International Legal English
Corporate Insolvency Law: Key Concepts and Procedures * Objective: Provides a structured approach for handling insolvent companies through rescue or liquidation. * Distinct from personal insolvency, which focuses on giving individuals a fresh start. * Goal: Balance the rights and interests of creditors, shareholders, and employees. * Common Law Systems (e.g., UK): Use procedures like administration, receivership, and Company Voluntary Arrangements (CVAs). * Civil Law Systems (e.g., Czech Republic): Use statutory procedures like reorganizace (reorganization) and konkurz (liquidation). * Shared Aim: Maximizing creditor recovery while preserving viable businesses where possible. * Initiated by a secured creditor. * Receiver manages and sells specific assets to repay that creditor. * Not focused on saving the business. "Receivership is focused, creditor-driven, and does not prioritize company rescue." * Provides a statutory moratorium from creditor actions. * Administrator may run the business, sell it, or propose restructuring. * Exit routes: return to directors, liquidation, CVA, or pre-pack sale. "Administration offers temporary legal protection while exploring rescue or better-value asset sales." * Debt restructuring agreement proposed by the company and insolvency practitioner. * Approved if 75% of creditors (by value) vote in favor. * Supervised by an appointed insolvency professional. * Court-supervised plan involving creditor class voting and judicial confirmation. * Allows continued business operation while restructuring debt. * Licensed professionals who manage different aspects of insolvency: * Receiver: For secured creditors. * Administrator: Business stabilization and rescue. * Liquidator: Wind-up and asset distribution. * Types of creditors: * Secured: Rights over specific assets. * Unsecured: No asset security. * Preferential: Statutory priority (e.g., employees). * Creditor powers: * Vote on CVAs/reorganization plans. * Form creditors’ committees (e.g., věřitelský výbor in Czech law). * Review reports and challenge practitioner decisions. "Creditors have legal tools to monitor, influence, and, if needed, oppose insolvency outcomes." * Ensures coordination between main and secondary insolvency proceedings. * Case Study: EuroBuild AG – German main proceedings with Polish secondary proceedings to ensure fairness and consistency. * Possible outcomes: * Rescue (e.g., ModeTex S.A. – returned to profitability). * Job retention (e.g., XYZ Electronics – saved 60% of jobs). * Higher creditor returns (compared to liquidation). * Liquidation, if rescue is not viable. Let me know if you'd like this turned into a PDF handout, a presentation slide deck, or an ESL-focused lesson. I. Purpose and Scope of Corporate Insolvency LawII. Cross-System VariationsIII. Core Insolvency Procedures1. Receivership (Creditor-Driven)2. Administration (UK – Rescue-Oriented)3. Company Voluntary Arrangement (CVA) (UK)4. Reorganizace (Czech Republic)IV. Insolvency PractitionersV. Creditor Rights and ParticipationVI. Cross-Border Insolvency (EU Regulation 2015/848)VII. Outcomes and Real-World Application
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