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    Research memo - negative net assets
    2011-11-04

    When is a company in insolvent? When is a company's assets less than its liabilities (taking account of contingent and prospective liabilities)?

    Under English law this is a commercial test and requires that a company has reached a "point of no return" and is not based solely on a review of the company's balance sheet:  

    Filed under:
    United Kingdom, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Reed Smith LLP, Fraud, Debt, Liability (financial accounting), Liquidation, Balance sheet, Public limited company, Trustee
    Authors:
    Georgia M. Quenby
    Location:
    United Kingdom
    Firm:
    Reed Smith LLP
    Smoke in the hall of mirrors: good news for defendants in Sinclair v Versailles [2011] EWHC Civ 347
    2011-06-08

    The Sinclair v Versailles1 decision has extinguished any prospect that a victim of a fraud has a proprietary claim to a fraudster’s secret profits. It also offers significant comfort to banks, insolvency practitioners and other potential recipients of trust funds by setting a high bar for whether a recipient person is “on notice” of a proprietary claim to those funds.

    Filed under:
    United Kingdom, Banking, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, White Collar Crime, Herbert Smith Freehills LLP, Share (finance), Bribery, Fraud, Fiduciary, Interest, Beneficiary, Consideration, Public limited company, Trustee, High Court of Justice (England & Wales)
    Location:
    United Kingdom
    Firm:
    Herbert Smith Freehills LLP
    Balance Sheet Test for insolvency - court looks at the bigger picture
    2011-04-06

    The Court of Appeal has confirmed the High Court's decision that the "Balance Sheet Test" (for whether a company is unable to pay its debts under Section 123(2) of the Insolvency Act 1986) cannot be reduced to a single formula or set of principles that apply to all companies.

    The Balance Sheet Test forms part of the provisions that regulate when a company may be compulsorily wound up by the Court.

    Filed under:
    United Kingdom, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Mills & Reeve LLP, Audit, Debt, Liability (financial accounting), Liquidation, Balance sheet, Public limited company, Insolvency Act 1986 (UK), Trustee, Court of Appeal of England & Wales, High Court of Australia
    Authors:
    Mary Prentice
    Location:
    United Kingdom
    Firm:
    Mills & Reeve LLP
    Court of appeal case on the "balance-sheet" test of insolvency
    2011-03-22

    In BNY Corporate Trustee Services Limited v Eurosail–UK 2007–3BL Plc and others, the Court of Appeal ruled on the interpretation of the so-called "balance-sheet" test of insolvency under section 123(2) of the Insolvency Act 1986. This is essentially that a company is deemed unable to pay its debts if the value of its assets is less than the amount of its liabilities, taking into account its contingent and prospective liabilities. This appears to be the first reported case on the interpretation of the balance-sheet test of insolvency.

    Filed under:
    United Kingdom, Insolvency & Restructuring, Insurance, Litigation, Locke Lord LLP, Debt, Mortgage loan, Liability (financial accounting), Legal burden of proof, Balance sheet, Public limited company, Portfolio (finance), Lehman Brothers, Insolvency Act 1986 (UK)
    Authors:
    Peter Fidler
    Location:
    United Kingdom
    Firm:
    Locke Lord LLP
    Balance sheet insolvency test clarified
    2011-03-08

    BNY Corporate Trustee Services Limited v Eurosail-UK 2007-3BL Plc & others [2011] EWCA Civ 227

    The Court of Appeal has allowed companies around the country to breathe a solvent sigh of relief, as it has held that the so-called “balance sheet” test of insolvency in s123(2) Insolvency Act 1996 is intended to apply where a company has reached a “point of no return” rather than being used as a “mechanistic, even artificial, reason for permitting a creditor to present a petition to wind up a company”.  

    Filed under:
    United Kingdom, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Mayer Brown, Bankruptcy, Credit (finance), Debt, Liability (financial accounting), Liquidation, Balance sheet, Public limited company, Default (finance), Lehman Brothers cases, Lehman Brothers, Court of Appeal of England & Wales
    Authors:
    Ashley Katz , Ian McDonald , Devi Shah , Kristy Zander , Jessica Walker
    Location:
    United Kingdom
    Firm:
    Mayer Brown
    Limiting the balance sheet test for insolvency
    2011-03-09

    Background

    Section 123 of the Insolvency Act 1986 provides two main tests of when a company is insolvent:

    Filed under:
    United Kingdom, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Kennedys Law LLP, Shareholder, Market liquidity, Subprime lending, Debt, Liability (financial accounting), Liquidation, Balance sheet, Public limited company, Default (finance), HM Revenue and Customs (UK), Insolvency Act 1986 (UK), Court of Appeal of England & Wales
    Authors:
    Steven Fennell , Dino Paganuzzi
    Location:
    United Kingdom
    Firm:
    Kennedys Law LLP
    Non-disclosure of corporate re-organisation and breach of warranty (again)
    2010-11-10

    By a judgment handed down on 26 October 2010 in Sugar Hut Group Ltd & Ors v Great Lakes Reinsurance (UK) Plc & Ors [2010] EWHC 2636 (Comm), Mr Justice Burton in the Commercial Court held that insurers were entitled to avoid, for a material non-disclosure of a corporate re-organisation, a policy which could otherwise have covered losses arising from a fire at the premises of the insureds.

    Filed under:
    United Kingdom, Insolvency & Restructuring, Insurance, Litigation, Herbert Smith Freehills LLP, Shareholder, Breach of contract, Reinsurance, Public limited company, Non-disclosure agreement, Warranty, Underwriting, Subsidiary, AXA, High Court of Justice (England & Wales), Commercial Court (England and Wales)
    Authors:
    Alexander Oddy , Greig Anderson
    Location:
    United Kingdom
    Firm:
    Herbert Smith Freehills LLP
    Landlords rejoice as court overturns “unfair” CVA
    2010-08-04

    The past eighteen months have seen a marked increase in the use of the Company Voluntary Arrangement (“CVA”) by retailers to reduce their lease liabilities and win the release of onerous parent company guarantees, with several high street names going through the process. Although this practice received cautious support from landlords, real concern continues to be voiced over the practice of “guarantee stripping”.

    Filed under:
    United Kingdom, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Real Estate, Squire Patton Boggs, Costs in English law, Retail, Landlord, Leasehold estate, Brand, Public limited company, Valuation (finance), Parent company, High Court of Justice (England & Wales)
    Authors:
    Susan Kelly , John Alderton , Cathryn Williams , Daniel French
    Location:
    United Kingdom
    Firm:
    Squire Patton Boggs
    Cost on discontinuance of claim
    2010-07-15

    This article was written by Greg Standing, partner in Wragge & Co LLP's finance, insolvency, recoveries and sales team and published in the July issue of Motor Finance.

    When a claimant discontinues its claim, the usual position is that it has to pay the defendant's reasonable legal costs. This is the general presumption under the Civil Procedure Rules and applies unless there is good reason for it not to.

    Filed under:
    United Kingdom, Banking, Insolvency & Restructuring, Litigation, Gowling WLG, Bankruptcy, Discovery, Legal burden of proof, Court costs, Public limited company, Civil Procedure Rules (UK), Consumer Credit Act 1974 (UK)
    Authors:
    Greg Standing
    Location:
    United Kingdom
    Firm:
    Gowling WLG
    Protecting the customer v depriving the supplier's creditors
    2010-04-09

    In the present fi nancial climate, customers are increasingly asking for business critical software or other assets to be transferred to the customer should the supplier become insolvent, for the legitimate reason that the customer needs security of supply. Two recent Court of Appeal cases remind us that customers who outsource to and contract with potentially vulnerable service providers need to take account of the “anti-deprivation principle” when doing this.

    Filed under:
    United Kingdom, Insolvency & Restructuring, IT & Data Protection, Litigation, RPC, Share (finance), Shareholder, Joint venture, Public limited company, Common law, Insolvency Act 1986 (UK)
    Authors:
    Vivien Tyrell
    Location:
    United Kingdom
    Firm:
    RPC

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