Bankruptcy
(Désastre) (Jersey) Law 1990
A LAW to amend and extend the law
relating to the declaring of the property of a person to be en désastre; to make provision for the
disqualification and personal liability of persons involved in the management
of companies and other bodies corporate and legal persons; to abolish certain
customary law concepts; and for connected purposes[1]
Commencement
[see endnotes]
PART 1
INTERPRETATION AND General
1 Interpretation
(1) In this Law, unless the
context otherwise requires –
“claim” includes a claim for repossession of goods and a
claim for rent;
“Commission” means the Jersey Financial Services
Commission established by the Financial Services Commission (Jersey)
Law 1998;
“Companies Law” means the Companies (Jersey) Law 1991;
“company” means –
(a) a
company registered under the Companies Law (including a company originally
registered under the Loi (1861) sur les Sociétés à
Responsabilité Limitée);
(b) a foundation;
(c) a corporation
constituted under Article 4 of the Loi (1862) sur les
teneures en fidéicommis et l’incorporation d’associations;
(d) an
association constituted by Act of the States; and
(e) a
body corporate incorporated outside Jersey,
and references to directors and other officers of a company and to
voting power at a general meeting of a company shall be interpreted with the
necessary modifications;
“court” means the Royal Court;
“creditor” includes a person claiming repossession of
goods;
“debtor” –
(a) in
relation to an application for a declaration means a person who is insolvent;
(b) in
relation to a declaration means the person in respect of whose property that
declaration is made;
(c) in
relation to a reference to anything done by a debtor before a declaration was
made, means the person who became the debtor on the declaration being made
although the person may not have been insolvent at the time the thing was done;
“declaration” means an Act of the court made under
Article 6 declaring the property of a person to be en désastre;
“director” means any person occupying the position
of –
(a) director;
or
(b) in
the case of a foundation, a member of the council of the foundation,
by whatever name called;
“foundation” means a foundation incorporated under the Foundations (Jersey) Law 2009;
“hypothec”, “judicial hypothec” and “conventional
hypothec” have the respective meanings assigned to hypothèque, hypothèque
judiciaire and hypothèque
conventionelle under the Loi (1880) sur la propriété
foncière;
“incorporated limited partnership” has the meaning given
to it in the Incorporated Limited Partnerships (Jersey)
Law 2011;
“insolvency” means the inability of a debtor to pay his
or her debts as they fall due;
“limited liability company” means a
limited liability company registered under the Limited
Liability Companies (Jersey) Law 2018, and includes a series created within
that limited liability company under Article 12 of that Law;
“LLC agreement”
has the same meaning as in the Limited Liability Companies (Jersey)
Law 2018;
“limited liability partnership” means a limited
liability partnership registered under the Limited Liability Partnerships (Jersey)
Law 2017;
“Minister” means the Minister for External Relations;
“prescribed by the Minister” means prescribed by the Minister
by Order;
“prescribed by the court” means prescribed by the court
by Rules made under Article 2;
“property” means land, money, goods, things in action,
goodwill, and every valuable thing, whether movable or immovable, and whether
situated in Jersey or elsewhere; and also means obligations, servitudes, and
every description of estate, interest, and profit, present or future, vested or
contingent, arising out of or incident to property;
“registrar” means
in relation to –
(a) a company
registered under the Companies Law;
(b) a
foundation;
(c) an
incorporated limited partnership;
(ca) a limited
liability company; or
(d) a
limited liability partnership,
the registrar appointed pursuant to Article 196 of the Companies
Law;
“security interest” means –
(a) a
continuing security interest to which, as referred to in Article 1A of the
Security Interests (Jersey)
Law 1983, that Law applies; or
(b) a
security interest within the meaning of the Security Interests (Jersey) Law 2012.[2]
(2) In this Law, the
expression “during the course of a désastre”
means the period between the date of the declaration and such date as an order
of discharge under Article 41 takes effect.
(3) Subject to Article 10,
the provisions of this Law shall be in addition to and not in derogation
of –
(a) the Loi (1832) sur les décrets;
(b) the Loi (1839) sur les remises de biens;
(c) those provisions of the
Loi (1880) sur la
propriété foncière
which relate to bankruptcy;
(d) the Loi (1904) (Amendement No. 2) sur la
propriété foncière;
and
(e) any
other law relating to bankruptcy,
except in so far as the provisions contained therein are
inconsistent with the provisions of this Law.
2 Power to make Rules
(1) Rules may from time to
time be made in the manner prescribed by the Royal Court (Jersey) Law 1948 relating to the procedure of
the court (including the procedure and practice to be followed by the Viscount
under this Law) and to give effect to this Law.
(2) Without prejudice to
the generality of paragraph (1), Rules may be made under this Article as to –
(a) the
manner in which proceedings may be commenced;
(b) the
mode of proving debts and the exemption of certain debts from the requirement
of proof;
(c) [3]
(d) the
forms to be used in any proceedings;
(e) the
attestation and verification of documents for use in proceedings;
(f) the
notices to be given in connection with any proceedings and by and to whom the
same shall be given;
(g) the
manner of advertising;
(h) the
granting of costs, and the cases in which security for costs must be given;
(i) subject
to Article 49A, such matters as are required for giving full effect to the
provisions of this Law and for the due administration thereof.[4]
(3) The Rules may authorize
the Viscount to exercise a discretion including a discretion to extend or
abridge the period within which a person is required or authorized to do any
act in pursuance of the Rules.[5]
(4) The Rules may authorize
the Viscount to grant an extension referred to in paragraph (3) although
the application for the extension was not made until after the period
prescribed by the Rules or any extension of that period.[6]
PART 2
APPLICATION FOR DECLARATION
3 Application for a declaration[7]
(1) An application for a
declaration may be made by –
(a) a
creditor of the debtor with a claim against the debtor of not less than such
liquidated sum as shall be prescribed by the Minister;
(b) the
debtor; or
(c) the
Commission, in the case of a person who –
(i) holds or has held
a permit under the Insurance Business (Jersey) Law 1996 or the Collective Investment Funds (Jersey)
Law 1988,
(ii) holds
or has held a certificate under the Collective Investment Funds (Jersey)
Law 1988 or the Alternative Investment Funds
(Jersey) Regulations 2012,
(iii) is or
was registered under the Financial Services (Jersey) Law 1998, or
(iv) is a
foundation.[8]
(2) An application may not
be made by –
(a) a
creditor to the extent that the creditor has agreed not to make an application;
or
(b) a
creditor whose only claim is one for the repossession of goods.
(3) Except as provided by
paragraph (4), an application must be made in the form prescribed by the
court and must be accompanied by an affidavit verifying the contents of the
form.
(4) Paragraph (3) does
not apply to an application made by the Commission under paragraph (1)(c).
4 Persons in respect of whose property a declaration may be applied
for
(1) An application under
Article 3 may be made in respect of the property of any
debtor –
(a) who –
(i) is, or
(ii) was,
at any time within the period of 12 months immediately preceding the date of
the application,
ordinarily resident in Jersey;
(b) who –
(i) carries on, or
(ii) has
carried on, at any time within the period of 3 years immediately preceding the
date of the application,
business in Jersey;
(c) who
has in Jersey immovable property capable of realization at the time of the
application;
(d) who,
being a company, is registered under the Companies Law or has been dissolved
pursuant to that Law;
(da) who is an
incorporated limited partnership;
(db) who is a limited
liability company; or
(e) who
is a limited liability partnership,
whether or not the debtor is present in Jersey at the time of
application for a declaration or at the time of the declaration.[9]
(2) For the avoidance of
doubt it is hereby declared that no application may be made in respect of the
property of a deceased person.
(3) Notwithstanding
Article 3 or paragraph (1), an application for a declaration may not
be made if Article 94 of the Bank (Recovery and Resolution) (Jersey)
Law 2017 applies.[10]
5 Duty of court to refuse to make declaration in certain cases
(1) The court shall refuse
to make a declaration –
(a) if
the court has made an order pursuant to Article 2 of the Loi (1839) sur les remises de biens granting permission to the
debtor to place the debtor’s property in the hands of the court and at
the date of the application the order remains in force;
(b) if
the debtor has been permitted to make general cession (reçu
à faire cession générale)
of the debtor’s property; or
(c) if
the debtor’s property has been adjudged renounced (adjugée
renoncée).
(2) In the case of an
application by a creditor the court may require the creditor to indemnify the
Viscount against the costs of the désastre
to the extent that it thinks fit.
PART 3
DECLARATION
6 Declaration
(1) Subject to paragraph (2),
the court, after considering an application and the affidavit required by
Article 3(3) to accompany it, may make a declaration.[11]
(2) Where an application is
made under Article 3(1)(c) the court may make a declaration if it
considers it just and equitable to do so.[12]
(3) The court may at any
time adjourn the hearing of an application for such time as it thinks fit and
may require the applicant to furnish such further information as it requires.
(4) Where, as the result of
an application made by a creditor a declaration is made and the person in
respect of whose property it is made is, notwithstanding the declaration, at
the date of the declaration not insolvent, that person shall have a right of
action against the applicant to recover damages for or in respect of any loss
sustained by the person as a consequence of the declaration, unless the
applicant, in making the application, acted reasonably and in good faith.
(5) Any action brought
pursuant to paragraph (4) shall be commenced within 12 months from the
date of the declaration.
7 Debtor’s
application to recall a declaration
(1) The debtor may at any
time during the course of the désastre
apply to the court for an order recalling the declaration.
(2) The debtor shall give
to the Viscount not less than 48 hours’ notice of the debtor’s
intention to make an application under paragraph (1).
(3) The court shall refuse
an application made under paragraph (1) where it is not satisfied that
property of the debtor vested in the Viscount pursuant to Article 8 or 9
is at the time of such application sufficient to pay in full claims filed with
the Viscount or claims which the Viscount has been advised will be filed within
the prescribed time.
(4) In considering an
application under paragraph (1) the court shall have regard to the
interests of –
(a) creditors
who have filed a statement of claim;
(b) creditors
whose claims the Viscount has been advised will be filed within the prescribed
time; and
(c) the
debtor,
and in the case of a declaration made pursuant to Article 6(2),
shall also have regard to the views of the Commission and of the Viscount.[13]
(5) Where the court makes
an order under this Article it may make such order as to costs as it thinks
fit.
(6) Where the court makes
an order under this Article, the property of the debtor which is vested in the
Viscount pursuant to Article 8 or 9 shall, with effect from the date of
the order, vest in the debtor.
(7) An order made under
this Article shall not prejudice the validity of any act of the Viscount
relating to the property of the debtor between the date of the declaration and
the date of the order.
PART 4
EFFECT OF DECLARATION
8 Property
of debtor at date of declaration to vest in the Viscount
(1) All the property and
powers of the debtor specified in paragraph (2) shall vest in the Viscount
immediately upon the making of the declaration.
(2) Subject to paragraph (3)
and Article 8A, the property and powers of the debtor to vest in the
Viscount under this Article and be divisible amongst the debtor’s
creditors shall comprise –
(a) all property
belonging to or vested in the debtor at the date of the declaration;
(b) the
capacity to exercise and to take proceedings for exercising all such powers in
or over or in respect of any property as might have been exercised by the
debtor for the debtor’s own benefit at the date of the declaration.[14]
(3) Property held by the
debtor in trust for any other person shall not vest in the Viscount.
8A Rights
under approved pension arrangements excluded[15]
(1) The States may, by
Regulations, make provision for or in connection with enabling rights of a
person under an approved pension arrangement to be excluded, in the event of a
declaration being made in respect of that person, from the person’s
property for the purposes of this Law.
(2) Regulations under this
Article may, in particular, make provision –
(a) for
rights under an approved pension arrangement to be excluded from a
person’s property –
(i) by an order made
by the court on the person’s application, or
(ii) in
accordance with a qualifying agreement made between the person and the
Viscount;
(b) for
the court’s decision whether or not to make such an order in relation to
a person to be made by reference to –
(i) future likely
needs of the person and the person’s family, and
(ii) whether
any benefits (by way of pension or otherwise) are likely to be received by
virtue of rights of the person under other pension arrangements and (if so) the
extent to which they appear to be likely to be adequate for meeting any such
need;
(c) for
the prescribed persons, in the case of any prescribed pension arrangement, to
provide a person or the Viscount on request with information reasonably
required by that person or the Viscount for or in connection with the making of
such applications and agreements as are mentioned in sub-paragraph (a);
(d) for
rights under an approved pension arrangement to be excluded from a
person’s property to an approved extent.
(3) Regulations made under
this Article –
(a) may
make different provisions in relation to different cases;
(b) may
exempt specified cases from any provision of the Regulations;
(c) may
contain provisions that are incidental or supplementary.
(4) In this
Article –
“approved pension arrangement” means a pension
arrangement of a prescribed type;
“prescribed” means prescribed by Regulations made under
this Article;
“qualifying agreement” means an agreement entered into
in such circumstances and satisfying such requirements as may be prescribed.
9 After-acquired
property
(1) Subject to this
Article, the Viscount may by notice in writing claim any property which has
been acquired by, or has devolved upon, the debtor since the date of the
declaration for division amongst the debtor’s creditors.
(2) A notice under this
Article shall not be served in respect of any property which is acquired by, or
devolves upon, the debtor after the debtor’s discharge.
(3) Subject to paragraph (4),
upon the service on the debtor of a notice under this Article the property to
which the notice relates shall vest in the Viscount and the Viscount’s
title to that property has relation back to the time at which the property was
acquired by, or devolved upon, the debtor.
(4) Where, whether before
or after service of a notice under this Article –
(a) a
person acquires property in good faith, for value and without notice of the
declaration; or
(b) a
banker enters into a transaction in good faith and without such notice,
the Viscount is not in respect of that property or transaction
entitled by virtue of this Article to any remedy against that person or banker,
or any person whose title to any property derives from that person or banker.
(5) Except with the leave
of the court a notice shall not be served after the end of the period of 40
days beginning with the day on which it first came to the knowledge of the Viscount
that the property had been acquired by, or had devolved upon the debtor.
10 Prohibition
on pursuing alternative remedies, etc. after declaration[16]
(1) With effect from the
date of the declaration a creditor to whom the debtor is indebted in respect of
a debt provable in the “désastre” shall not –
(a) have
any other remedy against the property or person of the debtor in respect of the
debt;
(b) commence
any action or legal proceedings to recover the debt; or
(c) except
with the consent of the Viscount or by order of the court, continue any action
or legal proceedings to recover the debt.
(2) Consent under paragraph (1)(c)
may be given on such terms as the Viscount or the court thinks fit.
(3) If the debtor is a
company –
(a) a
transfer of shares in the debtor not being a transfer made to or with the
sanction of the Viscount; or
(b) an
alteration in the status of the company’s members,
made after the declaration is void.
(4) If the debtor is an
incorporated limited partnership –
(a) a
transfer of any interest in the debtor not being a transfer made to or with the
sanction of the Viscount; or
(b) an
alteration in the status of the partnership’s partners, as partners,
made after the declaration is void.[17]
(4A) If the debtor is a limited
liability company, any of the following made after the declaration is void –
(a) a
transfer of any interest in the debtor not being a transfer made to, or with
the sanction of, the Viscount; or
(b) an
alteration in the status of the limited liability company’s members, as
members.[18]
(5) Paragraphs (1) and
(2) shall not prevent a secured party under a security agreement from
exercising, without the consent of the Viscount, and without an order of the
court, a power under Part 7 of the Security Interests (Jersey) Law 2012 in relation to the relevant
collateral.[19]
(6) Paragraphs (3), (4) and
(4A) shall not avoid a transfer of shares, partnership interests or LLC
interests made in exercise of a power under Part 7 of the Security Interests (Jersey) Law 2012 even if not made to, or with
the sanction of, the Viscount. [20]
11 Special
provisions regarding immovable property
(1) Any immovable property
vesting in the Viscount pursuant to Article 8(1) or 9(3) shall so vest
subject to all hypothecs and debts secured thereby to which such property was
subject prior to the vesting.
(2) Subject to paragraph (3),
and without prejudice to the rights of preference of an hypothecary creditor,
where any property which vests in the Viscount pursuant to Article 8(1) or
9(3) is subject to a judicial or conventional hypothec, the hypothec shall be
extinguished on the sale of the property by the Viscount under Article 27.
(3) Paragraph (2)
shall not apply to a judicial or conventional hypothec obtained against or
created or consented to by any predecessor in title of the debtor, the debtor
not having been charged by the debtor’s contract of acquisition with the
payment of the debt or other claim which the hypothec secures, and Article 2(3)
of the Loi (1880) sur la
propriété foncière shall continue to apply in
such a case.
(4) If, immediately prior
to a declaration, the debtor is beneficially entitled to immovable property as
a joint owner (“conjointement par ensemble”) the title to the
property shall, as from the date of the declaration, be taken to have been
converted into an ownership in common in equal shares (“en indivis en
parts égales”) and any hypothecs to which the immovable property
is subject shall, with the debts secured by it, be apportioned equally between
those shares.[21]
(5) If, after a conversion
and any apportionment under paragraph (4) has taken place, the court, on
an application made under Article 7(1), makes an order recalling the
declaration, the court may also make such order as the court thinks fit for
restoring the position to what it would have been if the declaration had not
been made or as nearly thereto as the court thinks practicable.[22]
12 Special
provisions regarding matrimonial home
(1) Where any property
vesting in the Viscount pursuant to Article 8(1) or 9(3) represents the
matrimonial home or an interest in part thereof the spouse of the debtor, not
being a person in respect of whom a declaration has been made and not recalled,
may, within 3 months of the date of the declaration, apply to the court
for such order as is referred to in paragraph (5) as the court thinks fit.[23]
(1A) Where any property vesting in the
Viscount pursuant to Article 8(1) or 9(3) represents the civil partnership
home or an interest in part thereof the civil partner of the debtor, not being
a person in respect of whom a declaration has been made and not recalled, may,
within 3 months of the date of the declaration, apply to the court for
such order as is referred to in paragraph (5) as the court thinks fit.[24]
(2) Application may be made
under paragraph (1) notwithstanding any agreement made to the contrary.
(3) The power to sell
property conferred on the Viscount by Article 27 shall not be exercised in
respect of property referred to in paragraph (1) until a period of more
than 3 months has elapsed from the date of the declaration.
(4) Paragraph (1)
shall apply whether or not the spouse or civil partner of the debtor is
beneficially entitled as a joint tenant with the debtor to the matrimonial home
or civil partnership home.[25]
(5) After considering an
application under paragraph (1) or (1A) the court may order –
(a) that
the property or the interest in part thereof as to which the Viscount is
beneficially entitled, subject to –
(i) any hypothec and
debts secured thereby, or
(ii) security
interest and debts secured thereby,
or part thereof attaching to the property or interest therein, be
vested in the applicant;
(b) the
sale of the property and the distribution of the proceeds of sale, or such part
of the proceeds as represents the value of the interest in the part of the
property as to which the Viscount is beneficially entitled, to such persons and
in such proportions as the court thinks fit;
(c) a
usufruct in the property or in such part thereof as to which the Viscount is
beneficially entitled to be vested in the applicant for such period as the
court thinks fit.[26]
(6) Where the court makes
an order under paragraph (5)(a) it may make a further order that payment
be made by the applicant to the Viscount of such sum as the court thinks fit
for the benefit of the debtor’s creditors.
(7) Orders made under
paragraphs (5) and (6) shall be on such terms and conditions as the court
thinks fit.
(8) It shall be the duty of
the court in deciding in what manner to exercise its powers under paragraph (5)
to give first consideration to the desirability of reserving the matrimonial
home or civil partnership home for the occupation of the spouse or civil
partner and any dependants of the debtor having regard to all the circumstances
of the désastre including the
interests of creditors.[27]
(9) The court shall in
particular have regard to the following matters –
(a) the
income, earning capacity, property and other financial resources which the
spouse or civil partner has or is likely to have in the foreseeable future;
(b) the
age of the debtor’s dependants; and
(c) the
income, earning capacity (if any), property and other financial resources of
the debtor’s dependants.[28]
(10) Before deciding whether to
make an order under paragraph (5), the court shall give the Viscount an
opportunity to make representations with respect to the order.
(11) Any representations made by
the Viscount shall be included among the circumstances to which the court is
required to have regard under this Article.
(12) For the purposes of this
Article –
“civil partner” includes a person with whom the debtor
is alleged to be in a civil partnership by habit and repute;
“civil partnership home” means the residence that is
used habitually or from time to time by the debtor and the debtor’s civil
partner or either of them as the only or principal family residence;
“dependants” means all persons who in the opinion of the
court are dependant on the debtor wholly or partially for the provision of the
ordinary necessities of life;
“matrimonial home” means the residence that is used
habitually or from time to time by the debtor and the spouse or either of them
as the only or principal family residence;
“spouse” includes a person to whom the debtor is alleged
to be married by habit and repute.[29]
13 Special
provisions regarding movable property
Where immediately prior to a declaration the debtor owns or has an
interest in movable property jointly with one or more persons, the
debtor’s share or interest in that property shall vest in the Viscount
upon the making of a declaration as a tenancy in common in equal shares with
the other co-owners.
14 Security
interests
(1) Where immediately prior
to a declaration the debtor is beneficially entitled with other persons to any
movable property in undivided shares and that property is the subject of a
security interest, the security interest shall as from the date of the
declaration be apportioned between the persons beneficially entitled to the
property and the interest of the debtor vesting in the Viscount shall bear its
proportion of the security interest.
(2) Article 6 of the Security Interests (Jersey) Law 1983, or Articles 56 and 59
of the Security Interests (Jersey)
Law 2012, shall apply to a security interest to which any movable property
of a debtor is subject, being, respectively, a continuing security interest
within paragraph (a) of the definition of “security interest”
in Article 1(1) or a security interest within paragraph (b) of that
definition.[30]
15 Power
to disclaim certain onerous property
(1) For the purpose of this
Article “onerous property” means –
(a) movable
property;
(b) a
contract lease;
(c) other
immovable property if it is situated outside Jersey,
that is unsaleable or not readily saleable or is such that it may
give rise to a liability to pay money or perform any other onerous act, and
includes an unprofitable contract.[31]
(2) The Viscount may,
within 6 months of the declaration, and by giving the notice prescribed by
the court, disclaim any onerous property of the debtor vested in the Viscount,
and may do so notwithstanding that the Viscount has taken possession of it,
endeavoured to sell it or otherwise exercised rights of ownership in respect of
it.[32]
(3) A disclaimer under this
Article shall –
(a) operate
so as to determine, as from the date of the disclaimer, the rights, interests
and liabilities of the debtor in or in respect of the property disclaimed; and
(b) discharge
the Viscount from all liability in respect of that property as from the date of
the declaration,
but shall not, except so far as is necessary for the purpose of
releasing the debtor, the debtor’s property and the Viscount from any
liability, affect the rights or liabilities of any other person.
(4) Any person sustaining
loss or damage in consequence of the operation of a disclaimer under this
Article shall be deemed to be a creditor of the debtor to the extent of the
loss or damage and accordingly may prove for the loss or damage.
15A Disclaimer of
contract leases[33]
(1) The disclaimer of a
contract lease does not take effect unless a copy of its disclaimer has been
served (so far as the Viscount is aware of their addresses) on every person
claiming under the debtor as a hypothecary creditor or under the lessee and
either –
(a) no
application under Article 16 is made with respect to the contract lease
before the end of the period of 14 days beginning with the day on which
the last notice under this paragraph was served; or
(b) where
such an application has been made, the court directs that the disclaimer is to
have effect.
(2) Where the court gives a
direction under paragraph (1)(b) it may also, instead of or in addition to
any order it makes under Article 16, make such orders with respect to
fixtures, tenant’s improvements and other matters arising out of the
lease as it thinks fit.
16 Powers
of court in respect of disclaimed property
(1) This Article applies
where the Viscount has disclaimed any property under Article 15.
(2) An application may be
made to the court under this Article by –
(a) any
person who claims an interest in the disclaimed property (which term shall be
taken to include, in the case of the disclaimer of a contract lease, a person
claiming under the debtor as a hypothecary creditor or an under lessee); or
(b) any
person who is under any liability in respect of the disclaimed property (which
term shall be taken to include a guarantor), not being a liability discharged
by the disclaimer.[34]
(3) Subject to paragraph (4),
the court may, on an application under this Article, make an order on such
terms as it thinks fit for the vesting of the disclaimed property in, or for
its delivery to –
(a) a
person entitled to it or a trustee for such a person; or
(b) a
person subject to such a liability as is mentioned in paragraph (2)(b) or
a trustee for such a person.
(4) The court shall not
make an order by virtue of paragraph (3)(b) except where it appears to the
court that it would be just to do so for the purpose of compensating the person
subject to the liability in respect of the disclaimer.
(5) The effect of any order
under this Article shall be taken into account in assessing for the purposes of
Article 15(4) the extent of any loss or damage sustained by any person in
consequence of the disclaimer.
17 Transactions
at an undervalue[35]
(1) If a debtor has at a
relevant time entered into a transaction with a person at an undervalue the
court may, on the application of the Viscount, make such an order as the court
thinks fit for restoring the position to what it would have been if the debtor
had not entered into the transaction.
(2) The court shall not
make an order under paragraph (1) if it is satisfied –
(a) that
the debtor entered into the transaction in good faith for the purpose of
carrying on a business or, in the case of a company, its business; and
(b) that,
at the time the debtor entered into the transaction, there were reasonable
grounds for believing that the transaction would be of benefit to the debtor.
(3) Without prejudice to
the generality of paragraph (1) but subject to paragraph (5), an
order made under paragraph (1) may do all or any of the following things,
namely –
(a) require
property transferred as part of the transaction to be vested in the Viscount;
(b) require
property to be so vested if it represents in a person’s hands the
application either of the proceeds of sale of property so transferred or of
money so transferred;
(c) release
or discharge (in whole or in part) security given by the debtor;
(d) require
a person to pay in respect of a benefit received by him or her from the debtor
such sum to the Viscount as the court directs;
(e) provide
for a surety or guarantor whose obligation to a person was released or
discharged (in whole or in part) under the transaction to be under such new or
revived obligation to that person as the court thinks appropriate;
(f) provide –
(i) for security to
be provided for the discharge of an obligation imposed by or arising under the
order,
(ii) for
the obligation to be secured on any property, and
(iii) for
the security to have the same priority as the security released or discharged
(in whole or in part) under the transaction;
(g) provide
for the extent to which a person –
(i) whose property is
vested in the Viscount by the order, or
(ii) on
whom an obligation is imposed by the order,
is to be able to prove in the “désastre” of the
debtor for debts or other liabilities that arose from, or were released or
discharged (in whole or in part) under or by, the transaction.
(4) Except to the extent
provided by paragraph (5), an order made under paragraph (1) may
affect the property of or impose an obligation on any person, whether or not he
or she is the person with whom the debtor entered into the transaction.
(5) An order made under
paragraph (1) –
(a) shall
not prejudice an interest in property that was acquired from a person other
than the debtor and was acquired in good faith and for value, or prejudice any
interest deriving from such an interest; and
(b) shall
not require a person who in good faith and for value received a benefit from
the transaction to pay a sum to the Viscount, except where the person was a
party to the transaction.
(6) In considering for the
purposes of this Article whether a person has acted in good faith, the court
may take into consideration –
(a) whether
the person was aware –
(i) that the debtor
had entered into a transaction at an undervalue, and
(ii) that
the debtor was insolvent or would as a likely result of entering into the
transaction become insolvent; and
(b) whether
the person was an associate of or was connected with either the debtor or the
person with whom the debtor had entered into the transaction.
(7) For the purposes of
this Article, a debtor enters into a transaction with a person at an undervalue
if –
(a) he or
she makes a gift to that person;
(b) he or
she enters into a transaction with that person –
(i) by way of a
marriage settlement, or
(ii) on
terms for which there is no “cause”, or
(iii) for a
“cause” the value of which, in money or money’s worth, is
significantly less than the value, in money or money’s worth, of the
“cause” provided by the debtor.
(8) Subject to paragraphs (9)
and (10), the time at which a debtor entered into a transaction at an
undervalue is a relevant time for the purpose of paragraph (1) if the transaction
was entered into during the period of 5 years immediately preceding the
making of the declaration.
(9) The time to which
paragraph (8) refers is not a relevant time unless –
(a) the
debtor was insolvent when he or she entered into the transaction; or
(b) the
debtor became insolvent as a result of the transaction.
(10) If the transaction at an
undervalue was entered into with a person connected with the debtor or with an
associate of the debtor, paragraph (9) does not apply and the time to
which paragraph (8) refers is a relevant time unless it is proved
that –
(a) the
debtor was not insolvent when he or she entered into the transaction; and
(b) the
debtor did not become insolvent as a result of the transaction.
(11) For the purposes of this
Article “cause” has the meaning assigned to it by the customary law
of Jersey.
17A Giving of
preferences[36]
(1) If a debtor has at a
relevant time given a preference to a person the court may, on the application
of the Viscount, make such an order as the court thinks fit for restoring the
position to what it would have been if the preference had not been given.
(2) Without prejudice to
the generality of paragraph (1) but subject to paragraph (4), an
order made under paragraph (1) may do all or any of the following things,
namely –
(a) require
property transferred in connection with the giving of the preference to be
vested in the Viscount;
(b) require
property to be vested in the Viscount if it represents in any person’s
hands the application either of the proceeds of sale of property so transferred
or of money so transferred;
(c) release
or discharge (in whole or in part) security given by the debtor;
(d) require
a person to pay in respect of a benefit received by him or her from the debtor
such sum to the Viscount as the court directs;
(e) provide
for a surety or guarantor whose obligation to a person was released or
discharged (in whole or in part) by the giving of the preference to be under
such new or revived obligation to that person as the court thinks appropriate;
(f) provide –
(i) for security to
be provided for the discharge of any obligation imposed by or arising under the
order,
(ii) for
such an obligation to be secured on any property, and
(iii) for
the security to have the same priority as the security released or discharged
(in whole or in part) by the giving of the preference; and
(g) provide
for the extent to which a person –
(i) whose property is
vested by the order in the Viscount, or
(ii) on
whom obligations are imposed by the order,
is to be able to prove in the “désastre” of the
debtor for debts or other liabilities that arose from, or were released or
discharged (in whole or in part) under or by the giving of the preference.
(3) Except as provided by
paragraph (4), an order made under paragraph (1) may affect the
property of, or impose an obligation on, any person whether or not he or she is
the person to whom the preference was given.
(4) An order made under
paragraph (1) shall not –
(a) prejudice
an interest in property that was acquired from a person other than the debtor
and was acquired in good faith and for value, or prejudice any interest
deriving from such an interest; or
(b) require
a person who in good faith and for value received a benefit from the preference
to pay a sum to the Viscount, except where the payment is in respect of a
preference given to that person at a time when he or she was a creditor of the
debtor.
(5) In considering for the
purpose of this Article whether a person has acted in good faith the court may
take into consideration –
(a) whether
the person had notice –
(i) of the
circumstances that amounted to the giving of the preference by the debtor, and
(ii) of
the fact that the debtor was insolvent or would as a likely result of giving
the preference become insolvent; and
(b) whether
the person was an associate of or was connected with either the debtor or the
person to whom the debtor gave the preference.
(6) For the purposes of
this Article, a debtor gives a preference to a person if –
(a) the
person is a creditor of the debtor or a surety or guarantor for a debt or other
liability of the debtor; and
(b) the
debtor –
(i) does anything, or
(ii) suffers
anything to be done,
that has the effect of putting the person into a position which, in
the event of a declaration being made in respect of that debtor’s
property, will be better than the position he or she would have been in if that
thing had not been done.
(7) The court shall not
make an order under this Article in respect of a preference given to a person
unless the debtor, when giving the preference, was influenced in deciding to
give the preference by a desire to put the person into a position which, in the
event of a declaration being made in respect of the debtor’s property,
would be better than the position in which the person would be if the
preference had not been given.
(8) A debtor who gave a
preference to a person who was, at the time the preference was given, an
associate of or connected with the debtor (otherwise than by reason only of
being the person’s employee) shall be presumed, unless the contrary is
shown, to have been influenced in deciding to give the preference by the desire
mentioned in paragraph (7).
(9) Subject to paragraphs (10)
and (11), the time at which a debtor gives a preference is a relevant time for
the purpose of paragraph (1) if the preference was given during the period
of 12 months immediately preceding the making of the declaration.
(10) The time to which paragraph (9)
refers is not a relevant time unless –
(a) the
debtor was insolvent at the time the preference was given; or
(b) the
debtor became insolvent as a result of giving the preference.
(11) If the preference was given
to a person connected with the debtor or to an associate of the debtor,
paragraph (10) does not apply and the time to which paragraph (9)
refers is a relevant time unless it is proved that –
(a) the
debtor was not insolvent at the time the preference was given; and
(b) the
debtor did not become insolvent as a result of the preference being given.
17B Certain definitions
in respect of Articles 17 and 17A[37]
(1) For the purposes of
Articles 17 and 17A, a person is connected with a company if the person
is –
(a) a
director of the company;
(b) an
associate of a director of the company; or
(c) an
associate of the company.
(1A) For the purposes of Articles 17
and 17A, a person is connected with an incorporated limited partnership if
the person is –
(a) a
general partner of the partnership;
(b) an
associate of a general partner of the partnership; or
(c) an
associate of the partnership.[38]
(1B) For the purposes of
Articles 17 and 17A, a person is connected with a limited liability
company if the person is –
(a) a
manager of the limited liability company;
(b) a
member of the limited liability company who is involved in its management; or
(c) an
associate of such a manager or member.[39]
(2) For the purposes of
Articles 17 and 17A and of this Article –
(a) a
person is an associate of an individual if that person is the
individual’s husband or wife or civil partner, or is a relative, or the
husband or wife or civil partner of a relative, of the individual or of the
individual’s husband or wife or civil partner;
(b) a
person is an associate of any person with whom he or she is in partnership
(whether or not such a partnership is a limited partnership), and of the
husband or wife or civil partner or a relative of any individual with whom he
or she is in partnership;
(c) a
person is an associate of any person whom he or she employs or by whom he or
she is employed;
(d) a
person in his or her capacity as a trustee of a trust is an associate of
another person if –
(i) the beneficiaries
of the trust include that other person or an associate of that other person, or
(ii) the
terms of the trust confer a power that may be exercised for the benefit of that
other person or an associate of that other person;
(e) a
company is an associate of another company –
(i) if the same
person has control of both companies, or a person has control of one company
and either persons who are his or her associates, or he or she and persons who
are his or her associates, have control of the other company, or
(ii) if
each company is controlled by a group of 2 or more persons and the groups
either consist of the same persons or could be regarded as consisting of the
same persons by treating (in one or more cases) a member of either group as
replaced by a person of whom he or she is an associate;
(f) a
company is an associate of another person if that person has control of the
company or if that person and persons who are his or her associates together
have control of the company;
(fa) a limited
partner of an incorporated limited partnership is an associate of a general
partner of the partnership;
(fb) an
incorporated limited partnership is an associate of another body corporate if
the same person has control of both of those bodies corporate, or a person has
control of one of those bodies corporate and either persons who are his or her
associates, or he or she and persons who are his or her associates, have
control of the other body corporate;
(fc) an
incorporated limited partnership is an associate of another body corporate if
each of those bodies corporate is controlled by a group of 2 or more persons,
and the groups either consist of the same persons or could be regarded as
consisting of the same persons by treating (in one or more cases) a member of
either group as replaced by a person of whom he or she is an associate;
(fd) an
incorporated limited partnership is an associate of another person if that
person has control of the partnership or if that person and persons who are his
or her associates together have control of the partnership;
(fe) a manager
of a limited liability company is an associate of a member of the limited
liability company;
(ff) a limited
liability company is an associate of a body corporate if –
(i) the same person
has control of both the limited liability company and the body corporate,
(ii) a
person has control of the limited liability company or the body corporate and
is an associate of the person who has control of the other (whether together
with or without the person), or
(iii) a
group of persons each has control of both the limited liability company and the
body corporate and the groups contain the same persons or could be regarded as
containing the same persons by treating a member of either group as replaced by
an associate of the member;
(fg) a limited
liability company is an associate of a person if the person has control of the
limited liability company or if the person has control of the limited liability
company together with an associate of the person; and
(g) a
provision that a person is an associate of another person shall be taken to
mean that they are associates of each other.[40]
(3) For the purposes of
this Article a person is a relative of an individual if he or she is that
individual’s brother, sister, uncle, aunt, nephew, niece, lineal ancestor
or lineal descendant, for which purpose –
(a) any
relationship of the half blood shall be treated as a relationship of the whole
blood and the stepchild or adopted child of a person as his or her child; and
(b) an
illegitimate child shall be treated as the legitimate child of his or her
mother and reputed father.
(4) References in this
Article to a husband or wife include a former husband or wife and a reputed
husband or wife.
(4A) References in this Article to a civil
partner include a former civil partner and a reputed civil partner.[41]
(5) For the purposes of
this Article, a director or other officer of a company shall be treated as employed
by the company.
(5A) For the purposes of this Article, a
general partner of an incorporated limited partnership shall be treated as
employed by the partnership.[42]
(6) For the purposes of
this Article, a person shall be taken as having control of a company
if –
(a) the
directors of the company or of another company that has control of it (or any
of them) are accustomed to act in accordance with his or her directions or
instructions; or
(b) he or
she is entitled –
(i) to exercise, or
(ii) to
control the exercise of,
more than one third of the voting power at any general meeting of
the company or of another company which has control of it,
and where 2 or more persons together satisfy either of the above
conditions, they shall be taken as having control of the company.
(6A) For the purposes of this Article, a
person shall be taken as having control of an incorporated limited partnership
if –
(a) the
terms of the partnership agreement so provide;
(b) the
general partners of the partnership or of another body corporate which has
control of it (or any of them) are accustomed to act in accordance with his or
her directions or instructions; or
(c) he or
she has control (within the meaning of this Article) of another body corporate
which has control of the partnership,
and where 2 or more persons together satisfy either of the above
conditions, they shall be taken as having control of the partnership.[43]
(7) For the purposes of
this Article, a person (whether together with or without another person) has
control of a limited liability company if –
(a) the
terms of the LLC agreement so provide;
(b) the
members involved in the management of the limited liability company, or the
manager of the limited liability company, are accustomed to act in accordance
with the person’s direction or instructions;
(c) the
directors, managers, secretary or other similar officers of a body corporate or
other entity, which has control of the limited liability company, are
accustomed to act in accordance with the person’s direction or
instructions; or
(d) the
person has control of a body corporate or other entity which has control of the
limited liability company.[44]
17C Extortionate
credit transactions[45]
(1) This Article applies
where a debtor is, or has been, a party to a transaction for, or involving, the
provision of credit to the debtor.
(2) The court may, on the
application of the Viscount, make an order with respect to the transaction if
the transaction is or was extortionate and was entered into in the period of
3 years ending with the declaration.
(3) For the purposes of
this Article, a transaction is extortionate if, having regard to the risk
accepted by the person providing the credit –
(a) the
terms of it are or were such as to require grossly exorbitant payments to be
made (whether unconditionally or in certain contingencies) in respect of the
provision of the credit; or
(b) it
otherwise grossly contravened ordinary principles of fair dealing.
(4) It shall be presumed,
unless the contrary is proved, that a transaction with respect to which an
application is made under this Article is or, as the case may be, was
extortionate.
(5) An order under this
Article with respect to a transaction may contain one or more of the following
as the court thinks fit –
(a) provision
setting aside the whole or part of an obligation created by the transaction;
(b) provision
otherwise varying the terms of the transaction or varying the terms on which a
security for the purposes of the transaction is held;
(c) provision
requiring a person who is or was a party to the transaction to pay to the
Viscount sums paid to that person, by virtue of the transaction, by the debtor;
(d) provision
requiring a person to surrender to the Viscount property held by him or her as
security for the purposes of the transaction;
(e) provision
directing accounts to be taken between any persons.
17D Recovery of
excessive approved pension arrangement contributions[46]
(1) Where a debtor has
excluded rights under an approved pension arrangement, the Viscount may apply
to the court for an order under this Article.
(2) If the court is
satisfied –
(a) that
the rights under the arrangement are to any extent, and whether directly or
indirectly, the fruits of relevant contributions; and
(b) that
the making of any of the relevant contributions (“the excessive
contributions”) has unfairly prejudiced the debtor’s creditors,
the court may make such order as it thinks fit for restoring the
position to what it would have been had the excessive contributions not been
made.
(3) In paragraph (2)
“relevant contributions” means contributions to the approved
pension arrangement or any other pension arrangement –
(a) that
the debtor has at any time made on his or her own behalf; or
(b) that
have at any time been made on his or her behalf.
(4) The court shall, in
determining whether it is satisfied under paragraph (2)(b), consider in
particular –
(a) whether
any of the contributions were made for the purpose of putting assets beyond the
reach of the debtor’s creditors or any of them; and
(b) whether
the total amount of any contributions –
(i) made by or on
behalf of the debtor to pension arrangements, and
(ii) represented
(whether directly or indirectly) by excluded rights under the approved pension
arrangement,
is an amount which is excessive in view of the debtor’s
circumstances when those contributions were made.
(5) For the purposes of
this Article, rights of a debtor under an approved pension arrangement are
excluded rights if they are rights which are excluded from forming part of his
or her property by virtue of Regulations made under Article 8A.
(6) Without prejudice to
the generality of paragraph (2), an order under that paragraph may include
provision –
(a) requiring
the person responsible for the approved pension arrangement to pay an amount to
the Viscount;
(b) adjusting
the liabilities of the arrangement in respect of the debtor;
(c) adjusting
any liabilities of the arrangement in respect of any other person that derive,
directly or indirectly, from rights of the debtor under the arrangement;
(d) for
the recovery by the person responsible for the arrangement (whether by
deduction from any amount which that person is ordered to pay or otherwise) of
costs incurred by that person in complying in the debtor’s case with any
requirement under paragraph (12) or in giving effect to the order.
(7) In paragraph (6),
references to adjusting the liabilities of the arrangement in respect of a
person include (in particular) reducing the amount of any benefit or future
benefit to which that person is entitled under the arrangement.
(8) The maximum amount
which the person responsible for an arrangement may be required to pay by an
order under paragraph (2) is the lesser of –
(a) the
amount of the excessive contributions; and
(b) the
value of the debtor’s rights under the approved pension arrangement.
(9) An order under
paragraph (2) that requires the person responsible for an arrangement to
pay an amount (“the restoration amount”) to the Viscount must
provide for the liabilities of the arrangement to be correspondingly reduced.
(10) For the purposes of paragraph (9),
liabilities are correspondingly reduced if the difference between –
(a) the
amount of the liabilities immediately before the reduction; and
(b) the
amount of the liabilities immediately after the reduction,
is equal to the restoration amount.
(11) An order under paragraph (2)
in respect of an arrangement –
(a) shall
be binding on the person responsible for the arrangement; and
(b) overrides
provisions of the arrangement to the extent that they conflict with the
provisions of the order.
(12) The person responsible
for –
(a) an
approved pension arrangement under which a debtor has rights; or
(b) a
pension arrangement under which a debtor has at any time had rights,
shall, on the Viscount making a written request, provide the
Viscount with such information about the arrangement and rights as the Viscount
may reasonably require for, or in connection with, the making of applications
under paragraph (2).
(13) Where any sum is required by
an order under paragraph (2) to be paid to the Viscount that sum shall
form part of the debtor’s property.
(14) References in this Article to
the person responsible for an approved pension arrangement are to –
(a) the
trustees, managers or provider of the arrangement; or
(b) the
person having functions in relation to the arrangement corresponding to those
of a trustee, manager or provider.
(15) In this Article
“approved pension arrangement” means a pension arrangement
prescribed by Regulations made under Article 8A.
PART 5
CONTROL OVER PERSON AND
PROPERTY OF DEBTOR
18 General
duties of debtor
(1) In addition to every
other duty imposed on the debtor by this Law or any other enactment or by law,
the debtor shall, to the utmost of the debtor’s power, aid the Viscount
in the realization of the debtor’s property and the distribution of the
proceeds amongst the debtor’s creditors, and, more particularly,
shall –
(a) give
a complete and accurate list of the debtor’s property and of the
debtor’s creditors and debtors and such other information as to the
debtor’s property as the Viscount requires, and attend before the
Viscount whenever called upon to do so;
(b) disclose
to the Viscount as soon as practicable any property which may be acquired by
the Viscount during the course of the désastre;
(c) execute
an assignment in favour of the Viscount of any property which has been acquired
by, or has devolved upon, the debtor since the date of the declaration;
(d) supply
such information regarding his or her expenditure and sources of income after
the declaration as the Viscount may require;[47]
(e) deliver
on demand all or any of the debtor’s property that is divisible amongst
the debtor’s creditors and is under the debtor’s possession or
control to the Viscount or anyone authorized by the Viscount to take possession
of it or any part thereof;
(f) deliver
on demand to the Viscount or anyone authorized by the Viscount any property
that is acquired by the debtor during the course of the désastre;
(g) notify
the Viscount immediately in writing of any change of the debtor’s
address, employment or name.
(2) If the debtor is a
company, an incorporated limited partnership or a limited liability company, a
person who is or was at the time of the declaration any of the following must,
as soon as reasonably practicable in writing, notify the Viscount of any change
to the person’s address, employment or name –
(a) a
director of the company;
(b) a
manager of the limited liability company or a member of the limited liability
company involved in its management; or
(c) a
general partner of the partnership. [48]
(2A) If a person without reasonable
excuse fails to comply with a requirement of paragraph (1) or (2) he or
she commits an offence and is liable to imprisonment for a term of 6 months and
a fine.[49]
(3) Where an offence under
this Article which has been committed by a company is proved to have been
attributable to any director, manager, secretary or other officer of the
company, or any person who was purporting to act in any such capacity, or any
liquidator of the company, he or she, as well as the company, shall be deemed
to be guilty of that offence and shall be liable to be proceeded against and
punished accordingly.
19 Failure
to keep proper accounts of business
(1) Where the debtor has
been engaged in any business for any of the period of 2 years ending with the
date of the declaration, the debtor commits an offence if he or she has
not –
(a) kept
proper accounting records throughout that period; or
(b) preserved
all the accounting records which the debtor has kept.
(2) The debtor shall not be
guilty of an offence under paragraph (1)(a) if –
(a) the
debtor’s unsecured liabilities at the date of the declaration did not
exceed the amount prescribed by the Minister; or
(b) the
debtor proves that in the circumstances in which the debtor carried on business
the omission was honest and excusable.[50]
(3) The debtor shall not be
guilty of an offence under paragraph (1)(b) if the debtor complies with
paragraph (2)(b).
(4) For the purposes of
this Article, a person shall be deemed not to have kept proper accounting
records if the person has not kept such records as are necessary to show or
explain the person’s transactions and financial position in the
person’s business, including –
(a) records
containing entries from day to day, in sufficient detail, of all cash received
and paid;
(b) where
the business involved dealings in goods, statements of annual stock-takings;
and
(c) except
in the case of goods sold by way of retail trade to the actual customer,
records of all goods sold and purchased showing the buyers and sellers in
sufficient detail to enable the goods and the buyers and sellers to be
identified.
(5) A debtor who commits an
offence under paragraph (1) is liable to a fine or to imprisonment for a
term not exceeding 6 months, or to both.
(6) Where an offence under
paragraph (1) has been committed by a company, any director, or any person
who was purporting to act in such capacity who knowingly and wilfully
authorized or permitted the offence shall be guilty of that offence and shall
be liable to be proceeded against and punished accordingly.
20 Attendance
of persons respecting debtor or the debtor’s property
(1) The Viscount may, at
any time, summon before the Viscount –
(a) the
debtor;
(b) the
wife or husband or civil partner of the debtor; or
(c) any
other person known or suspected to have in the person’s possession any of
the property, or any book, paper, document or record relating to the affairs or
property, of the debtor, or supposed to be indebted to the debtor, or whom the
Viscount thinks capable of giving any information respecting the debtor, the
debtor’s trade, dealings, or property, or concerning the debtor’s
income from any source, or the debtor’s expenditure, and may require the
person so summoned to produce and surrender to the Viscount any book, paper,
document or record in the person’s custody or power relating to the
dealings or property of the debtor.[51]
(2) Where the debtor is a
company , an incorporated limited partnership or a limited liability company, the
Viscount may at any time summon any officer of the company or partnership or
person known or suspected to have in his or her possession any of its property
or supposed to be indebted to it, or any person whom the Viscount deems capable
of giving information concerning the promotion, formation, trade, dealings,
affairs or property of the company or partnership.[52]
(3) The Viscount may apply
to the court for an order to question before the Viscount the debtor or any
other person referred to in paragraph (1) or (2) on oath.
(4) If the debtor or any
other person summoned before the Viscount under paragraph (1) or
(2) –
(a) fails
without reasonable excuse to come before the Viscount at the time appointed; or
(b) not
being questioned on oath –
(i) makes any statement
knowing it to be false in a material particular, or
(ii) wilfully
misleads or attempts to mislead the Viscount,
the debtor or other person commits an offence and is liable to a
fine or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 6 months, or to both.
(5) For the purposes of
paragraph (2), “officer” –
(a) in
the case of a company, includes a director, manager or secretary;
(b) in
the case of an incorporated limited partnership, means a general partner; and
(c) in
the case of a limited liability company, means a manager or a member of the
limited liability company.[53]
(6) A person shall not
under this Article be required to disclose any information or produce any
document which the person would be entitled to refuse to disclose or produce on
grounds of legal professional privilege in the Royal Court.
21 Unenforceability
of liens on records[54]
(1) Subject to paragraph (2),
a lien or other right to retain possession of a record of the debtor shall be
unenforceable to the extent that its enforcement would deny possession of the
record to the Viscount.
(2) Paragraph (1) does
not apply to a lien on a document that gives a title to property and is held as
such.
22 Privilege
of witnesses
Any debtor or other person who is being questioned by the Viscount
under Article 20 shall be excused from answering any question on the
ground that the answer may incriminate or tend to incriminate him or her or his
or her spouse or civil partner.[55]
23 Viscount
may make allowance to debtor
The Viscount may from time to time make such an allowance of money
as the Viscount thinks just out of the property of the debtor for the support
of the debtor and his or her dependants.
24 Debtors
prohibited from acting in certain capacities[56]
(1) In this
Article –
“person to whom this Article applies” means –
(a) a
debtor during the course of the “désastre”;
(b) a
person who is or has the status of an undischarged bankrupt (by whatever name
called) under the laws of any other jurisdiction;
“private office” means the office of delegate, director
of a company, “electeur”, liquidator of a company, general partner
of an incorporated limited partnership, manager of a limited liability company,
trustee, “tuteur”, executor or administrator of a deceased
person’s estate or the donee of a power of attorney;
“public office” means the office of Centenier,
Vingtenier, Constable’s Officer, “Procureur du Bien Public”,
member of the Assessment Committee constituted under the Parish Rate
(Administration) (Jersey) Law 2003.[57]
(2) A person to whom this
Article applies shall not hold a public or private office.
(3) A person who at the
time of becoming a person to whom this Article applies is the holder of a
public or private office shall resign from the office forthwith.
(4) Subject to paragraph (5),
a person to whom this Article applies is not qualified to sit on a jury.
(5) If a person who is
sitting on a jury becomes a person to whom this Article applies the person is
qualified to continue to sit on that jury until his or her services on the jury
are no longer required.
(6) A person
who –
(a) contravenes
paragraph (2); or
(b) fails
to comply with paragraph (3); or
(c) sits
on a jury when he or she is not qualified to do so by virtue of paragraph (4),
commits an offence and is liable to imprisonment for a term of
6 months and a fine.
(7) Where the debtor is a
company, the Court may, on the application of the Viscount, make any order in
respect of a person who is or was a director of the company that it would be
permitted to make under Article 78 of the Companies Law in respect of such
a person.
25 Requirement
that debtor disclose declaration
(1) No debtor shall obtain
credit, in excess of such sum as shall be prescribed by the Minister, during
the course of the désastre unless the
debtor informs the intending creditor of the declaration.[58]
(2) A debtor who
contravenes paragraph (1) commits an offence and is liable to a fine or to
imprisonment for a term not exceeding 6 months, or to both.
Part 6
ADMINISTRATION OF
DEBTOR’S ESTATE
26 General
powers of Viscount
Subject to the provisions of this Law, the Viscount may –
(a) hold property of every
description;
(b) bring, institute, or
defend any action or other legal proceedings relating to the property of the
debtor whether situated in Jersey or elsewhere;
(c) refer any dispute to
arbitration, or at the Viscount’s discretion compromise all debts,
claims, and liabilities, whether present or future, certain or contingent,
liquidated or unliquidated, subsisting or supposed to subsist, between the
debtor and any person who may have incurred any liability to the debtor on such
terms as may be agreed upon;
(d) make such compromise or
other arrangements as are thought expedient with creditors, or persons claiming
to be creditors, in respect of any debts provable under the declaration;
(e) make such compromise or
other arrangements as are thought expedient with respect to any debt or other
claim secured upon the property of the debtor by a judicial or conventional
hypothec obtained against or created or consented to by any predecessor in title
of the debtor;
(f) accept for the
sale of any property of the debtor a sum of money payable at a future time,
subject to such conditions as to security and otherwise as the Viscount thinks
fit;
(g) make such compromise or
other arrangements as are thought expedient with respect to any claim arising
out of or incidental to the property of the debtor made or capable of being
made on the Viscount by any person or by the Viscount on any person;
(h) carry on the business
of the debtor as far as is necessary or expedient for the beneficial disposal
of the same and for that purpose may employ and pay the debtor or any other
person;
(i) expend money of
the debtor for the repair, maintenance, upkeep, or renovation of the property
of the debtor, whether or not the work is necessary for the purpose of the
salvage of the property;
(j) borrow any money
and charge any property of the debtor;
(k) employ any person to
transact any business or do any act required to be transacted or done in the
course of administration of a désastre,
including the receipt and payment of money;
(l) prove and draw a
dividend in respect of any debt due to the debtor;
(m) divide in its existing form
amongst the creditors according to its estimated value any property which from
its peculiar nature or other special circumstances cannot readily or
advantageously be sold;
(n) give receipts and
execute discharges and releases for any money received by the Viscount, which
receipts, discharges, or releases shall effectively discharge the person paying
the money from all responsibility in respect of the application thereof, and
execute any powers of attorney, deeds, and other instruments for the purpose of
carrying into effect the provisions of this Law;
(o) exercise any voting
rights on shares owned by the debtor;
(p) exercise any authority
or power or do any act in relation to the debtor’s property which the
debtor could have exercised or done if it were not for the declaration;
(q) from time to time
appoint an agent by power of attorney or otherwise to act for the Viscount,
either in or out of Jersey, in respect of any particular property and delegate
to any such agent all or any of the powers hereby conferred upon the Viscount
in respect of the property and from time to time revoke any such appointment
and fix the remuneration for any such agent, which shall be paid out of the
debtor’s property:
Provided that the powers conferred upon the Viscount by this Article
shall be in furtherance of and not in limitation of all other powers vested in
the Viscount.
27 Power
of Viscount to sell
(1) Subject to the
provisions of this Law, and to Article 12(3), the Viscount may sell the
whole or any part of the property of the debtor by public auction or public
tender on such terms and conditions as the Viscount thinks fit, with power to
buy in at any auction or to rescind or vary any contract for sale on such terms
as the Viscount thinks fit, and with power also to sell the whole thereof to
any person or to sell the same in parcels and in any order.
(2) In addition to the
powers given by paragraph (1), but subject to the provisions of this Law,
the Viscount may sell by private contract –
(a) any
perishable property;
(b) any
property offered for sale by public auction or public tender and not sold;
(c) any
property which, by reason of its nature, situation, value, or other special
circumstances, the Viscount considers it unnecessary or inadvisable to sell by
public auction or public tender.
(3) Except in the case of
perishable property none of the property of the debtor shall be sold until
after the specified date.
(4) For the purposes of
paragraph (3), “specified date” means the date specified in
Rules made under Article 2 by which statements of claim of creditors shall
be filed.
(5) Where a document is
made or executed in exercise of the power to sell conferred by this Article,
the title of any person acquiring title thereunder shall not be impeachable
except on the ground of fraud, or be affected on the ground that no case has
arisen to authorize the sale, or the power was otherwise improperly or
irregular exercised.
28 Reports
by Viscount to creditors
The Viscount may from time to time report to creditors on the
progress of a désastre.
Part 7
PROOFS OF DEBT
29 Provable
debts
(1) Except as provided in
paragraph (4), all debts and liabilities, present or future, or
contingent, to which the debtor is subject at the time of the declaration, or
to which the debtor becomes subject before payment of the final dividend by
reason of any obligation incurred before the time of the declaration, shall be
debts provable in the désastre.[59]
(2) Where a debt bears
interest, interest to the date of the declaration is provable as part of the
debt, except in the case of a debt secured by a hypothec, security interest, or
pledge, when interest is provable to the date of payment of the claim and
payable out of the proceeds of sale of the secured property to the extent that
it is required and able to meet it and is secured thereby.
(3) In the case of a debt
which, by reason of its being subject to any contingency or contingencies or
for any other reason does not bear a certain value, and a debt provable by
virtue of Article 15(4) the creditor shall make an estimate of its value.
(4) Where a declaration has
been made in respect of the property of a person before the commencement of
this Law, no debt or liability which would not have been provable in the désastre if this Law had not been passed
shall be provable in the désastre.
30 Creditors
to prove
(1) Unless exempted by
Rules made under Article 2, every creditor shall prove the
creditor’s debt at the time and in the manner prescribed by the court.[60]
(2) A creditor shall bear
the cost of proving the debt unless the court decides otherwise.
(3) Every creditor who has
lodged a proof shall be entitled to see and examine the proofs of other
creditors at a time fixed by the Viscount in accordance with Rules made under
Article 2.
(4) A creditor may from
time to time amend or withdraw the creditor’s proof and every such
amendment shall be subject to the same formalities as the original proof.
31 Proofs of debts to be examined and admitted or rejected[61]
(1) The Viscount may admit
or reject proof of a debt in whole or in part.
(2) Before admitting or
rejecting proof of a debt the Viscount shall examine the proof and any
statement opposing the admission of the debt.
(3) Before admitting or
rejecting proof of a debt the Viscount may require further evidence in support
of, or in opposition to, its admission.
(4) The Viscount may reject
in whole or part any claim for interest on a debt if the Viscount considers the
rate of interest to be extortionate.
(5) If the Viscount rejects
proof of a debt in whole or in part the Viscount shall serve notice of
rejection in the manner prescribed by the court on the person who provided the
proof.
(6) If the Viscount rejects
a statement opposing admission of a debt in whole or in part the Viscount shall
serve notice of rejection in the manner prescribed by the court on the person
who provided that statement.
(7) If a person upon whom
notice has been served in accordance with paragraph (5) or paragraph (6)
is dissatisfied with the decision of the Viscount and wants the decision
reviewed by the court he or she must, within the time prescribed by the court,
request the Viscount to apply to the court for a date to be fixed for the court
to review the decision.
(8) The Viscount shall
comply with a request made in accordance with paragraph (7).
PART 8
DISTRIBUTION OF ASSETS
32 Order
of payment of debts[62]
(1) Except as otherwise provided
by this Article, the Viscount shall apply money the Viscount receives by the
realization of the property of a debtor in the following order –
(a) in
payment of the Viscount’s fees and emoluments and all costs, charges,
allowances and expenses properly incurred by or payable by the Viscount in the
“désastre” (and any expenses of a liquidator as defined by
Article 15(7) of the Dormant Bank Accounts (Jersey) Law 2017);
(aa)
(b) in
payment to any employee of the debtor of any amount due to the employee at the
date of the declaration in respect of arrears of –
(i) wages or salary
for services rendered to the debtor during the 6 months immediately
preceding the declaration, and
(ii) holiday
pay and bonuses,
but not exceeding in either case such amount as may be prescribed by
the Minister;
(c) in
payment of –
(i) all sums payable
to the Health Insurance Fund under Article 25 of the Health Insurance (Jersey) Law 1967 and to the Social Security
Fund under Article 41 of the Social Security (Jersey) Law 1974,
(ia) all
amounts due as described in Article 45(3) of the Income Tax (Jersey) Law 1961 and all amounts due as
described in Article 47(8) of the Goods and Services Tax (Jersey) Law 2007,
(ii) an
amount due by the debtor to his or her landlord for the payment of rent due to
the extent, if any, that his or her claim qualifies for preference by virtue of
customary law,
(iii) parochial
rates due to any parish in Jersey for a period not exceeding 2 years;
(d) in
payment of all other debts proved in the “désastre”.[63]
(2) The debts referred to
in paragraphs (1)(b) and (c) shall rank equally between themselves and
shall be paid in full, unless the property of the debtor is insufficient to
meet them, in which case they shall abate in equal proportions between
themselves.
(3) Debts provable in the
“désastre”, other than those referred to in paragraph (2),
shall be paid on an equal footing.
(4) Except as provided by
paragraph (5), hypothecary creditors shall be entitled to preference in
the order of the date of creation of their respective judicial or conventional
hypothecs upon the proceeds of sale of any ‘hereditament, corporeal or
incorporeal’ upon which their respective judicial or conventional
hypothecs are secured.
(5) If the Viscount sells a
corporeal hereditament that is subject to a judicial or conventional hypothec
the proceeds of sale shall be applied first in payment of the costs,
disbursements and other charges necessarily incurred by the Viscount in
connection with the sale and the Viscount’s fees in connection with the
sale.
(6) If the proceeds of sale
of a “hereditament, corporeal or incorporeal,” upon which a
judicial or conventional hypothec is secured is insufficient to meet in full
the claim of a hypothecary creditor the balance shall rank for payment on the
same footing as other debts mentioned in paragraph (1)(d).
(7) Where any property of
the debtor is subject to a continuing security interest within paragraph (a)
of the definition of “security interest” in Article 1(1) or a
security interest within paragraph (b) of that definition, the proceeds of
sale of the property shall be applied in the manner provided by, respectively, Article 8(6)
of the Security Interests (Jersey)
Law 1983 or Part 7 of the Security Interests (Jersey) Law 2012.[64]
(8) If the debtor at any
time before the realisation in accordance with this Law of his or her property
has made application to the court to place his or her property in its hands
(remettre son bien entre les mains de la Justice) the reference in paragraph (1)(a)
to the Viscount’s costs, charges, allowances and expenses shall be taken
to include a reference to the costs (frais) of the Autorisés des Justice
payable by virtue of Article 10 of the Loi (1839) sur les remises des
biens.
(9) In this
Article –
(a) “corporeal
hereditament” has the meaning assigned to “corps de
bien-fonds” in Article 1 of the Loi (1880) sur la propriété
foncière;
(b) “incorporeal
hereditament” has the meaning assigned to “bien-fonds
incorporeal” in Article 1 of the Loi (1996) sur l’hypothèque des
biens-fonds incorporels.
33 Distribution
of assets
The Viscount shall distribute the assets among the persons entitled
to receive them in accordance with their respective claims as provided by
Article 32 as soon as practicable and may from time to time pay interim
dividends for this purpose.
34 Set
off
Where there have been mutual credits, mutual debts or other mutual
dealings between the debtor and a creditor, an account shall be taken of what
is due from the one party to the other as at the date of the declaration in
respect of such mutual dealings, and the sum due from one party shall be set
off against any sum due from the other party, and the balance of the account,
and no more, shall be claimed or paid on either side respectively.
35 Hire-purchase
agreements
Where the debtor is in possession of goods by virtue of a
hire-purchase agreement, the Viscount may settle the debtor’s
indebtedness under such agreement if the Viscount considers that it would be in
the interests of the creditors to do so.
36 Duty
of Viscount to report to creditors and pay final dividend[65]
(1) When the Viscount has
realised all the debtor’s property, or as much of it as in the
Viscount’s opinion can be realised without needlessly protracting the
“désastre”, the Viscount must –
(a) supply
all the creditors of the debtor with a report and accounts relating to the
“désastre”; and
(b) pay
whatever final dividend is due.
(2) The Viscount must notify
the registrar in writing of the date of payment of the final dividend if the
debtor is –
(a) a
company registered under the Companies Law;
(b) a
foundation;
(c) an
incorporated limited partnership; or
(d) a
limited liability company. [66]
(2A) [67]
(3) If the debtor is a
limited liability partnership, the Viscount must notify the registrar in
writing of the date of payment of the final dividend.
37 Surplus
of assets
(1) This Article shall have
effect where a surplus of assets remains after payment in full of the provable
debts and payment of the Viscount’s fees and emoluments and all costs,
charges, allowances and expenses incurred by or payable by the Viscount in the désastre.
(2) The Viscount may pay
interest on all provable debts not bearing interest at such rate as to the
Viscount seems reasonable having regard to the circumstances of the désastre.
(3) Where interest is paid
under this Article it shall be calculated from the date of the declaration.
(4) The Viscount shall
serve notice on the debtor and creditors of the rate fixed by the Viscount
under paragraph (2).
(5) Where any person to
whom notice has been given is dissatisfied with the decision of the Viscount
the person shall within 21 days of the date of such notice notify the Viscount
that the person wishes application to be made to the court for a variation of
the decision, and the Viscount shall apply to the court for a date to be fixed
for the hearing of such applications.
(6) If a surplus remains
after payment in full of interest referred to in this Article the Viscount
must –
(a) if
the debtor is a company and the memorandum or articles of the company do not
otherwise provide, distribute the surplus among the members of the company
according to their rights and interests in the company;
(aa) if the debtor is
an incorporated limited partnership and the partnership agreement does not
otherwise provide, distribute the surplus among the partners according to their
rights and interests in the partnership;
(ab) if the debtor is
a limited liability company and the LLC agreement does not otherwise provide,
distribute the surplus among the members according to their interests in the
limited liability company; and
(b) in
any other case, pay the surplus to the debtor.[68]
38 Status
of debtor following distribution of assets
(1) Until an order of
discharge under Article 41 takes effect –
(a) the
debtor shall not cease to be liable for any debts provable in the désastre that are still outstanding;
(b) no
action for the recovery of a debt incurred during the course of the désastre shall be taken against the debtor.
(2) Subject to paragraph (3),
where the debtor is a company registered under the Companies Law, foundation, incorporated
limited partnership or limited liability company, it is dissolved with effect
from the date on which the registrar receives the notice under Article 36(2)
or (2A) (as the case may be), which notice the registrar shall thereupon
register.[69]
(3) Paragraph (2)
shall not apply where the Attorney General has notified the registrar that
criminal proceedings have been instituted or are pending against the company,
foundation, limited liability company or incorporated limited partnership.[70]
PART 9
DISCHARGE WHERE DEBTOR IS
AN INDIVIDUAL
39 Application
of Part 9
This Part applies to debtors who are individuals.
40 Application
by Viscount for order of discharge
(1) Subject to paragraph (2),
at the expiration of 4 years from the date of the declaration the Viscount
shall apply to the court for an order discharging the debtor.
(2) The Viscount, the
debtor or a creditor of the debtor may apply to the court for an order that the
period referred to in paragraph (1) be reduced or extended.
41 Order
of discharge
(1) At the hearing of any
application for an order under Article 40(1), the court may –
(a) grant
an immediate order;
(b) grant
an order subject to such conditions as it thinks fit, or suspend an order for
such time as it thinks fit;
(c) grant
an order with or without such conditions as it thinks fit to take effect at a
specified future date;
(d) refuse
to make an order.
(2) At the hearing of an
application for an order under Article 40(2), the court shall make such
order as it thinks fit.
(3) If the court exercises
its powers under paragraph (1)(d) the Viscount, the debtor or a creditor
of the debtor may from time to time apply for an order under Article 40(1).
42 Effect
of order of discharge
(1) An order of discharge
shall release the debtor from all debts provable in the désastre except the following –
(a) any
debt or liability incurred by means of fraud or fraudulent breach of trust to
which the debtor was a party;
(b) any
debt or liability whereof the debtor has obtained forbearance by any fraud to
which the debtor was a party;
(c) any
debt or liability under a maintenance order (as that term is defined by the Maintenance
Orders (Facilities for Enforcement) Jersey) Law 2000) that is enforceable in
Jersey or elsewhere by virtue of that Law or the Maintenance Orders (Enforcement) (Jersey) Law
1999.[71]
(2) The prohibitions
imposed by Article 24 and the provisions of Article 25 shall, as from
the date at which an order under Article 41 takes effect, cease to apply
to the debtor.
PART 10[72]
Additional provisions where
the debtor is a company, limited liability company or incorporated limited
partnership [73]
42A Interpretation – Part 10
(1) Words and expressions
used in this Part and defined in the Companies Law have the same meaning in
this Part as they have in the Companies Law.[74]
(2) Words and expressions
(in addition to those already defined in Article 1(1) of this Law) which
are used in this Part and defined in the Incorporated Limited Partnerships (Jersey)
Law 2011 have the same meanings in this Part as they have in that Law.[75]
(3) Words and expressions
used in this Part (but not those already defined in Article 1(1) of this
Law) have the same meanings as they have in the Limited Liability Companies (Jersey)
Law 2018.[76]
43 Viscount
to report possible misconduct
(1) The Viscount in the
case of a “désastre” in respect of a company, incorporated
limited partnership or limited liability company must take the action specified
in paragraph (2) if it appears to the Viscount in the course of the
“désastre” –
(a) that
the company, partnership or limited liability company has committed a criminal
offence;
(b) that
a person has committed a criminal offence in relation to the company, partnership
or limited liability company; or
(c) in
the case of a director, that for any reason (whether in relation to the
company, or to a holding company of the company or to any subsidiary of such a
holding company) his or her conduct has been such that an order should be
sought against him or her under Article 78 of the Companies Law.[77]
(2) The Viscount
shall –
(a) forthwith
report the matter to the Attorney-General; and
(b) furnish
the Attorney-General with information and give him or her access to, and
facilities for inspecting and taking copies of, documents (being information or
documents in the possession or under the control of the Viscount and relating
to the matter in question) as the Attorney-General requires.
(3) Where a report is made
to the Attorney General under paragraph (2), the Attorney-General may
refer the matter to the Minister or the Commission for further enquiry.[78]
(4) Where a matter is
referred to the Minister or the Commission under paragraph (3) it shall
have effect as if it were a matter referred to the Minister or the Commission
under Article 184(4) of the Companies Law.[79]
(5) Where criminal
proceedings are instituted by the Attorney-General following a report or
reference under this Article the Viscount shall give the Attorney-General any
assistance in connection with the prosecution which the Viscount is reasonably
able to give.
44 Responsibility
of persons for wrongful trading
(1) Subject to paragraph (3),
if in the course of a “désastre” in respect of a company or
limited liability company it appears that paragraph (2) applies in
relation to a person who is or has been a director of the company or manager of
the limited liability company, the court on the application of the Viscount
may, if it thinks it proper to do so, order that that person be personally
responsible, without any limitation of liability, for all or any of the debts
or other liabilities of the company or the limited liability company arising
after the time referred to in paragraph (2).[80]
(2) This paragraph applies
in relation to a person if at a time before the date of the declaration that
person as a director of the company or manager of the limited liability company –
(a) knew
that there was no reasonable prospect that the company or limited liability
company would avoid a declaration or a creditors’ winding up; or
(b) on
the facts known to him or her was reckless as to whether the company or limited
liability company would avoid a declaration or such a winding-up.[81]
(3) The court shall not
make an order under paragraph (1) with respect to a person if it is
satisfied that after either condition specified in paragraph (2) was first
satisfied in relation to him or her the person took reasonable steps with a
view to minimising the potential loss to the company’s or limited
liability company’s creditors.[82]
(4) On the hearing of an
application under this Article, the Viscount may himself or herself give
evidence or call witnesses.
(5) In this Article,
“manager” has the same meaning as in Article 1 of the Limited
Liability Companies (General Provisions) (Jersey) Regulations 202-.[83]
45 Responsibility
for fraudulent trading
(1) If, in the course of a
désastre in respect of a company, an incorporated limited partnership or
a limited liability company, it appears that any business of the company, partnership
or limited liability company has been carried on with intent to defraud its
creditors or creditors of another person, or for a fraudulent purpose, the
court may, on the application of the Viscount, order that persons who were
knowingly parties to the carrying on of the business in that manner are to be
liable to make such contributions to the assets of the company, partnership or
limited liability company as the court thinks proper.[84]
(2) On the hearing of the
application the Viscount may himself or herself give evidence or call
witnesses.
(3) Where the court makes
an order under this Article or Article 44, it may give such further
directions as it thinks proper for giving effect to the order.
(4) Where the court makes
an order under this Article or Article 44 in relation to a person who is a
creditor of the company, partnership or limited liability company, it may
direct that the whole or part of a debt owed by the company, partnership or
limited liability company to that person and any interest thereon shall rank in
priority after all other debts owed by the company, partnership or limited
liability company and after any interest on those debts.[85]
(5) This Article and
Article 44 have effect notwithstanding that the person concerned may be
criminally liable in respect of matters on the ground of which the order under
paragraph (1) is to be made.
45A Liability in
respect of purchase or redemption of shares
(1) This Article applies
where a declaration has been made in respect of a company (other than an
open-ended investment company) and –
(a) it
has within 12 months before the declaration made a payment under Article 55
or Article 57 of the Companies Law or under Regulations made under Article 59
of that Law in respect of the redemption or purchase of its own shares;
(b) the
payment was not made wholly out of profits available for distribution or out of
the proceeds of a fresh issue of shares made for the purpose of the redemption
or purchase; and
(c) the
aggregate realisable value of the company’s assets and the amount paid by
way of contribution to its assets (apart from this Article) is not sufficient
for the payment of its liabilities and the expenses in connection with the “désastre”.
(2) In this Article, the
amount of a payment that has not been made wholly out of profits available for
distribution or out of the proceeds of a fresh issue of shares made for the
purpose of the redemption or purchase is referred to as “the relevant
payment”.
(3) Subject to paragraphs (5)
and (6), the court on the application of the Viscount may order –
(a) a
person from whom the shares were redeemed or purchased; or
(b) a
director,
to contribute in accordance with this Article to the company’s
assets so as to enable the insufficiency to be met.
(4) A person from whom any
shares were redeemed or purchased may be ordered to contribute an amount not
exceeding so much of the relevant payment as was made in respect of his or her
shares.
(5) A person from whom
shares were redeemed or purchased shall not be ordered to contribute under this
Article unless the court is satisfied that, when the person received payment
for his or her shares –
(a) the
person knew; or
(b) the
person ought to have concluded from the facts known to him or her,
that immediately after the relevant payment was made the company
would be unable to discharge its liabilities as they fell due, and that the
realisable value of the company’s assets would be less than the aggregate
of its liabilities.
(6) A director who has
expressed an opinion under Article 55(9) of the Companies Law may be
ordered, jointly and severally with any other person who is liable to
contribute under this Article, to contribute an amount not exceeding the
relevant payment, unless the court is satisfied that the director had grounds
for the opinion expressed.
(7) Where a person has
contributed an amount under this Article, the court may direct any other person
who is jointly and severally liable to contribute under this Article to pay to
him or her such amount as the court thinks just and reasonable.
(8) Article 45B does
not apply in relation to liability accruing by virtue of this Article.
(9) The States may by
Regulations extend or modify the provisions of this Article in such ways as may
appear to be reasonably necessary in consequence of any Regulations made under
Article 59 of the Companies Law.
45AA Liability in respect of
returned contributions[86]
(1) This Article applies where
a declaration has been made in respect of an incorporated limited partnership
and –
(a) the
partnership has within 6 months before the declaration made to a limited
partner a payment representing a return of any part of that partner’s
contribution to the partnership;
(b) the
payment was not made wholly out of profits available for distribution; and
(c) the
aggregate realisable value of the partnership’s assets and the amount
paid by way of contribution to its assets (apart from this Article) is not sufficient
for the payment of its liabilities and the expenses in connection with the
“désastre”.
(2) In this Article, the
amount of a payment which has not been made wholly out of profits available for
distribution is referred to as “the relevant payment”.
(3) Subject to paragraph (4),
the court on the application of the Viscount may order the limited partner to
whom the payment was made, or a general partner, to contribute in accordance
with this Article to the assets of the company or partnership so as to enable
the insufficiency to be met.
(4) A limited partner to
whom a payment was made may be ordered to contribute an amount not exceeding so
much of the relevant payment as the limited partner received, together with
such interest as may be payable by that partner to the incorporated limited
partnership under Article 16(2) of the Incorporated Limited Partnerships (Jersey)
Law 2011 in respect of the relevant payment.
45AB Liability in respect of distributions[87]
(1) This Article applies
if –
(a) a
declaration has been made in respect of a limited liability company;
(b) within
6 months before the declaration was made, the limited liability company
made a distribution to the member or released the member from the performance
of an obligation;
(c) the
distribution or release was made at a time when the limited liability company
was insolvent or became insolvent as a result of the distribution or release;
and
(d) the
aggregate realisable value of the limited liability company’s assets and
the amount paid by way of contribution to its assets (apart from this Article)
is not sufficient for the payment of its liabilities and expenses in connection
with the “désastre”.
(2) Subject to
paragraph (3), the court, on the application of the Viscount, may order
the member to whom the payment was made or who was released from the obligation
to contribute in accordance with this Article to the assets of the limited
liability company to enable the insufficiency to be met.
(3) A member to whom a payment
was made or who was released from an obligation may be ordered to contribute
an amount not exceeding the amount of the relevant payment that the member
received, or the value of the obligation from which that member was released.
45B Liability as
contributories of present and past members
(1) Except as otherwise
provided by this Article, where a declaration has been made in respect of a
company, each present and past member of the company is liable to contribute to
its assets to an amount sufficient for payment of its liabilities, the expenses
of the “désastre”, and for the adjustment of the rights of
the contributories among themselves.
(2) A past member of a
particular class is not, as a member of that class, liable to
contribute –
(a) unless
it appears to the court that the present members of that class are unable to
satisfy the contributions required to be made by them as such members;
(b) if he
or she ceased to be a member of that class for 12 months or more before
the declaration; or
(c) in
respect of a liability of the company contracted after he or she ceased to be a
member of that class.
(3) A past or present
guarantor member is not liable in that capacity to contribute unless it appears
to the court that the past and present members in their capacity as the holders
of limited shares are unable to satisfy the contributions required to be made
by them as such members.
(4) A past or present
member in his or her capacity as the holder of an unlimited share is not liable
to contribute unless it appears to the court that the past and present members
in their capacities as the holders of limited shares or as guarantor members
are unable to satisfy the contributions required to be made by them as such
members.
(5) A contribution shall
not be required from a past or present member, as such a member,
exceeding –
(a) any
amount unpaid on any limited shares in respect of which he or she is liable; or
(b) the
amount undertaken to be contributed by him or her to the assets of the company
if it should be wound up.
(6) A sum due to a member
of the company, in his or her capacity as a member, by way of dividends,
profits or otherwise is not in a case of competition between himself or herself
and any other creditor who is not a member of the company, a liability of the
company payable to that member, but any such sum may be taken into account for
the purpose of the final adjustment of the rights of the contributors among
themselves.
45C Liability as
contributories of present and past partners of incorporated limited
partnerships[88]
(1) Except as otherwise
provided by this Article, where a declaration has been made in respect of an
incorporated limited partnership, each present and past partner of the
partnership is liable to contribute to its assets to an amount sufficient for
payment of its liabilities, the expenses of the “désastre”,
and for the adjustment of the rights of the contributories among themselves.
(2) A contribution shall
not be required from a present or past limited partner of an incorporated
limited partnership, as such a partner, exceeding the amount for which, by
virtue of Articles 16 and 17 of the Incorporated Limited Partnerships (Jersey)
Law 2011, he or she is liable to the
partnership.
(3) A sum due to a partner
of an incorporated limited partnership in his or her capacity as a partner, by
way of profits or otherwise, is not in a case of competition between himself or
herself and any other creditor who is not a partner of the partnership a
liability of the partnership payable to that partner, but any such sum may be
taken into account for the purpose of the final adjustment of the rights of the
contributors among themselves.
45D Liability as
contributories of present and past members of limited liability companies[89]
(1) Except as otherwise
provided by this Article, where a declaration has been made in respect of a
limited liability company, each present and past member of the limited
liability company is liable to contribute to its assets to an amount sufficient
for payment of its liabilities, the expenses of the
“désastre”, and for the adjustment of the rights of the
contributories among themselves.
(2) A contribution is not
required from a present or past member of a limited liability company exceeding
the amount for which, under Article 30 of the Limited Liability Companies (Jersey)
Law 2018, that member is liable to
the limited liability company.
(3) A sum due to a member
of a limited liability company in his or her capacity as a member, by way of
profits or otherwise, is not in a case of competition between that member and
any other creditor who is not a member of the limited liability company a
liability of the limited liability company payable to that member, but any such
sum may be taken into account for the purpose of the final adjustment of the
rights of the contributors among themselves.
PART 11
ABOLITION OF CERTAIN
CUSTOMARY LAW CONCEPTS
46 Norman
Customary Dower
The dower, known as Norman
Customary Dower, is abolished.
47 Désastre maritime
Any customary rule of law
providing for a désastre
maritime and for the order of payment of debts
in such a désastre is abolished.
PART 12
MISCELLANEOUS AND citation
48 Limitation
of liability[90]
(1) No person or body to
whom this Article applies shall be liable in damages for anything done or
omitted in the discharge of or purported discharge of any functions under this
Law or any enactment made or purportedly made, under this Law, unless it is
shown that the act or omission was in bad faith.
(2) The Article applies
to –
(a) the
States;
(b) the
Minister or any person who is, or is acting as, an officer, servant or agent in
an administration of the States for which the Minister is assigned
responsibility or who is performing any duty or exercising any power on behalf
of the Minister;
(c) the
Commission, any Commissioner or any person who is, or is acting as an officer,
servant or agent of the Commission or performing any duty or exercising any
power on behalf of the Commission; and
(d) the
Viscount or any member of the Viscount’s Department.[91]
49 Assistance
for other courts in insolvency matters
(1) The court may, to the
extent it thinks fit, assist the courts of a relevant country or territory in
all matters relating to the insolvency of a person, and when doing so may have
regard to the extent it considers appropriate to the provisions for the time
being of any model law on cross border insolvency prepared by the United
Nations Commission on International Trade Law.[92]
(2) For the purposes of
paragraph (1), a request from a court of a relevant country or territory
for assistance shall be sufficient authority for the court to exercise, in
relation to the matters to which the request relates, any jurisdiction which it
or the requesting court could exercise in relation to these matters if they
otherwise fell within its jurisdiction.[93]
(3) In exercising its
discretion for the purposes of this Article the court shall have regard in
particular to the rules of private international law.
(4) In this Article
“relevant country or territory” means a country or territory
prescribed by the Minister.[94]
49A Orders[95]
The Minister may make Orders prescribing any matter that is to be
prescribed by the Minister by any provision of this Law.
50 Registration
in the Public Registry[96]
The Judicial Greffier shall register in the Public Registry all
Acts, orders and notices affecting immovable property made under this Law.
51 Citation
This Law may be cited as the Bankruptcy (Désastre) (Jersey)
Law 1990.