Key point

Claimants should ensure that in foreign as well as UK insolvency procedures their claims are protected against limitation defences.

Facts

Location:

Key Point

The Court of Appeal has overturned a first instance decision (discussed in our April 2014 Update) that the Companies Court should not normally make an order upon a winding up petition based on tax assessments that are under appeal.

The Facts

Authors:
Location:

Key point

Pensions in payment were within the ambit of section 310(7) of the Insolvency Act 1986 (the "Act"), but pensions not in payment were not payments to which a bankrupt was “entitled” as the right to draw had not been excerised. The court therefore refused to make an income payments order ("IPO").

The Facts

Location:

Key Points

  • Paragraph 13 of Schedule 4 to the Insolvency Act 1986 ("Paragraph 13") permits a liquidator to do all acts "necessary" for the winding up and distribution of property.
  • The decision as to what action is "necessary" is one for the liquidators (albeit subject to sanction).
  • Nothing in FSMA 2000 prevented the investors from assigning their claims against the former operators..

The facts

Location:

Key Point

The Court has given guidance on when a company in administration has possession of third party assets allowing an administrator to apply for an order allowing him to sell them.

The Facts

The administrators of a company applied to Court under paragraphs 72 and 68 of Schedule B1 to the Insolvency Act 1986 for permission to sell assets located on its freehold premises pursuant to a chattel hire contract with a group company (the "Assets").

The Decision

Location:

Key Point

A provisional liquidator may be appointed if the evidence justifies it even where the tax assessments upon which the winding up petition is based are under appeal.

Facts

Authors:
Location:

Key point

Administrators are entitled to remuneration for the full period of office even where work is carried out outside of the scope set out in proposals agreed by creditors

Facts

Location:

Key point

This case demonstrates how reservation of legal rights can be key even if the parties are seeking a commercial solution

Facts

Location:

Key Point

Subrogation operates not by assigning the benefit of the relevant third party's security but by creating new security rights in the hands of the subrogated creditor similar to those held by that third party.

Facts

Authors:
Location:

Key Point

An administrator appointed under a qualifying floating charge can "adopt" an existing winding up petition for the purposes of liquidating the company where the benefit to the creditors of the insolvent estate is manifest on the facts.

Facts

Authors:
Location: