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    Costs and proper use of the statutory demand procedure
    2016-06-30

    In Ebert Construction Ltd v Sanson [2016] NZHC 472, the High Court awarded costs to liquidators after a statutory demand issued by the liquidators had been set aside by consent.  The reasons were as follows:

    Filed under:
    New Zealand, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Buddle Findlay, Liquidator (law)
    Authors:
    David Perry , Jan Etwell , Scott Abel , Scott Barker
    Location:
    New Zealand
    Firm:
    Buddle Findlay
    Regulation of liquidators - the extent of the Official Assignee's powers
    2012-09-28

    The High Court decision of Official Assignee v Norris [2012] NZHC 961 examined whether the Official Assignee could apply for orders relating to Mr Norris' actions as liquidator of multiple companies, and whether adequate notice of his alleged failure to comply with his duties as a liquidator had been given. 

    Filed under:
    New Zealand, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Buddle Findlay, Liquidator (law)
    Location:
    New Zealand
    Firm:
    Buddle Findlay
    Security for costs ordered against liquidator with litigation funder
    2017-06-29

    The liquidators of a group of companies related to property investor, David Henderson, have recently been ordered to pay a substantial sum for security for costs to the former directors and auditors of the group.  In Walker & Ors v Forbes & Ors the plaintiffs sue the former directors and auditors of the group for alleged breaches of duties.  The proceedings have been allocated a trial of 12 weeks commencing in February 2018.  We reported on disputes over the litigation funding arrangement in this proceeding in an earlier 

    Filed under:
    United Kingdom, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Buddle Findlay, Liquidator (law)
    Authors:
    Bridie McKinnon , Matthew Triggs , Myles O'Brien , Jan Etwell , Scott Abel , David Broadmore , Scott Barker , Peter Niven , David Perry , Susan Rowe , Willie Palmer , Kelly Paterson
    Location:
    United Kingdom
    Firm:
    Buddle Findlay
    Previous convictions no issue for liquidator
    2016-06-30

    Mr Kamal was appointed as liquidator of two companies of which the Commissioner of Inland Revenue (CIR) was a creditor.  The CIR applied to the High Court for orders under section 286(5) of the Companies Act 1993 prohibiting Mr Kamal from acting as a company liquidator for a period of up to five years.

    In CIR v Kamal [2016] NZHC 1053 the CIR sought the orders on the basis that Mr Kamal was guilty of a continuing breach of his duties as a liquidator that made him unfit to act as a liquidator because:

    Filed under:
    New Zealand, Company & Commercial, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Buddle Findlay, Liquidator (law)
    Authors:
    David Perry , Jan Etwell , Scott Abel , Scott Barker
    Location:
    New Zealand
    Firm:
    Buddle Findlay
    Account receivable defined
    2011-10-04

    Burns & Agnew v Commissioner of the Inland Revenue and Strategic Finance Limited (in rec) concerned a dispute between a secured creditor and the IRD (as a preferential creditor) in respect of certain funds received by the liquidators of Takapuna Procurement Limited (TPL).  The liquidators applied to the High Court for directions as to the application of those funds and this required the Court to undertake an analysis of the concept of an "account receivable" for the purposes of determining whether such funds could be applied to satisfy preferential claims under the Seventh

    Filed under:
    New Zealand, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Buddle Findlay, Credit (finance), Security (finance), Accounts receivable, Debt, Personal property, Liquidation, Unconscionability, Secured creditor, Liquidator (law), Securities Act 1933 (USA)
    Location:
    New Zealand
    Firm:
    Buddle Findlay
    Recognition of Liquidator Not Appointed in Place of Incorporation
    2016-08-16

    A key factor contributing to the vitality and development of the common law is that judges can have the benefit of authorities from other jurisdictions with a comparable legal framework. This has proved and will be increasingly important in areas such as cross-border insolvency, where modified universalism has been thecatchword in recent years.

    Filed under:
    Hong Kong, Singapore, Company & Commercial, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Mayer Brown, Common law, Liquidator (law)
    Authors:
    John M. Marsden , Richard M. Tollan , Thomas A. Pugh , Edmund M. S. Ma
    Location:
    Hong Kong, Singapore
    Firm:
    Mayer Brown JSM
    Liquidators, do not brush aside personal liability for costs at super speed
    2016-01-21

    Did you know that when a liquidator makes a court application, it is important to identify the appropriate applicant, not only as a procedural matter, but also from a costs perspective?

    All good where the liquidator succeeds in the court application

    Filed under:
    Hong Kong, Insolvency & Restructuring, Insurance, Litigation, Mayer Brown, Liquidator (law)
    Authors:
    Richard M. Tollan , Edmund M. S. Ma
    Location:
    Hong Kong
    Firm:
    Mayer Brown JSM
    Hong Kong Court recognises foreign liquidators
    2014-08-04

    Did you know that a liquidator of a foreign company may seek the assistance of the Hong Kong Court to obtain orders for the production of information which orders are, in substance, of the type made in Hong Kong windings-up under section 221(3) of the Companies (Winding-up and Miscellaneous Provisions) Ordinance?

    Filed under:
    Hong Kong, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Mayer Brown, Liquidator (law)
    Authors:
    Richard M. Tollan , Justine T. K. Lau , Edmund M. S. Ma
    Location:
    Hong Kong
    Firm:
    Mayer Brown
    Liquidators' costs in a preference claim
    2013-05-13

    In The Joint and Several Liquidators of QQ Club Limited (in liquidation) v. Golden Year Limited (HCCW 245/2011, 9 April 2013) (QQ Club), the Court of First Instance held that a liquidator's costs in pursuing an avoidance claim are "fees and expenses properly incurred in preserving, realizing or getting in the assets", and are payable out of the company's assets in priority to all other payments prescribed in rule 179 of the Companies (Winding-up) Rules. In reaching this conclusion, the court distinguished the English Court of Appeal's decision in Lewis v.

    Filed under:
    Hong Kong, United Kingdom, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Mayer Brown, Liquidator (law), Court of Appeal of England & Wales
    Authors:
    Richard M. Tollan , Edmund M. S. Ma
    Location:
    Hong Kong, United Kingdom
    Firm:
    Mayer Brown
    Resolving the conflict: a pragmatic approach to the appointment of receivers as provisional liquidators
    2012-05-18

    Did you know... that the court may, in special circumstances, exercise its discretion to appoint pre-existing receivers as a company’s provisional liquidators.

    In the recent decision ofRe K Vision International Investment (Hong Kong) Limited, the Honourable Mr. Justice Barma confirmed that, where the circumstances require it, the court will exercise its discretion to appoint pre-existing receivers of a company’s assets as that company’s provisional liquidators provided that potential conflicts of interest are identified and appropriately addressed.

    Filed under:
    Hong Kong, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Mayer Brown, Conflict of interest, Liquidator (law)
    Authors:
    Richard M. Tollan , Justine T. K. Lau
    Location:
    Hong Kong
    Firm:
    Mayer Brown

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