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McPherson & Keay's Law of Company Liquidation 5th Edition
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McPherson & Keay's Law of Company Liquidation 5th Edition
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Book $781.00 RRP + GST |
Dispatched from overseas. Estimated delivery 3-6 weeks. Date: 27/09/2021 Code: 9780414089204 Sweet & Maxwell, UNITED KINGDOM |
![]() McPherson & Keay's Law of Company Liquidation 5th Edition
Price: $781.00 GST included
Dispatched from overseas. Estimated delivery 3-6 weeks.
|
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| Format | Title | Date | Code | Price (excl. GST) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Book | McPherson & Keay's Law of Company Liquidation 5th Edition | 27/09/2021 | 9780414089204 | $781.00 |
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![]() McPherson & Keay's Law of Company Liquidation 5th Edition
Price: $781.00 GST included
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Description
- Examines the various means and modes by which a company can be wound-up, including in depth analysis at a general level of: creditors, court and members’ winding up procedures.
- Includes a detailed examination of the effects of liquidation on the company, creditors, members, legal actions etc including an in-depth consideration of the stay that is created on proceedings when a company entering liquidation
- Provides an extremely detailed analysis of actions that are available to liquidators, including those in relation to transactional avoidance, wrongful trading and breach of directors’ duties.
- Explains the dissolution process and the restoration of companies that have been dissolved so that they might be liquidated
- Provides a discussion of the international and cross-border elements of liquidation post Brexit, by consideration of the EU Insolvency Regulations and the UNCITRAL Model law.
- It considers the effects of Brexit on liquidations and the issues that now confront liquidators both in English liquidations and those European liquidations where there is an English element.
- Examines the effects of the Corporate Insolvency and Governance Act 2020 as far as it affects liquidations as well as the amendments made by the various subsequent regulations.
- Discusses where appropriate parts of the Practice Direction: Insolvency Proceedings 2018 and its impact on liquidations.
- Explains changes to the rules on preferential creditors and the re-introduction of a limited Crown priority effected by a combination of the Finance Act 2020 and the Insolvency Act 1986 (HMRC Debts: Priority on Insolvency) Regulations 2020
- Provides new sections on: the respondent’s private information in the context of private examinations; applications to subject foreign residents to private examinations; effects of restoration following dissolution; special purpose appointment liquidators; the rule in Ex parte James.
- Considers the latest leading appellate decisions affecting liquidations, including Bresco Electrical Services Ltd (In Liquidation) v Michael J Lonsdale (Electrical) Ltd (adjudication where a company is in insolvent liquidation), Joint Administrators of Lehman Brothers International (Europe) (in admin.) v HM Revenue and Customs Commissioners (statutory interest payable to creditors on their debts owed), Botleigh Grange Hotels Ltd v Revenue and Customs Commissioners (disputed debts on a petition), Bakhshiyeva v Sberbank of Russia; ; Re OJSV International Bank of Azerbaijan (cross-border insolvency), Chu v Lau (just and equitable winding-up petitions), Officeserve Technologies Ltd v Anthony-Mike and Ahmed v Ingram (void dispositions), Fakhry v Pagden (who may apply to remove a liquidator and restoration of dissolved companies), BTI 2014 LLC v Sequana SA (s.423 and duty to take into account creditors’ interests), Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken AB v Conway (avoidance provisions), Ezair v Conn (collection of company property and private examinations), JSC BTA Bank v Ablyazov (transactions defrauding creditors), Leon v Attorney-General (disclaimer and dissolution), Re Paramount Powders (UK) Ltd (petitions on just and equitable ground) and Re Peak Hotels and Resorts Ltd (invalidation of charges).
Table of Contents
- Chapter 1 - Introduction
- Chapter 2 - Modes of Winding Up
- Chapter 3 - Creditor’s Petition for a Winding-up Order
- Chapter 4 - Contributory’s Petition
- Chapter 5 - Miscellaneous Other Petitions
- Chapter 6 - Provisional Liquidation
- Chapter 7 - Commencement and Effect of Winding Up
- Chapter 8 - Administrative Organs of Winding Up
- Chapter 9 - Functions of the Liquidator
- Chapter 10 - Contributories
- Chapter 11 - Assets Available for Division and Distribution
- Chapter 12 - Creditors
- Chapter 13 - Division of Assets Among Creditors
- Chapter 14 - Distribution of Surplus Assets
- Chapter 15 - Investigations and Examinations
- Chapter 16 - Misconduct and Prosecutions
- Chapter 17 - The Conclusion of Winding-up Proceedings
- Chapter 18 - International Aspects of Liquidations
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Description
- Examines the various means and modes by which a company can be wound-up, including in depth analysis at a general level of: creditors, court and members’ winding up procedures.
- Includes a detailed examination of the effects of liquidation on the company, creditors, members, legal actions etc including an in-depth consideration of the stay that is created on proceedings when a company entering liquidation
- Provides an extremely detailed analysis of actions that are available to liquidators, including those in relation to transactional avoidance, wrongful trading and breach of directors’ duties.
- Explains the dissolution process and the restoration of companies that have been dissolved so that they might be liquidated
- Provides a discussion of the international and cross-border elements of liquidation post Brexit, by consideration of the EU Insolvency Regulations and the UNCITRAL Model law.
- It considers the effects of Brexit on liquidations and the issues that now confront liquidators both in English liquidations and those European liquidations where there is an English element.
- Examines the effects of the Corporate Insolvency and Governance Act 2020 as far as it affects liquidations as well as the amendments made by the various subsequent regulations.
- Discusses where appropriate parts of the Practice Direction: Insolvency Proceedings 2018 and its impact on liquidations.
- Explains changes to the rules on preferential creditors and the re-introduction of a limited Crown priority effected by a combination of the Finance Act 2020 and the Insolvency Act 1986 (HMRC Debts: Priority on Insolvency) Regulations 2020
- Provides new sections on: the respondent’s private information in the context of private examinations; applications to subject foreign residents to private examinations; effects of restoration following dissolution; special purpose appointment liquidators; the rule in Ex parte James.
- Considers the latest leading appellate decisions affecting liquidations, including Bresco Electrical Services Ltd (In Liquidation) v Michael J Lonsdale (Electrical) Ltd (adjudication where a company is in insolvent liquidation), Joint Administrators of Lehman Brothers International (Europe) (in admin.) v HM Revenue and Customs Commissioners (statutory interest payable to creditors on their debts owed), Botleigh Grange Hotels Ltd v Revenue and Customs Commissioners (disputed debts on a petition), Bakhshiyeva v Sberbank of Russia; ; Re OJSV International Bank of Azerbaijan (cross-border insolvency), Chu v Lau (just and equitable winding-up petitions), Officeserve Technologies Ltd v Anthony-Mike and Ahmed v Ingram (void dispositions), Fakhry v Pagden (who may apply to remove a liquidator and restoration of dissolved companies), BTI 2014 LLC v Sequana SA (s.423 and duty to take into account creditors’ interests), Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken AB v Conway (avoidance provisions), Ezair v Conn (collection of company property and private examinations), JSC BTA Bank v Ablyazov (transactions defrauding creditors), Leon v Attorney-General (disclaimer and dissolution), Re Paramount Powders (UK) Ltd (petitions on just and equitable ground) and Re Peak Hotels and Resorts Ltd (invalidation of charges).
Table of Contents
- Chapter 1 - Introduction
- Chapter 2 - Modes of Winding Up
- Chapter 3 - Creditor’s Petition for a Winding-up Order
- Chapter 4 - Contributory’s Petition
- Chapter 5 - Miscellaneous Other Petitions
- Chapter 6 - Provisional Liquidation
- Chapter 7 - Commencement and Effect of Winding Up
- Chapter 8 - Administrative Organs of Winding Up
- Chapter 9 - Functions of the Liquidator
- Chapter 10 - Contributories
- Chapter 11 - Assets Available for Division and Distribution
- Chapter 12 - Creditors
- Chapter 13 - Division of Assets Among Creditors
- Chapter 14 - Distribution of Surplus Assets
- Chapter 15 - Investigations and Examinations
- Chapter 16 - Misconduct and Prosecutions
- Chapter 17 - The Conclusion of Winding-up Proceedings
- Chapter 18 - International Aspects of Liquidations