Missouri Department of Labor and Industrial Relations |
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| Division of Employment Security |
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Selling a Business or Discontinuing Employment This page contains information for entities which sell all or part of their business or stop employing workers for any reason. Select one of the categories below to go directly to your area of interest, or scroll down the page for the full text. Change in Ownership of a Business An employer should inform the Division of Employment Security immediately when a change in ownership of business occurs by completing the Report on Change of Business Operations. This form is printed on the reverse side of the Contribution and Wage Report instructions. The information may also be provided online through the Unemployment State Tax Automated Reporting (USTAR) system. A business may change ownership due to a sale, lease, reorganization, merger, foreclosure or inheritance. A change of ownership may also occur when the business makes a change in legal entity such as when a partnership adds or changes a partner; an owner forms a corporation; or an entity changes its state of registration. The new owner or entity needs to complete the Report to Determine Liability Status form. When there is a change in the legal entity operating a business or the business is acquired and continued by another legal entity, a transfer of the employer's unemployment tax account may occur. This process is referred to as successorship. The parties involved in a transfer are referred to as:
An employer’s account is transferred to one or more successors who, at the same time, acquire and continue without interruption substantially all the business of a predecessor. In addition, if an employer transfers its trade or business, or a portion thereof, to another employer and at the time of the transfer there is substantially common ownership, management or control of the two employers, then the unemployment experience attributable to the transferred trade or business shall be transferred to the employer (successor) to whom such business is so transferred. Substantially common ownership, management or control is defined in the Code of State Regulations, 8 CSR 10-4.190. If the new operating entity is determined to be a successor:
If the Division determines the new operating entity is not a successor:
The Employment Security Law prohibits the transfer of unemployment experience whenever any individual, type of organization or employing unit is not an employer at the time it acquires the trade or business of an employer and the Division finds that such new entity acquired the business solely or primarily for the purpose of obtaining a lower rate of contributions. Instead, the new entity will be assigned a new employer account and rate. To determine if the acquisition was made solely or primarily to obtain a lower rate, the Division will use objective factors such as:
End of Employment by the Entity An employer that ceases to have employment without a successor to its business may be exempted from filing reports beginning with the first day of the calendar quarter following the last date it paid any wages, provided it files an application for such exemption. The application must show the reason the employer discontinued having employment and that no employment is anticipated in the foreseeable future. A request for exemption from filing reports may be made by completing the Report On Change of Business Operations furnished with each Quarterly Contribution and Wage Report. The application may also be made online through the Unemployment State Tax Automated Reporting (USTAR) system. An employer that is exempted from filing reports continues to be liable for reporting any wages it may later pay for employment subject to the Missouri Employment Security Law until or unless it terminates its liability. An employer must notify the Division if it resumes employment after being exempted from filing reports. Entity No Longer Meets Liability for Unemployment Tax An employer may file an application for Termination of Coverage as of January 1st of any calendar year. The application must be filed by February 10th of such year and must show that the employer and any predecessor combined had less employment and wages during the preceding calendar year than was necessary to become liable under the Law and was not liable for Federal Unemployment Tax. Criteria for terminating coverage as to wages and employment of the various types of employers during the preceding calendar year is as follows:
In addition, any employer not having knowledge of liability for prior years may file an application to terminate coverage beginning any January 1st following first year of liability if the employer files such application within 90 days from the date of receiving a notice of liability, and employment or wages during any preceding calendar year met the criteria set out above. |