The draft Lex Covid, which amends insolvency and enforcement laws and draft law on certain measures related to repayment of loans in relation to the COVID-19 pandemic, has been approved by the Czech Parliament and must now be counter-signed by the President.
The insolvency law-related measures include:
Debtor's delay in payments
The long-discussed amendments to the Czech Insolvency Act entered into force on 1 July 2017.
These aim primarily to strengthen the transparency of insolvency proceedings; reduce paperwork in the insolvency courts; and change the system of allocation of insolvency cases in the area of debt relief.
The following highlights the most fundamental changes introduced last month.
Allocating insolvency cases
Key Points
Debt relief procedure
Reorganisation is one of the means of resolving a company’s insolvency under Czech law. In the course of reorganisation the debtor’s enterprise continues to carry out its business activity within the framework set out by the reorganisation plan. The aim of reorganisation is a recovery of the debtor’s business and settlement of the relationships between the debtor and his creditors.
Generally, the reorganisation is not available to company which is;
Background
By way of introduction it should be stated that under Czech law, certain legal acts (voidable transactions) can be opposed pursuant to the Civil Code as well as the Insolvency Act. There are therefore two kinds of opposition rights: general (i.e. outside of insolvency) and insolvency right to oppose, whereby the latter can be generally applied during insolvency proceedings, while the former cannot.
The decision
Key points
Yet another major amendment to the Insolvency Act has been recently approved by the Czech government and passed to the Chamber of Deputies. The amendment is expected to become legally binding at the beginning of 2017. However, this timing does not allow for any potential obstacles or prolonged proceedings, which are common features of the Czech Parliamentary process.
Revising existing methods for the allocation of insolvency cases
Summary
The German Federal Court has recently examined the treatment of shareholder loans and how these creditor claims are classified in the event of a company’s insolvency (decision by the German Federal Court of Justice (BGH) dated 13 October 2016 (file no. IX ZR 184/14)).
Background
Summary
A recent judgment (German FCJ, 10 September 2015, IX ZR 215/13) deals with the question whether the recipient of a payment may be subject to a clawback claim if he returned the received amount to the debtor before the opening of insolvency proceedings.
Background
Introduction
A recent judgment (German FCJ, 9 June 2016, IX ZR 314/14) relates to the interface between the German master agreement for financial derivative transactions (GMA) and sec. 104 of the German Insolvency Statute (InsO).
Background