Insolvency Flashcards
Meaning of insolvency?
- Unable to pay its debts
- S123 IA 86 goes on to describe 4 situations
- Unable to pay its debts as they fall due – known as cash flow test
- Has liabilities that are greater than its assets known as balance sheet test
- Does not comply with statutory demand for a debt of over 750, this provides evidence that the company is cash flow insolvent
- Has failed to pay a creditor to satisfy enforcement of a judgement debt
Directors obligations towards their company in financial difficulties?
recognise when it is facing financial difficulties.
- Example of financial difficulty
- Company has unpaid creditors who are putting pressure on the company
- Company has an overdraft facility that is fully drawn and bank is refusing to provide further credit
- Directors who need to decide what action to take on behalf of the company.
Options
- Do nothing – potential breach under CA
- Do a deal
- Appoint an administrator
- Request appointment of a receiver to get a fixed charge and sell it
- Put the company into liquidation
Informal agreements?
Informal agreements with creditors
- Avoid time and cost of formal insolvency arrangements or proceedings.
To obtain creditor agreement the company may have
- Grant new or additional security
- Replace directors or senior employees
- Sell failing business/subsidiaries
- Reduce costs – through a redundancy programme
- Issue new shares to the creditors
As a preliminary step to negotiating an informal arrangement with relevant creditors a company may ask the creditors to enter into a standstill agreement.
What is an pre-insolvency moratorium?
- CIGA 2020 – introduces a new pre-insolvency moratorium for financially struggling companies that are not in a formal insolvency process.
- A mortarium is a period during which creditors are unable to take action to exercise their usual rights and remedies thereby creating a breathing space for the company to attempt to resolve the situation
- The actions restricted by moratorium include
- No creditor can enforce its security against the company’s assets
- There is a stay of legal proceedings again the company and a bar on bringing new proceedings against it
- No winding up procedures can be commenced in respect of the company and no shareholder resolution can be passed to wind up the company
- No administration procedure can be commended in respect of the company
Procedure for obtaining the pre-insolvency moratorium?
- Can obtain one by filing documents at court including
- A statement that the company is or likely to become unable to pay its debts as they fall due.
- A statement from a licensed insolvency practitioner known as a monitor for this purpose stating in their view that a moratorium will result in rescue of company.
- Lasts for 20 business days but can be extended by directors for a further 20 business days. Maximum period is one year subject to a court order to extend further.
- Terminates automatically if company’s goes insolvent or court sanctions a restructuring plan.
Effect of a pre-insolvency moratorium? Pre-moratorium debts?
PRE-MORTAORIUM DEBTS
DO NOT HAVE TO PAY THESE PRE-MORATROUM debts whilst the moratorium exists but the following must be paid
- Monitors remuneration
- Goods and services supplied during moratorium
- Rent in respect of a period during moratorium
-Wages or salary
-Loans under a contract involving financial services - SO STILL REMAIN IABLE DUE TO BANK BEFORE THE MORAROIUM WAS IN PLACE
Moratorium debts?
Moratorium debts
If a company has obtained a pre-insolvency moratorium it must pay all its moratorium debts.
These are debts that fall due during or after the moratorium by reason of an obligation incurred
during the moratorium. They usually relate to payment for goods or services ordered by the
company during the moratorium period.
This means that in practice a company must be ‘cash flow’ solvent ie able to pay its debts as and
when they fall due and so is capable of paying its way during the moratorium period.
Formal arrangements using statutory procedures - Company voluntary arrangement?
o Compromise between company and creditors. A composition in satisfaction of its debts or a scheme of arrangement of its affairs.
o Creditors agree to part payments of debts owned or to extended timetable for repayment.
o Once approved must be reported to court – but no requirement on court to approve it
o Its supervised and implemented by a supervisor who is an insolvency practitioner. Company’s directors REMAIN IN OFFICE.
Setting up a CVA?
) The directors draft a CVA proposal and appoint a Nominee (who must be an insolvency
practitioner). If the company is in liquidation or administration, the administrator or liquidator
drafts the CVA proposal and acts as Nominee.
(b) The directors must submit the CVA proposal and a statement of the company’s affairs to the
Nominee (although in practice it is the Nominee who drafts the CVA proposal).
(c) The Nominee considers the CVA proposal and, within 28 days, must report to court on
whether in their opinion, the company’s creditors and shareholders should be asked to vote
on the CVA proposal (s 2(1) and s 2(2)).
(d) The Nominee must allow at least 14 days for creditors to vote on the CVA proposal. A meeting
of the shareholders must take place within 5 days of the creditors’ decision.
(e) Voting – the CVA proposal will be approved if:
- At least 75% in value (ie, value of debts owed) of those voting on the CVA proposal
(excluding secured creditors) vote in favour;
- If the above majority is obtained, the decision of those creditors will be invalid if those
voting against the CVA proposal include more than half of the total value of creditors
unconnected to the company (eg not a related company, shareholder or director of the
company proposing the CVA); and
AND - A simple majority of shareholders/members vote in favour.
Note. In practice, it is only the approval of the CVA proposal by creditors which matters. If the
creditors vote in favour of the CVA proposal but the members vote against, the creditors’ vote will
always prevail.
(f) The Nominee reports to court that the CVA has been approved.
(g) The Nominee becomes a supervisor and implements the CVA proposal.
Effect of a CVA?
A CVA is binding on all unsecured creditors, including those who did not vote or voted against it. BUT a secured or preferential creditor is not bound unless it specially consents to be bound.
Creditor can challenge a CVA within 28 days on grounds - of UNFAIR PREJIUDICE OR THE APPROVAL OF THE CVA PROCEDURAL IRREGULATORTY subject to which is becomes binding on all creditors
Supervisors’ role will be to agree to creditors claims, collect in unsecured funds to pay dividends.
o How are they used
o Helps secure rent reductions during pandemic
o Adv – directors remain in control
o Disavd – doesn’t bind secured creditors or preferential creditors without their consent
Formal arrangements using statutory procedures - Restructuring plan under CIGA?
- Compromise a company’s creditors and shareholders and restructure its liabilities so that a company can return to solvency.
- Only used by companies which have or are likely to encounter financial difficulty.
It requires a court approval called a sanction – creditors and shareholders must be divided into classes and each class which votes on the plan must be asked to approve it. 75% approval in value needed by each voting class.
Plan only becomes binding if court sanctions it – binds all creditors including secured creditors.
Advantages of restructuring plan?
ovel features of the Plan include:
* The court can exclude creditors and shareholders from voting even if they are affected by the
Plan if they have no genuine economic interest in the company;
* The court can sanction a plan which brings about a ‘cross-class cram down’ if it is just and
equitable to do so even if one or more classes do not vote to approve the Plan.
A cross class cramdown means that one rank of creditor can force the Plan on another class of
creditor who has voted against the Plan. A cramdown of shareholders means forcing shareholders
to accept a debt for equity swap in which creditors are able to hold new shares in the company in
place of their debt claims.
The Plan is likely to be used by directors alongside the pre-insolvency moratorium but can also be
used by administrators and liquidators considered later in these materials.
The Plan may be better than a CVA because it can compromise the rights and claims of secured
creditors and shareholders. A CVA cannot do this. The other advantage of a Plan is that it can be
sanctioned by the court to bind all creditors even where the requisite majority approval is not
obtained in every voting class of creditors and shareholders.
Comparison between CVA and restructuring plan?
CVA
- WHO CAN INITIATE
- Directors, liquidator or
administrator
Approval
- AT LEAST 75% in value of unsecured creditors but without more than 50% of unconnected creditors voting against it
- Over 50% of shareholders
Who does it bind - ALL unsecured creditors
Advantages - no court sanction required so quicker and less costly
Limitations
- Prefernetial and secured creditors not bound without express consent
Restructuring plan
Who can initiate - Company, creditor, member or liquidator or administrator
Approval = sanctioned by the court
- at least 75% in value of each affected class of creditors and shareholders
- Who does it bind - BINDS ALL CREDITORS AND SHAREHOLDERS
Adv
- Binds all creditors including
dissenting creditors and
potentially classes of
creditors which do not
approve the Plan
The court may sanction a
Plan even if one or more
classes do not approve
Court process can be costly
and time consuming and
need to consider if creditors
are in separate classes for
voting purposes
Administration objectives?
Administration – objectives of the administrator
- Administrators are required to perform their duties in the interests of the creditors as a whole rather than in interests of a particular one.
- Also, officers in court who owe duties to court.
- Must be licensed insolvency practitioners
Statutory objectives of administration
- Must perform their functions with the objective of achieving one of three objectives
- First – to rescue company as a going concern, or if that’s not reasonably achievable
- Secondly to achieve a better result for the company’s creditors as a whole that would be likely if wound up or if that’s not reasonably achievable
- Thirdly to realise the company’s property in order to make a distribution to one or more secured or preferential creditors.
Appointment of an administrator - procedure?
2 procedures
Court and OUT OF COURT
Court procedure
The court may appoint an administrator where the company is or is likely to become unable to
pay its debts (Sch B1 para 11(a)) on the application of: the company, the directors, a creditor, the
supervisor of a CVA or a liquidator. The court must, when deciding to make an administration
order, consider whether the appointment is reasonably likely to achieve the purpose of the
administration (Sch B1 para 11(b)).
An interim moratorium temporarily freezing creditor action comes into effect on the application to
court and lasts until either, the administration order is made or the court dismisses the
application
Appointments by court order are uncommon. The usual case when a court makes an
administration order is where a creditor has begun winding up proceedings against the company
and the directors wish to appoint administrators before the court has made a winding up order. In
this situation, the out-of-court appointment procedure is not available to the directors, and they
must apply to court for an order to appoint administrators.
If the court makes an administration order, the pending winding up proceedings are automatically
dismissed
Appointment of administrator - OUT of court procedure?
First under Sch B1, the directors or the company may appoint an administrator out of court (in
practice it is usually the directors who appoint under Sch B1 Para 22 rather than the company).
they must file a notice of intention to
appoint (NOI) at court and, not less than 10 business days later file a notice of appointment at
court. The administrators’ appointment takes effect when the second notice is filed at court.
OR BY
a holder of a qualifying floating charge holder (QFC) may
appoint an administrator out of court
- means a floating charge which together with any other security that’s held relates to the whole or substantially the whole of the company property AND the document that creates it provides that either sch b1 para-IA applies or they have power to appoint an administrator
have power to appoint an administrator.
o Many banks will request a QFC to secure the loan.
o If a QFC holder wishes to appoint an Administrator it must enforce its security in accordance with terms of the QFC and appointment will take effect when it has filed a notice of appointment at court.
o If more than one QFC holder – normally determined by priory agreement entered into by them.
o Must first give two business days’ notice to holders of a QFC which have propriety and can only proceed if the higher priority holder agrees.