“The only man who sticks closer to you in adversity than a friend is a creditor.” (Evan Esar)
The court held that the body corporate had not met the statutory requirements under the Insolvency Act. In particular, it had not shown that sequestration would be to the advantage of creditors. The court also noted that the body corporate had other execution remedies available and emphasised that sequestration proceedings are not intended to function as a debt-collection mechanism.
Sequestration is a court-ordered insolvency process under the Insolvency Act. It applies where a debtor can no longer meet their financial obligations. The court places the debtor’s estate under the control of a trustee, who sells the debtor’s assets and distributes the proceeds among creditors.
The second requirement is where many applications come unstuck.
If the answers suggest that sequestration will not benefit creditors, the application is unlikely to succeed.
Other options
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