83,357
edits
Amwelladmin (talk | contribs) m (Amwelladmin moved page Balancesheet insolvency to Balance sheet insolvency) |
Amwelladmin (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
“[[Balance sheet insolvency]]”, like [[cashflow insolvency]], is a variety of being “[[unable to pay its debts|unable to pay ones debts]]”, an expression which in turn features in many definitions of “[[insolvency]]” or “[[bankruptcy]]”. | |||
Section 123(2) of the [[Insolvency Act 1986]] | Compared with the carefully crafted prose of other limbs, this seems a dangerously vague expression. But it has a pretty technical meaning — conferred by statute, no less — Section 123(2) of the [[Insolvency Act 1986]], which says a company will be deemed [[unable to pay its debts]] “''if it is proved to the satisfaction of the court that the value of the company’s assets is less than the amount of its liabilities, taking into account its [[contingent liability|contingent]] and prospective liabilities''”. This is what we mean by [[balance sheet insolvency]]. | ||
In {{casenote|BNY Corporate Trustees|Eurosail}} the Supreme Court | English courts have recently had an opportunity consider what this means, and have resourcefully concluded: “what it says”. | ||
In {{casenote|BNY Corporate Trustees|Eurosail}} the Supreme Court noted that while this test this is often called “[[balance sheet insolvency]]” it can’t be satisfied purely by reference to the company's statutory balance sheet, because that may omit important information like [[contingent liability|contingent liabilities]]. Nor does it mean that the company has “reached the point of no return because of an incurable deficiency of assets”, which was what the Court of Appeal in this case had hypothesised. | |||
===Brexit means Brexit=== | ===Brexit means Brexit=== |