Insolvency
Insolvency
Insolvency
The essence of insolvency consists in a debtor’s ultimate inability to meet his or her financial
commitments1. The instant paper revolves around an attempt made by the United Nations to
provide for a uniform standard of provisions relating to cross border insolvency. In 1997, the
United Nations Commission on International Trade Law presented the UNCITRAL Model Law
on Cross-Border Insolvency at the UN General Assembly. Since its adoption by the General
Assembly, the Model Law has been hailed as a timely and historic document2. However, before
the Model Law is actually looked into, it would be most prudent to cover some of the
preliminary areas of law relating to cross-border insolvency.
The Wharton’s Law Lexicon defines insolvency as the state of one who has not properly
sufficient funds for the full payment of his debts3. In other words, one who cannot cover his or
her liabilities with the assets that that person possesses, that person is termed to be an insolvent.
According to Shardul Shroff, corporate insolvency law has the following objectives4:
• To restore the debtor company to profitable trading where this is practicable;
• To maximise the return to creditors as a whole where the company itself cannot be saved;
• To establish a fair and equitable system for the ranking of claims and the distribution of assets
among creditors, involving a redistribution of rights and;
• To provide a mechanism by which the causes of failure can be identified and those guilty of
mismanagement brought to book, and where appropriate, deprived of the right to be involved in
the management of other companies.
The term of ‘insolvency’ is often confused with another having a very similar meaning that of
bankruptcy. While insolvency is employed to mean a state of financial distress, the term
bankruptcy is usually used to refer to the proceedings that mark a person as an insolvent5.
However, usually the two terms are used interchangeably.
There are two well-established tests for determining whether a person is solvent or
otherwise. The first is the Balance Sheet Test6 or ‘absolute insolvency7’. This states that a
person is insolvent if his or her liabilities outweigh the assets. In other words, if the net
worth of a person were negative, he or she would be termed insolvent. The other test is
the Cash Flow Test, a condition referred to as ‘liquidity crisis’8. This states that if a
person is unable to pay his or her debts as and when they arise, that person would be
deemed as an insolvent9. Insolvency may apply to all persons whether, real or juristic10.
Therefore, insolvency may apply to incorporated persons such as companies as wellgiving
rise to the area of corporate insolvency.
Cross-border insolvency is a term used to describe circumstances in which an insolvent
debtor has assets and/or creditors in more than one country11. Many businesses have
interests stretching beyond their home jurisdictions. Firms are increasingly organising
their activities on a global scale, forming production chains including inputs that cross
national boundaries. With the advent of sophisticated communications and information
technology, cross-border trade is no longer the preserve only of large multi-national
corporations. This trend is unlikely to change. A cross-border insolvency matter would
arise with regard to a company in the following scenarios12:
• A company may have dealings with parties situated in countries other than of its
incorporation.
• The company may own or have an interest in properties in other countries.
• Liabilities may be owed to whose forensic connections with a different country than
which the debtor is connected
• The relevant obligations may be governed by foreign law, may have been incurred
outside the debtor’s home country, or may be due to be performed abroad
• The diversified state of the debtor’s activities may be such that the conditions for
opening insolvency proceedings are simultaneously met with regard to more than one
country, giving rise to the possibility multiple proceedings in different jurisdictions.
Given such scenarios, in the case of bankruptcy proceedings against such a company,
certain difficulties arise in the adjudication of solvency of the company and if found insolvent,
the consequent realisation of assets and distribution of the proceeds thereof to
the various creditors and contributories13.
Risks of cross-border insolvency
One of the risks that all businesses face is that of a trading partner's failure. Most
domestic laws provide for the handling of an insolvent enterprise. Typically, in the case
of corporate insolvency, domestic laws will prescribe procedures for:
• Identifying and locating the debtors’ assets;
• ‘Calling in’ the assets and converting them into a monetary form;
• Identifying and reversing any voidable or preference transactions which occurred
prior to the administration;
• Identifying creditors and the extent of their claims, including determining the
appropriate priority order in which claims should be paid; and
• Making distributions to creditors in accordance with the appropriate priority.
In a cross-border insolvency context, additional complexities that may arise include14:
• The extent to which an insolvency administrator may obtain access to assets held in a
foreign country;
• The priority of payments: whether local creditors may have access to local assets
before funds go to the foreign administration, or whether they are to stand in line with
all the foreign creditors;
• Recognition of the claims of local creditors in a foreign administration;
• Whether local priority rules (such as employee claims) receive similar treatment
under a foreign administration;
• Recognition and enforcement of local securities over local assets, where a foreign
administrator is appointed; and
• Application of transaction avoidance provisions.
The additional complexities surrounding cross-border insolvencies necessarily result in
uncertainty, risk and ultimately costs to businesses. It would be of overall benefit to
businesses in all countries to have adequate mechanisms in place to deal efficiently and
effectively with cross-border insolvencies. Given India’s place in the world economy, it
is especially important to adopt policies that promote efficiency, reduce legal
uncertainties and transaction costs and enhance international trading efficiency15.