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Chapter 1: The Roots of Corporate Insolvency Law

Chapter 1: The Roots of Corporate Insolvency Law

pp. 9-25

Authors

, London School of Economics and Political Science, , Lancaster University
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Summary

In a society that facilitates the use of credit by companies there is a degree of risk that those who are owed money by a firm will suffer because the firm has become unable to pay its debts on the due date. If a number of creditors were owed money and all pursued the rights and remedies available to them (for example, contractual rights; rights to enforce security interests; rights to set off the debt against other obligations; proceedings for delivery, foreclosure or sale) a chaotic race to protect interests would take place and this might produce inefficiencies and unfairness. Huge costs would be incurred in pursuing individual creditors’ claims competitively and (since in an insolvency there are insufficient assets to go round) those creditors who enforced their claim with most vigour and expertise would be paid but naïve latecomers would not.

A main aim of insolvency law is to replace this free-for-all with a legal regime in which creditors’ rights and remedies are suspended and a process established for the orderly collection and realisation of the debtors’ assets and the fair distribution of these according to creditors’ claims. Part of the drama of insolvency law flows, accordingly, from its potentially having to unpack and reassemble what were seemingly concrete and clear legal rights.

Corporate insolvency law, with which this book is concerned, is now a quite separate body of law from personal bankruptcy law although these have shared historical roots. Those roots should be noted, since the shape of modern corporate insolvency law is as much a product of past history and accidents of development as of design.

Development and Structure

The earliest insolvency laws in England and Wales were concerned with individual insolvency (bankruptcy) and date back to medieval times. Early common law offered no collective procedure for administering an insolvent's estate but a creditor could seize either the body of a debtor or his effects – but not both. Creditors, moreover, had to act individually, there being no machinery for sharing expenses. When the person of the debtor was seized, detention in person at the creditor's pleasure was provided for. Insolvency was thus seen as an offence little less criminal than a felony.

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