Clear structure.
Decisive advice.
Commercial certainty.
Businesses rarely fail because of a single contract clause.
Commercial law is not paperwork. It is protection.
They encounter risk when ownership structures, liability exposure or shareholder arrangements are not properly aligned.
At Canterbury Legal, we advise business owners, directors and investors on structure first, documentation second.
Our Business & Commercial Law services include...
Your business structure should reflect risk and growth plans.
We advise on company structures, shareholder arrangements and asset separation strategies to minimise exposure.
Personal guarantees and security interests create real exposure.
We provide clear advice on lending structures, PPSR implications and enforcement risk before commitments are signed.
Trading without strong terms increases vulnerability.
We draft and review terms of trade designed to strengthen enforceability, limit liability and improve recovery options.
Risk allocation matters.
We assist in drafting and negotiating agreements that clearly define rights, obligations and exit mechanisms.
Buying or selling a business requires precision.
We advise on due diligence, warranties, restraints, lease arrangements and transaction structuring to protect your commercial outcome.
Our commercial approach.
We advise with commercial awareness and strategic perspective.
Ownership alignment.
Liability containment.
Clear governance.
Practical enforceability.
How we work.
Strategic commercial advice.
We assist clients in:
- Establishing and restructuring business entities
- Managing director duties and risk exposure
- Negotiating commercial contracts
- Protecting against credit and trading risk
- Structuring business acquisitions and exits
The right structure can prevent disputes, reduce liability and protect personal assets.
Frequently asked questions.
Structures should be reviewed when bringing in new shareholders, acquiring assets, increasing debt exposure or planning an exit.
A personal guarantee can expose personal assets if the business cannot meet its obligations. Guarantees should always be reviewed before signing.
Yes. Clear agreements reduce disputes by setting expectations around governance, decision-making and exit rights.
Well-drafted terms can significantly strengthen recovery rights and limit liability. However, enforceability depends on proper implementation and acceptance.
A business purchase typically involves due diligence, review of financial performance, lease arrangements, warranties, employee obligations and transaction structuring.
Yes. Once signed, obligations become binding. Early advice helps identify risk allocation, termination exposure and liability caps.
Better contracts.
Better protection.
Better outcomes.
If you are entering a transaction, restructuring or managing risk, early advice reduces uncertainty.
