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Collecting from a Closed Florida Business

A judgment against a closed Florida business can still produce recovery through three paths: tracing assets transferred before or after closure, identifying a successor entity continuing the same operations under a new name, and pursuing personal guarantors. Each path requires entity, asset, and transfer analysis before filing enforcement papers.

Three Paths to Recovery from a Closed Business

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1. Asset Transfer Analysis

Did the business transfer cash, equipment, inventory, contracts, or goodwill before closure? Transfers to insiders or for less than fair value are voidable under Chapter 726, F.S. (Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act). §56.29 proceedings supplementary reaches the transferee.

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2. Successor Entity Analysis

Did a "new" company appear with same employees, customers, equipment, location, or owners? Florida successor liability doctrines support reaching the successor where there is continuation of operations, fraudulent purpose, or de facto merger.

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3. Personal Guarantor Pursuit

Many small business obligations are personally guaranteed by owners or officers. If the judgment named only the entity, separate enforcement against guarantors may require an additional action — but the underlying claim against the guarantor often survives entity dissolution.

Investigation Steps

  1. Florida Sunbiz review. Pull current and historical filings for the debtor entity. Identify officers, agents, and any name changes or amendments.
  2. Successor search. Search for new entities sharing officers, registered agents, principal addresses, or trade names.
  3. Asset transfer inventory. Review final business records, asset transfer documents, last bank statements, and any sale or assignment instruments.
  4. Guarantor identification. Review original contract or court papers for personal guaranty language. Identify guarantors and their current asset profile.
  5. Filing strategy. Combination of §56.29 proceedings supplementary, fraudulent transfer action under Chapter 726, and direct action against guarantors based on what the investigation produces.

People Also Ask

Can a closed business still owe a judgment?

A closed or dissolved Florida business can still be connected to a judgment debt. Recovery depends on remaining assets, transfers to insiders or successor entities, personal guarantors, and court-authorized remedies including proceedings supplementary under §56.29, F.S. for transferred assets.

What is a successor entity in Florida?

A successor entity is a new business that continues the operations of a prior business — same employees, customers, equipment, or trade name — often after the prior business closed to avoid debts. Florida successor liability doctrines allow reaching the successor for predecessor judgments.

Can I sue the owner of a closed business in Florida?

Generally only if the owner personally guaranteed the obligation, was named in the original judgment, or veil piercing applies. Veil piercing requires showing the entity was a sham, alter ego, or used to perpetrate fraud — high bar but achievable on the right facts.

How long can I pursue a closed business judgment in Florida?

The 20-year enforceability window under §55.081 applies. Proceedings supplementary, successor liability claims, and fraudulent transfer actions typically have their own limitation periods running from the transfer date or the date of discovery, often 4 years under Chapter 726.

Florida Business Closed and Skipped Out?

Closed-business cases are our specialty. Successor and transfer investigation included in intake.

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About the Licensed Specialist. Belua Capital is operated by a Florida Private Investigator License C 2700700 Florida Remote Online Notary W882582. Belua Capital is a managed affiliate of ArcXet Group. Information on this site is for general educational purposes and does not constitute legal advice. Engagements are governed by a written agreement specifying fees, costs, and assignment terms. Information on this site is for general educational purposes and does not constitute legal advice. Engagements are governed by a written agreement specifying fees, costs, and assignment terms.

Last reviewed: April 2026