- Administrations
- Are you a creditor in formal insolvency proceedings?
- Bankruptcy
- Company Voluntary Arrangements
- Compulsory Liquidations
- Corporate Insolvency
- Creditors Voluntary Liquidations
- Individual Voluntary Arrangements
- Insolvency
- Members Voluntary Liquidations
- Partnership Insolvency
- Personal Debt
- Rescue and Recovery
Compulsory Liquidations
Corporate Insolvency
A Compulsory Liquidation is a court directed method of winding up a company's affairs i.e. realising and distributing its assets and concluding it's affairs in general.
There are a number of grounds under which a Court can make a Winding Up Order, principally being that the company has resolved that it be wound up by the court, that it does not commence its business within a year/suspends its business for a whole year, that it is just and equitable to wind-up or, most commonly, it is unable to pay its debts.
There are 3 ways the court may conclude that a company is unable to pay its debts:
- Total liabilities exceed total assets in value.
- A statutory demand greater than £750 remains unpaid for 21 days.
- The company is subject to an unsatisfied judgement execution.
The application to wind up the company must be by petition, presented either by the company, its Directors, its shareholders or any creditor or creditors of the company.
