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Insolvency – FED

7 January 2021 by By Lawyers

Insolvency practitioners and lawyers acting for small business clients are advised that the Corporations Amendment (Corporate Insolvency Reforms) Act 2020 and Corporations Amendment (Corporate Insolvency Reforms) Regulations 2020 commenced on 1 January 2021.

These instruments amend the Corporations Act 2001 and Corporations Regulations 2001 to introduce two new insolvency processes: small business restructuring and the simplified liquidation process.

Small business restructuring

Under Part 5.3B of the Corporations Act 2001 an eligible company may have a small business restructuring practitioner appointed. This enables small companies that are financially stressed to restructure debt to continue to trade. The process is supervised by a small business restructuring practitioner, who must be a registered liquidator. Directors play a large role and retain control of the business under supervision. This reduces the costs of external administration and may see the company survive the financial stress experienced.

Simplified liquidation process

Eligible companies may access a simplified and faster liquidation process under Part 5.5 of the Corporations Act 2001, which reduces the costs and time of the process to ensure creditors are paid. In this process liquidators are able to adopt a simplified liquidation process with reduced compliance requirements.

The two new processes are aimed at supporting small businesses in financial stress.

The By Lawyers Insolvency – Company Liquidation commentary has been updated accordingly.

Filed Under: Bankruptcy and Liquidation, Companies, Trusts, Partnerships and Superannuation, Federal Tagged With: corporate insolvency, Corporations act, debt restructuring, federal, insolvency, Simplified liquidation process, Small business restructuring

Court books – All states

14 December 2020 by By Lawyers

Court books are an indexed collection of all documents that the parties rely upon in proceedings, collated for convenience of use during a hearing. They are commonly used in all litigation matters and are compulsory in some courts, especially in specialist lists and on appeal.

A court book ordinarily includes all pleadings and evidence. It generally omits any irrelevant documents, even if they were disclosed in the proceedings. For example, a voluminous bundle of documents may have been produced under a subpoena issued by one of the parties in the lead-up to the hearing, but the party only seeks to rely on a few documents out of the bundle. The court book will contain the subpoena itself plus those relevant documents only.

A properly compiled and indexed court book allows solicitors, counsel and the bench to have a common reference point and easily navigate to relevant documents and issues as the hearing proceeds.

Two new precedents for creating court books have been added to every By Lawyers litigation guide in Australia.

The precedents Court book cover page and Court book index are customised for each court in each jurisdiction. They comply with each court’s requirements and will assist practitioners in compiling court books in all types of litigation.

 

Filed Under: Australian Capital Territory, Federal, Litigation, New South Wales, Northern Territory, Publication Updates, Queensland, South Australia, Tasmania, Victoria, Western Australia Tagged With: court, court books, federal, index, litigation

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