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    Social Housing Monthly Law Update - July 2018
    2018-07-18

    Monthly Law Update | Social Housing July 2018 Introduction  Supply chain  This update shows the main legislative and case law  developments and statutory guidance issued in  connection with the Social Housing sector from the  last month (June 2018) together with links to the  relevant sources where you can obtain further  information.  If you have any concerns about any of the  developments outlined in this update, or if you require  any advice on the effect of the developments or on  how to respond appropriately, please contact: 

    Filed under:
    United Kingdom, Insolvency & Restructuring, Planning, Real Estate, Tax, TLT LLP, Brexit, Gig economy, HM Revenue and Customs (UK), UK House of Commons, Charity Commission for England and Wales, GDPR
    Location:
    United Kingdom
    Firm:
    TLT LLP
    Case update - anti-suit injunctions, and arbitrating insolvency-related claims
    2018-06-19

    On 6 June 2018, the Commercial Court handed down its judgment in Nori Holdings Ltd v Bank Otkritie Financial Corp [2018] EWHC 1343 (Comm), and provided helpful guidance on three important issues:

    1. The Court clarified that West Tankers1 remains good law in that parties will not be granted anti-suit injunctions by the English Court to restrain proceedings commenced in other Member States in breach of an agreement to arbitrate, notwithstanding the contrary opinion expressed by Attorney General Wathelet in Gazprom (C-536/13).

    Filed under:
    United Kingdom, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Milbank LLP, Brexit, Anti-suit injunction, CJEU
    Location:
    United Kingdom
    Firm:
    Milbank LLP
    UK businesses face an increased risk of insolvency, says R3 study
    2018-05-08

    At the start of 2017, UK businesses had reported a 33% risk of insolvency, compared to the end of 2017 which saw that figure increase to nearly 40%.

    These figures were calculated by drawing together key performance indicators including balance sheets and records of the directors’ successful (or unsuccessful) directorship history.

    Filed under:
    United Kingdom, Insolvency & Restructuring, BDB Pitmans LLP, Brexit
    Authors:
    Suzanne Brooker
    Location:
    United Kingdom
    Firm:
    BDB Pitmans LLP
    Airline insolvency - British government seeks regime fit for 21st century
    2018-04-30

    Speed read

    1. The British government has commenced an airline insolvency review, in the wake of recent high profile airline failures such as Monarch and Air Berlin, and on the premise that changes in the industry have outpaced protection regimes.

    2. The review will focus on two main areas: repatriation of stranded passengers and redress for consumers. There is a desire to minimise repatriation costs falling on the public purse and ensure that consumers have clear avenues of redress.

    Filed under:
    United Kingdom, Aviation, Insolvency & Restructuring, CMS Cameron McKenna Nabarro Olswang LLP, Brexit, Consumer Credit Act 1974 (UK)
    Authors:
    Glen Flannery , Helen Coverdale
    Location:
    United Kingdom
    Firm:
    CMS Cameron McKenna Nabarro Olswang LLP
    A Culture of Fear or Rescue? - Consultation on Insolvency and Corporate Governance
    2018-03-26

     March 2018 The Government has issued a Consultation on proposals designed to reduce the risk of major company failures and to strengthen the responsibilities of directors in the context of actual or threatened insolvency. The principal specific proposals are: • directors of a holding company that sells an insolvent subsidiary to be required to take into account the interests of the creditors of that subsidiary and possibly its other stakeholders • the unwinding of transactions that have “unfairly removed value” from a company that becomes insolvent.

    Filed under:
    United Kingdom, Company & Commercial, Insolvency & Restructuring, Public, Slaughter and May, Corporate governance, Brexit, Stakeholder (corporate)
    Location:
    United Kingdom
    Firm:
    Slaughter and May
    An A to Z of enforcing a UK money judgment
    2018-01-09

    Attachment of earnings - money is paid directly from the judgment debtor’s wages/salary into court by the debtor’s employer to satisfy the judgment debt.

    Bankruptcy proceedings - you can currently apply to make an individual judgment debtor bankrupt for a judgment debt in excess of £5,000. The limit is £500 for applying to put a company into liquidation. The nuclear options.

    Filed under:
    United Kingdom, Banking, Company & Commercial, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Penningtons Manches Cooper LLP, Brexit, Bankruptcy, Debtor, Debt, Liquidation, Secured creditor, Beneficial interest
    Authors:
    Richard Marshall , Clare Arthurs
    Location:
    United Kingdom
    Firm:
    Penningtons Manches Cooper LLP
    The Arbiter - Summer 2017
    2017-06-30

    Summer 2017

    Editor: Melanie Willems

    IN THIS ISSUE

    You Swynson, you lose some

    by Robert Blackett 03

    10

    14

    The rule of English law - why Brexit, however blindly foolish it

    is, should not matter for arbitration

    by Melanie Willems

    Unintended consequences - be clear what you advise on

    by Ryan Deane

    T H E A R B I T E R [ S E A S O N ] 2 0 1 7 2

    T H E A R B I T E R S U M M E R 2 0 1 7 3

    You Swynson, you lose

    some

    by Robert Blacke

    Lowick Rose LLP (in liquidaon) v Swynson

    Filed under:
    United Kingdom, Arbitration & ADR, Company & Commercial, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Shipping & Transport, Hunton Andrews Kurth LLP, Brexit, UK Supreme Court
    Location:
    United Kingdom
    Firm:
    Hunton Andrews Kurth LLP
    Chapter 2: Bankruptcy in France - Challenges for a Trustee in Bankruptcy in a post Brexit landscape
    2024-07-31

    Despite numerous obstacles and challenges faced along the way following Brexit (and its inevitable impact on tracing and recovering assets of UK based debtors overseas), we last left our brave cross-border recovery specialists triumphantly holding the hard-won exequatur judgment which expressly recognised the bankruptcy order and Trustee in Bankruptcy (TIB) and confirmed that all rights and powers were enforceable in France. Vive La France!

    Filed under:
    France, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Addleshaw Goddard LLP, Brexit
    Authors:
    Rebecca O'Callaghan , Tim Cooper
    Location:
    France
    Firm:
    Addleshaw Goddard LLP
    Multi process restructurings
    2024-04-11

    Prompted by the EU Restructuring Directive and accelerated by the pandemic, jurisdictions all across Europe have completely transformed their restructuring regimes in recent years. This is part of a global trend towards more debtor-friendly, rescue-orientated restructuring regimes, inspired by US Chapter 11.

    Filed under:
    European Union, United Kingdom, Insolvency & Restructuring, Public, Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer, Brexit
    Authors:
    Jamie Murray-Jones , Lindsay Hingston , Katharina Crinson
    Location:
    European Union, United Kingdom
    Firm:
    Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer
    What does today's Sequana decision mean for directors?
    2022-10-05

    Background

    On 5 October 2022, the Supreme Court handed down its long-awaited judgment in BTI 2014 LLC v. Sequana S.A. [2022] UKSC 25 concerning the trigger point at which directors must have regard to the interests of creditors pursuant to s.172(3) of the Companies Act 2006 (the "creditors' interests duty").

    Filed under:
    European Union, United Kingdom, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Public, Dentons, Brexit, Supply chain, Coronavirus, Insolvency, UK Supreme Court
    Authors:
    Tessa Blank , Neil Griffiths , Luci Mitchell-Fry , Ian Fox , Celia Hayward , Richard Pallot-Cook
    Location:
    European Union, United Kingdom
    Firm:
    Dentons

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