Key point
The Joint special administrators of an investment banking entity succeed in obtaining a direction to allow them to distribute client assets quickly.
Facts
Key point
A statutory demand designed to achieve some connected or collateral purpose is not necessarily invalid.
The facts
Key points
The court has discretion to allow an insolvency practitioner to recover fees and costs from work done in realising assets for the benefit of a third party but it cannot be exercised where an insolvency practitioner takes action in relation to assets outside in the insolvency estate of his own accord.
The facts
Two major Slovakian construction companies, both heavily dependent on large state contracts, have recently been restructured. Both of these cases have proven that Slovakian entrepreneurs, even those who live off of public money, perceive and utilise the current regulation of the restructuring procedure as a “legally safe way” to restart their businesses and get rid of a large portion of creditors. This option is viable also in a moment, when the only solution clearly is a bankruptcy petition.
Key point
A liquidator can be held liable personally for obligations under a conditional fee arrangement.
The facts
Key point
A Court always has discretion whether to set aside a statutory demand based upon cross claims.
The facts
A debtor applied to Court to have a statutory demand set aside on the basis that he had a counter claim which, if set against the debt, would leave less than £750 outstanding.
The decision
Key point
Changing the governing law of a credit agreement or loan notes to English law helps to form a basis to implement an English scheme of arrangement.
The facts
Key Point
No recognition order was made where the main foreign insolvency proceedings had ended even where the plan agreed in those proceedings was in part still to be implemented.
The Facts
Key point
The Court of Appeal has recently given detailed guidance on what happens to the surpluses available in the insolvency of companies after dealing with an appeal in relation to the so-called Lehman Waterfall Application dealt with in an earlier Update.
Facts
Key Point
A distressed debt purchaser may be able to rely on misrepresentations made by the borrower to the original lender in published documents to recover loss.
The Facts
An Irish investment company ("Taberna") claimed damages for misrepresentations made by or on behalf of a large Danish bank ("Roskilde"), in investor presentation documents and annual results, which induced Taberna to enter into a secondary market purchase of subordinated notes originally issued by Roskilde.
The Decision