ArticleCoop.com homepage.
Follow Us On Twitter
Translate Page To Irish Translate Page To German Translate Page To Spanish Translate Page To French
Translate Page To Italian Translate Page To Japanese Translate Page To Korean Translate Page To Portugese Translate Page To Chinese
  Number Of Times Read: 6      
Categories

Accessories (1678)
Advice (2174)
Aging (363)
Arts (10183)
Arts and Crafts (987)
Automotive (8087)
Break-up (248)
Business (82725)
Business Management (1447)
Cancer Survival (400)
Career (511)
Cars and Trucks (5640)
CGI (7)
Cheating (259)
Coding Sites (185)
Computers (18891)
Computers and Technology (9292)
Cooking (2351)
Crafts (748)
Culture (280)
Current Affairs (1080)
Databases (79)
Death (60)
Education (12186)
Entertainment (14643)
Etiquette (21)
Family Concerns (2442)
Film (89)
Finances (30014)
Food and Drinks (5698)
Gardening (2548)
Healthy Living (44393)
Holidays (1016)
Home (15011)
Home Management (1925)
Internet (43934)
Jobs (1172)
Leadership (108)
Legal (1390)
Medical (2164)
Medical Business (196)
Medicines and Remedies (2018)
Men Only (3149)
Motorcyles (167)
Opinions (48)
Our Pets (5178)
Outdoors (1850)
Parenting (1033)
Pets (597)
Recreation (1239)
Relationships (12013)
Religion (2142)
Science (396)
Self Help (1174)
Self Improvement (4903)
Society (922)
Sports (9722)
Staying Fit (13132)
Technology (8102)
Travel (11120)
Web Design (2106)
Weddings (1251)
Wellness, Fitness and Di (5750)
Women Only (8261)
Womens Interest (1465)
World Affairs (47)
Writing (2296)
 
Stats
Total Articles: 5
Total Authors: 103534
Total Downloads: 6531152


Newest Member
Estrado Hengel

 


   

An Outline of Shareholder and Director Liabilities When a Business is in Difficulty



[Valid RSS feed]  Category Rss Feed - http://www.articlecoop.com/rss.php?rss=24

[Valid RSS feed]  Alison Withers's Author Feed - http://www.articlecoop.com/author-rss-feed.php?rss=4127
By : Alison Withers    4 or more times read
Submitted 2010-12-11 19:37:37

Copyright (c) 2010 Alison Withers

The duties of the directors as a company's officers when it is insolvent move from a primary duty to shareholders to a primary duty to protecting the interests of its creditors.

The liabilities of shareholders are limited to the value of their equity and they are protected from liability to creditos under what is known as the "corporate veil".

However, if the shares are only partly paid for and the company enters formal insolvency the creditors can, via the appointment of a liquidator, demand that the shares be fully paid in order to discharge the creditors' liability.

Shareholders often think it is clever to only part pay for shares but if the company goes bust the liquidator will want to recover the unpaid portion of the shares. So, for example, if as a shareholder you own 1000 shares valued at £1 each and you have only paid £250 for them, the liquidator will ask for the remaining £750.

It is also possible that a company's shareholders might have given a personal guarantee at some stage during their involvement with the company. It might be that at start-up for instance, particularly when a family member has started a small business, or when the company subsequently entered a contract such as a lease, some or all of the shareholders personally guaranteed the contract and then later forget about it, especially if they are no longer directors or officers of the company as they may have been in its early days. This can also be an issue after the shareholders have sold their shares and failed to discharge their personal guarantees.

Directors, however, can be held personally liable under the Insolvency Act 1986 for money owed to creditors. They must not sell any assets under their market value. They must be fair and not pay some creditors in preference to others. The fiduciary duty imposed on the directors of an insolvent company leaves them with personal liabilities that are not imposed on shareholders.

However, it is often the case with small companies that the director and shareholder are one and the same and in those situations the director must remember that he or she wears different hats as director, shareholder, employee and also as a creditor, if they have lent money to the company. This is in particular an area where repaying director loans can attract a charge of preference referred to above.

In a recent case of a manufacturing company that went into liquidation where all the family members who were both shareholders and employees as well as creditors because they had lent the company money, as shareholders they had to pay in unpaid share capital even though they were creditors because they were not able to offset the money they were owed as creditors against the money they were liable to pay as shareholders.

When a company enters liquidation liquidators expect the unpaid share capital to be paid. While complicated, the unpaid portion of share capital is often not treated as an asset that can be set off against the loan as a liability, hence the reason that unpaid share capital can be claimed even when the shareholder is a creditor of the company.

It may seem complicated and unfair and therefore it is sensible to seek outside help from business turnaround or rescue adviser if you are involved in a business as both a shareholder and as a creditor.

Too many shareholders and directors fail to carry out regular reviews of their businesses before they reach this sort of situation, let alone carry out an emergency review if the company is close to or in insolvency before they make decisions on what they should do.

Working as an objective outsider with a company, a rescue adviser has the tools and experience to properly assess the company, establish where there is a part that is viable and then propose a plan to help it survive what may be relatively short term insolvency, perhaps because of a decline in orders thanks to a recession.

It is in the advisor's interests to offer realistic solutions to help restructure the company on a more stable basis, deal with the company's liabilities in a way that is sustainable and allow it to carry on trading then move forward into growth. Or when a business is no longer viable the adviser can assist close it down in such a way that maximises the interests of creditors.

Author Resource: Directors and shareholders have different liabilities when a company is insolvent and, as Tony Groom, of K2 Business Rescue, explains to writer Ali Withers, it is important to understand exactly what they are, especially if the directors are also shareholders.
Article From ArticleCoop

Related Articles

HTML Ready Article. Click on the "Copy" button to copy into your clipboard.




Firefox users please select/copy/paste as usual
Rate This Article
Vote to see the results!

Do you like this article?
  • Yes.
  • Not Sure.
  • No.


New Members
select
Sign up
select
Learn More
 
Nav Menu
Home
Login
Submit Articles
Submission Guidelines
Top Articles
Link Directory
About Us
Contact Us
Privacy Policy
RSS Feeds

Actions
Print This Article
Add To Favorites

 
Sponsors

Target Your Competition

5% off CoffeeForLess.com Code: CFL

 


Copyright © 2009 - ArticleCoop.com
All Rights Reserved.

Powered By:Article Friendly