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When a post‑closing breach surfaces in a Brazilian M&A transaction, the indemnified party faces a narrow window in which to preserve evidence, quantify losses, and trigger the correct contractual and regulatory mechanisms to recover funds. Understanding how to enforce M&A indemnities in Brazil is critical for buyers, sellers, PE/VC funds, and in‑house deal teams that need to protect purchase‑price economics. The enforcement landscape has shifted materially during 2025–2026: CNJ Provimento nº 197/2025 introduced a regulated notarial escrow framework, while Lei Complementar nº 227/2026 launched the first implementation phase of Brazil’s consumption‑tax reform, both developments change the way indemnity claims are drafted, calculated, and drawn.
This guide maps the complete enforcement procedure, from the first 48 hours after discovery through to final execution of an award or judgment, with the timelines, documents, costs, and 2026 regulatory updates practitioners need right now.
An indemnity claim in Brazil arises when the indemnified party, typically the buyer or its permitted assignees, suffers a loss that falls within the scope of a contractual indemnity provision in a share‑purchase agreement (SPA) or asset‑purchase agreement. The most common categories are financial indemnities (covering general representations and warranties breaches), tax indemnities (covering pre‑closing tax liabilities), specific indemnities (targeting known risks disclosed during due diligence), and post‑closing adjustment mechanisms (purchase‑price true‑ups based on working‑capital or net‑debt metrics).
Enforcement is the process of converting that contractual right into actual recovery, whether through a voluntary payment by the seller, a draw on escrowed funds, or a compulsory award or judgment. In Brazil, escrowed funds have historically been held in bank‑controlled accounts governed by private escrow agreements. Since mid‑2025, however, CNJ Provimento nº 197/2025 has regulated a parallel mechanism: the conta notarial vinculada (notarial escrow account), held by a cartório under segregated‑custody rules. The escrow claim process in Brazil now requires practitioners to identify which instrument governs the funds before initiating a draw.
This procedure applies to any party with standing under the SPA’s indemnity clause, including buyers, target companies (where the SPA permits direct claims), and assignees such as successor funds. It also applies to sellers facing a claim, who need to understand the procedural steps to mount a timely defence, challenge quantum, or contest an escrow release.
Before a claim can proceed, several contractual and legal conditions must be satisfied. Failure to meet any one of them can render an otherwise meritorious indemnity claim unenforceable.
The enforceability of indemnities in Brazil depends first on the express terms of the SPA. Practitioners should confirm the following elements exist and remain operative:
If all prerequisites are met, the claim advances to the enforcement procedure. If any are doubtful, engage specialist counsel before issuing notice, an improperly framed claim can weaken negotiating position and, in some cases, trigger a counterclaim.
The following numbered steps represent the typical enforcement sequence. Timings are indicative; actual durations depend on the complexity of the claim, the forum selected, and whether the seller cooperates.
Within hours of discovering a potential breach, the buyer’s legal team must secure the evidentiary record. This means issuing internal litigation‑hold notices to all custodians of potentially relevant data, instructing IT to take forensic snapshots of the target’s financial systems, and preserving email archives, shared drives, and messaging platforms. Tax records, including IRPJ, CSLL, PIS/COFINS, and ICMS filings, should be copied and secured before any system migration or data purge occurs.
Where the discovery relates to financial misrepresentation, engage a forensic‑accounting firm to create hash‑authenticated copies of the general ledger, trial balance, and bank statements for the relevant periods. A sample internal preservation notice should read substantially as follows:
“Effective immediately, all documents, communications, and electronic records relating to [describe subject matter] for the period [date] to [date] must be preserved in their current form. No deletion, modification, or disposal of any such records is permitted until further notice from [buyer legal department / external counsel].”
Finance and tax counsel should assemble a provisional loss schedule. This involves mapping each identified breach to the specific SPA representation or warranty, quantifying the direct financial impact (using accounting records secured in Step 1), and, critically for deals closing in 2026 or later, re‑running tax‑impact calculations under the new consumption‑tax framework introduced by Lei Complementar nº 227/2026. The transition to the IBS/CBS architecture may alter the quantum of tax indemnities where the underlying exposure relates to PIS/COFINS or ICMS obligations that are being phased out or replaced.
Key data points to compile at this stage include: accounts receivable and payable at relevant dates, tax returns and assessment notices, invoices and contracts with customers and suppliers, and any post‑closing adjustment calculations already exchanged between the parties.
The SPA will prescribe the form, address, and method for delivering an indemnity claim notice. Compliance must be exact: use the specified method (registered mail, courier, email with read receipt, as the contract requires), send to the correct address, and include all information the notice clause demands. A soft or informal heads‑up to the seller before formal notice is common in practice and can facilitate negotiation, but it does not substitute for the contractual notice and does not toll any deadline.
Sample indemnity claim notice (abbreviated):
“Pursuant to Clause [X] of the Share Purchase Agreement dated [date] (the ‘SPA’), [Buyer] hereby notifies [Seller] of a claim for indemnification under Section [Y] of the SPA. The claim arises from a breach of the representation set out in Section [Z], particulars of which are as follows: [summary of facts]. Based on a preliminary assessment, the estimated quantum of losses is BRL [amount], calculated as set out in the attached schedule. [Buyer] reserves the right to supplement this notice as further information becomes available. [Buyer] requests that [Seller] respond within [number] days as provided in Clause [X.X] of the SPA.”
If the escrow draw trigger has been met, for example, a joint‑release instruction is contractually required once a qualifying loss is established, issue the escrow draw demand concurrently:
Sample escrow draw demand (abbreviated):
“Pursuant to Clause [A] of the Escrow Agreement dated [date], [Buyer] hereby instructs the Escrow Agent to release BRL [amount] from the Escrow Account to [Buyer’s designated account], on the basis of the indemnity claim notice delivered to [Seller] on [date], a copy of which is enclosed. [Buyer] certifies that the conditions for release specified in Clause [A.1] of the Escrow Agreement have been satisfied.”
Where there is evidence that the seller may dissipate assets, transfer funds, or otherwise frustrate enforcement, the buyer should seek interim relief. In arbitration, this may take the form of an emergency arbitrator application (available under ICC, LCIA, and CAM‑CCBC rules). In litigation, Brazilian courts can grant provisional attachments (arresto), preliminary injunctions (tutela de urgência), or asset‑freezing orders on an ex parte basis where the applicant demonstrates fumus boni iuris (likelihood of success) and periculum in mora (risk of irreparable harm). Emergency arbitral decisions typically issue within days; court interim relief can also be obtained rapidly, though enforcement against specific assets may require additional steps.
The choice between arbitration and litigation in Brazil is usually dictated by the SPA’s dispute‑resolution clause. Most mid‑market and large‑cap M&A transactions in Brazil include arbitration clauses designating a recognised institution, CAM‑CCBC (São Paulo), ICC, or LCIA are common choices. Key considerations for this decision include:
If the contract selects a foreign seat of arbitration, the resulting award must be recognised in Brazil before it can be enforced against Brazilian assets, a process that adds time and cost. Early assessment of where the seller’s assets are located is essential.
The escrow claim process in Brazil depends on the type of escrow instrument in place:
| Step | Who Does It | Typical Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Preserve evidence (forensic snapshot, hold notices) | Buyer legal team + IT forensics | 48–72 hours |
| Internal quantification & tax check | Finance + tax counsel | 7–14 days |
| Formal indemnity notice to seller | Buyer counsel | Contractual notice window (often 10–30 days) |
| Escrow draw demand to agent (if trigger met) | Buyer counsel or authorised representative | Agent review 5–30 days (depends on instrument) |
| Seller response / negotiation period | Seller counsel | 15–30 days (contract dependent) |
| Interim relief application (court or emergency arbitrator) | Buyer counsel | Emergency relief decisions within days–weeks |
| Arbitration or litigation hearing / award | Arbitral tribunal or court | 6–18 months typical (varies widely) |
| Enforcement of award/judgment (attachment, execution) | Buyer counsel + enforcement agents | 2–12+ months (varies by complexity & enforcement jurisdiction) |
Assembling a complete document package before issuing notice accelerates enforcement and strengthens the buyer’s negotiating position. The documents needed to enforce a contract‑based indemnity claim or draw escrow funds in Brazil are set out below. Each document should be obtained in its original or certified‑copy form and retained in a secure, access‑controlled repository.
| Document | Notes (Issuer / Format / Validity) |
|---|---|
| Original SPA / Purchase Agreement (signed) | Identifies indemnity clause, notice procedures, survival periods. Obtain executed PDF or scan with signature pages. |
| Escrow agreement or instruction (bank or notary) | Bank escrow or notarial escrow instrument showing draw triggers, agent duties. Copy from bank or cartório. |
| Formal indemnity notice (as sent) | Proof of service, registered mail receipt, courier tracking, or email with read receipt. Retain copy of full notice. |
| Accounting schedules (target period) | General ledger, trial balance, supporting invoices. Finance‑department certified extracts. |
| Tax returns and filings (relevant periods) | IRPJ, CSLL, PIS/COFINS, ICMS, and others as applicable. File copies and receipts from Receita Federal / state tax portals. |
| Due diligence reports (original diligence) | Seller DD reports, reps/warranties lists, disclosure schedule. Source from virtual deal room. |
| Forensic evidence (snapshots) | System snapshots, hash lists, chain‑of‑custody report. From IT forensic vendor. |
| Board minutes / approvals (if relevant) | Corporate records proving representations or approvals. From target’s corporate secretary. |
| External expert reports (valuation / tax) | Independent accountant or tax expert reports, signed and dated. |
| Seller responses / mitigation correspondence | Emails and letters showing seller engagement or mitigation efforts, relevant for mitigation credits. |
| Arbitration agreement / arbitration rules | UNCITRAL, ICC, LCIA, or CAM‑CCBC rules, or domestic arbitration clause as applicable. |
| Court judgments or interim orders (if already obtained) | Certified copies from court registry. |
For practitioners managing an escrow draw, the escrow agent will typically require at minimum the executed SPA, the escrow instrument, the formal indemnity notice with proof of delivery, the quantified loss schedule, and either a joint‑release instruction or a final enforceable order. Confirm the agent’s specific documentary requirements early, bank escrow agents and notarial escrow agents under CNJ Provimento nº 197/2025 may impose different verification steps.
The enforcement timeline for an indemnity claim in Brazil is shaped by both contractual survival periods and statutory limitation rules. Practitioners must track both in parallel.
Contractual survival periods vary by category. General representations and warranties in Brazilian M&A transactions typically survive for 12–36 months after closing. Tax indemnities commonly survive for 5 years or longer, often aligned with the applicable statute of limitations for tax assessments. Fundamental representations (title, authority, capitalisation) may survive indefinitely or for the maximum statutory period.
Statutory limitation under the Brazilian Civil Code applies where the contract is silent or where a claim is brought outside the contractual framework. The general limitation period for personal actions (including contractual claims) is 10 years; however, shorter periods may apply depending on the nature of the underlying obligation. Tax‑related administrative claims are typically subject to a 5‑year decadency (decadência) period.
The 2026 tax reform introduces transitional rules that may affect look‑back windows for tax indemnities. Under the implementation guidance published by the Receita Federal and the Ministry of Finance, companies entering the 2026 test period must update tax positions and systems. The likely practical effect for indemnity enforcement is that tax claims arising from the overlap between the outgoing PIS/COFINS/ICMS regime and the incoming IBS/CBS regime will require careful periodisation. Industry observers expect that disputes over the correct tax base for post‑closing adjustment calculations will increase during the transition years.
Contractual notice deadlines, typically 10–30 days from discovery of the breach, operate independently of statutory limitation periods and are often treated as conditions precedent to indemnification. Missing the contractual notice window, even where the statutory period has not expired, is one of the most common bases on which sellers resist claims.
Enforcement costs in Brazil vary significantly depending on the dispute value, forum, and complexity. The following table provides indicative cost bands based on market practice.
| Item | Amount (Indicative) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| External counsel (Brazil) | US$200–600 / hour or fixed retainers | Varies by firm and complexity; litigation and arbitration rates differ. |
| Arbitration filing & tribunal fees | US$10,000–250,000+ | ICC / LCIA / CAM‑CCBC fee schedules; parties often split fees initially. |
| Court filing fees | BRL, small fixed court registry fees + service costs | Small relative to counsel fees; enforcement may incur additional execution costs. |
| Forensic accounting / tax expert | US$5,000–100,000+ | Scope dependent; tax expert often needed for indemnity quantum calculation. |
| IT forensics | US$2,000–50,000 | Depends on data volume and cross‑border collection requirements. |
| Enforcement (attachment / execution) | Variable | Includes bailiff costs, translators, local counsel; cross‑border recognition adds cost for foreign awards. |
Tax treatment of indemnity payments. Indemnity receipts in Brazil are generally treated as compensatory in nature rather than as taxable income, provided they restore the indemnified party to its pre‑loss position. However, the precise tax characterisation depends on the nature of the underlying loss, the form of payment, and the applicable statutory provisions. Post‑2026, changes to Brazil’s consumption‑tax architecture under Lei Complementar nº 227/2026, including the introduction of the IBS (Imposto sobre Bens e Serviços) and CBS (Contribuição sobre Bens e Serviços), may affect downstream tax calculations in post‑closing adjustments. Cross‑border indemnity payments may also trigger withholding‑tax obligations. Tax counsel verification is essential in every case.
Two regulatory developments are reshaping how to enforce M&A indemnities in Brazil during 2026 and beyond.
CNJ Provimento nº 197/2025, published in June 2025, regulates the conta notarial vinculada, a notarial escrow account held by a cartório de notas. Under this framework, escrow funds are segregated from the notary’s own assets and held in dedicated custody. The Provimento establishes the notary’s duties as escrow agent, the documentary conditions for release, and the suspension mechanism that applies when a bona fide dispute is raised by either party. For M&A practitioners, this creates a regulated alternative to traditional bank escrow that may offer cost advantages and procedural clarity, particularly for mid‑market transactions. Early indications suggest that notarial escrow is gaining traction in transactions where parties seek an institutionally supervised, lower‑cost holding mechanism.
The practical implication for enforcement is direct: if escrow funds are held in a notarial account, the draw procedure must comply with the Provimento’s requirements, not merely with the terms of a private escrow agreement. Buyers should confirm the escrow type and the applicable release protocol before issuing a draw demand.
Lei Complementar nº 227/2026, sanctioned in January 2026, advances the implementation of Brazil’s consumption‑tax reform by introducing additional regulatory detail on the IBS and CBS frameworks. The Ministry of Finance has confirmed that 2026 operates as a transitional test period, during which companies must adapt systems and processes to the new regime. The Receita Federal has published guidance on compliance milestones and transitional rules.
For indemnity enforcement, the key effects are:
Knowing how to enforce M&A indemnities in Brazil, from the first forensic hold through to final execution, separates successful recoveries from lost claims. The 2026 regulatory environment, shaped by CNJ Provimento nº 197/2025 and Lei Complementar nº 227/2026, adds new procedural layers that practitioners must navigate with precision. The core principles remain constant: preserve evidence immediately, comply with every contractual notice deadline, assemble a complete document package, and choose the right forum before committing to proceedings. For deals closing in 2026 and beyond, contracts should be drafted with explicit provisions for the notarial escrow framework and the transitional consumption‑tax regime.
Practitioners who need guidance on a specific indemnity claim or escrow draw in Brazil should find a Brazil M&A lawyer through the Global Law Experts directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Elias Jabbour at KLA Advogados, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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