Dreptul insolvenței
Insolvența corporativă și personală, administrarea, lichidarea și concordatele.
Introducere
Dreptul insolvenței oferă cadrul legal pentru entitățile incapabile să-și plătească datoriile.
Principii fundamentale
Corporate Insolvency — A company is insolvent if it cannot pay its debts as they fall due (cash-flow test) or its liabilities exceed its assets (balance-sheet test) (s.123 Insolvency Act 1986).
Administration — A procedure to rescue a company as a going concern, achieve a better result for creditors than winding up, or realise property to pay secured/preferential creditors (Schedule B1, Insolvency Act 1986).
Liquidation — The process of winding up a company and distributing its assets. May be voluntary (members' or creditors') or compulsory (by court order on a petition).
Company Voluntary Arrangement (CVA) — A binding agreement between a company and its creditors to pay debts over time, supervised by an insolvency practitioner.
Bankruptcy — The personal insolvency equivalent for individuals who cannot pay their debts. A bankruptcy order is made by the court, and a trustee in bankruptcy administers the estate.
Individual Voluntary Arrangement (IVA) — A formal agreement between an individual and creditors to repay debts, supervised by an insolvency practitioner.
Wrongful Trading — Directors may be personally liable if they continued trading when they knew or ought to have concluded there was no reasonable prospect of avoiding insolvent liquidation (s.214 IA 1986).
Fraudulent Trading — Where a company's business is carried on with intent to defraud creditors, those knowingly party to it may be personally liable (s.213 IA 1986).
Statute cheie
Cazuri de referință
Scenarii comune
Company cannot pay its debts
A creditor owed more than £750 can serve a statutory demand. If the company fails to pay within 21 days, the creditor may petition the court for a winding-up order. The company may instead propose a CVA or seek administration to restructure.
Director continued trading while insolvent
If a company enters insolvent liquidation and a director knew or ought to have known there was no reasonable prospect of avoiding it, the liquidator may bring a wrongful trading claim under s.214 IA 1986. The director may be ordered to contribute to the company's assets.