Due diligence vs. warranties
By M. Henry Heines, Townsend and Townsend and Crew LLP -- 5/16/2007
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Editor's note: Excerpted from Patents For Business: A Manager's Guide to Scope, Strategy, and Due Diligence, by M. Henry Heines, partner, Townsend and Townsend and Crew LLP.
Every transaction involving the transfer or acquisition of assets or rights will contain warranties, and one may well wonder whether these warranties render due diligence reviews redundant. Certainly in intellectual property due diligence, all of the concerns listed above can be covered by warranties or indemnities. Why then should one invest in the expense of a due diligence review when the warranties or indemnities in the contract can be specifically worded to cover the same issues?
Certain warranties and indemnities will necessarily be included in the transaction regardless of whether a due diligence review precedes the closing, since there will be various matters that are unreasonable or uneconomical for the investigator to check. For example, the contract will typically contain a warranty by the target that the information the target supplies to the investigator is complete and accurate. Nevertheless, for the bulk of the intellectual property issues that will determine the risks and the value of transaction, it is far more expedient, efficient, and effective to investigate these issues in a due diligence review and identify them before they become losses.
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