this post was submitted on 14 May 2025
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Except what you're describing doesn't make sense. If the new owners purchased all of those things, then in reality they purchased the company. Courts are very likely to agree on this. It looks like a company-wide sale, therefore it probably is, even if someone tries to add a line saying "we aren't liable".
But imagine someone could "sell everything other than the liability". In such a case, the seller would be putting themselves on the hook to pay outstanding debts (i.e., the seller would be liable). And we know they have money -- they just sold the thing. So then the seller would pay... But they know that in advance, so they would not agree to such a sale in the first place, unless they were planning to steal that money through creative accounting of some kind... But both parties know all of that that in advance, so they would both be acting fraudulently.