experts and forensic

accountants to ensure that your company’s true value is accurately assessed and that your rights are fully protected.

Contact Davis & Associates today to schedule a confidential consultation and learn how we can help safeguard your business, your investments, and your long-term financial stability.

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