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Bankruptcy
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How can a person prove that he is not a bankrupt?

When a person is declared a bankrupt?

Can an innocent person be declared a bankrupt?

Is it illegal if a person is insolvent?

What is winding up of a company?  

Can a creditor attach all the properties of a bankrupt?

Is it necessary to have a bankruptcy search?

Can a bankrupt enter contracts with 3rd party?

 

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How can a person prove that he is not bankrupt?

The best way would be to make a search either yourself or through a Credit Search company at the Official Assignee’s office and obtain a certified copy.

 

The Official Assignee takes about three weeks for an official search to be done, and this should provide sufficient information on whether a person is a bankrupt or not.

 

There are situations where the name of the person who is a bankrupt may be similar but the identity card number is not available. In this case, you may have to use other evidence to prove that you are different from the bankrupt.

 

There are Credit Agencies in Malaysia providing information to banks, financial institutions and other business entities on companies or people against whom a summons is filed or judgment obtained.

 

These Credit Agencies also provide names of individuals or companies against whom a creditor petitions, or what people commonly refer to as a bankruptcy petition or a winding-up petition is filed.


When a person is declared a bankrupt?

Even after filing a creditor’s petition, it does not automatically make a debtor a bankrupt. A date of hearing for a creditor’s petition will be fixed and before an order can be made, the petition must be served and advertised. When the petition comes up for hearing, a receiving order and adjudication order will be made if all the requisite conditions are met. Only at this point is the debtor adjudged a bankrupt.

 

It would be wrong for the bank to consider a person a bankrupt on the basis that a creditor’s petition has been filed against him without taking further steps to ascertain whether an adjudicating order has been made or whether the petition has been withdrawn or is still pending.


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Can an innocent person be declared bankrupt?

The new regulations introduced which came into effect on January 1st 1999 will reduce the chance of innocent people being declared bankrupt due to mix-ups in names. The Official Assignee’s Office now requires lawyers to state the identity card number of a person in their applications for bankruptcy searches.

 

They also have to use the Official Assignee’s standard form for each applicant, unlike in the past when they could submit a letter listing any number of applicants. Any application which failed to abide by the format would not be entertained by the Official Assignee.

 
Is it illegal if a person is insolvent?

It is not an offence if a person is insolvent. If a person is insolvent but is able to meet demands for payment as and when they are due can carry on business as usual.

 

However, when demands for such payment are not met, the insolvent may be made bankrupt in the case of an individual and be liquidated in the case of a company. Such liquidation is commonly referred to as “winding up”.

 

In the case of an individual, bankruptcy action is instituted under the Bankruptcy Act. For companies, similar action could be instituted in commencing winding up proceedings under the Companies Act.

 
What is winding up of a company?

Winding up is a process by which a company is prepared for dissolution. In a winding up situation, the assets of a company will be applied to discharge its liabilities and returning any surplus to those who are entitled to it, subject to the costs of doing so, provided there are any excess remaining. Effectively, it means the company is bankrupt.

 

There are many reasons why a company is wound up. For example, a company may become insolvent or the company may seek to minimise the loss by closing down and selling all its assets.

 

There are varying grounds which a company may wound up by different people. This include situations where the company resolves to be wound up, members reduced to below two, directors acting in the affair of the company in their own interest or in any other manner which appears to be unfair or unjust.

 

However, the most common ground on which a company is wound up is because it is unable to pay its debts to creditors.

 

Malaysian Companies Act provides for two ways in which a creditor can demonstrate that a company is unable to pay its debts.

 

(1)     A creditor who is owed more than RM500 can serve on the company a statutory demand that the company pay the debt within three weeks. Neglect to pay the sum or to secure or compound for it to the reasonable satisfaction of the creditor leads to a statutory presumption that the company is unable to pay its debts.

(2)      

A company is also deemed to be unable to pay its debts if execution or other process is issued or a judgement, decree, or order of any court in favour of a creditor is returned unsatisfied in whole or part.

 

Once a company is deemed to be unable to pay its debts, the creditor can petition to the court for winding up of the company. On the date fixed for hearing, unless the court is satisfied to the contrary or for any other legitimate reason disallows the petition, a winding up order will be made.


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Can a creditor attach all the properties of a bankrupt?

No. A creditor may not attached all the properties of a bankrupt.

 

When a judgment debtor’s house is attached, not all chattels on the premises can be seized and auctioned off because not all of them belong to the debtor. Some of the property may belong to his wife or other family members or tenants.

 

Section 3(1) Debtors Act 1957 provides that:

 

‘Subject to and in accordance with any rules of  court, any sum of money payable under the judgement of a court may be recovered in case of default or failure of payment thereof forthwith or at the time or times, or in the manner thereby directed by execution whether legal or equitable against the property movable or immovable of the party against whom the judgement was obtained.”

However, there are a number of items which are not liable to attachment, seizure or sale in an execution and this is provided for in the provision to s.3 (1) Debtors Act 1957.

 

·        The clothes, cooking vessels, beds or bedding of the judgment debtor, his  wife and children, and the tools and implements of his trade to the value of RM200 in all;

 

·        The tools of artisans or, where the judgment debtor is an agriculturalist, his implements of husbandry and such cattle and seed-grain of produce as may in the opinion of the court be necessary to enable him to earn his livelihood;

 

·         Houses and other buildings (with the materials and the sites thereof and the land immediately appurtenant thereto and necessary for their enjoyment) belonging to an agriculturalist and occupied by him;

 

·         Books of account; and pension, gratuity or allowance granted by the Government or such other public body as the Yang di-Pertuan Agong may by notification in the gazette designate.


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Is it necessary to have a bankruptcy search?

Banks have a common practice to have bankruptcy searches made on borrowers. After the bank has granted a loan to a borrower, the banker’s solicitors are requested to prepare the relevant security documents and simultaneously conduct a bankruptcy search on the borrower at the Official Assignee’s Office. Normally, the bank’s loan release procedure depends very much on the outcome of the bankruptcy search results proving that the borrower is not a bankrupt. If the borrower is shown to be a bankrupt the bank reserves its rights to terminate the loan.

 

In reality, the banks do approve the loans applied for, but do not release the loan sum until the borrower is proved not a bankrupt and subject further to the security documents having been duly executed, stamped and where necessary presented at the relevant land office for registration.

 
Can a bankrupt enter contracts with 3rd party?

It is a common misconception that once a person becomes a bankrupt he is no longer able to make a contract with another part, because the Official Assignee has taken over the management of the bankrupt’s property.

 

However, the Bankruptcy Act does not have any provisions that expressly prohibit a bankrupt from contracting with third parties, nor are there any provisions which say that he can contract.

 

Where a bankrupt, who has not obtained his discharge, enters into transactions in respect of property acquired after the bankruptcy, then, until the trustee intervenes, all such transactions, with any person dealing with the bankrupt bona fide and for value, and whether with or without knowledge of the bankruptcy, are valid as against the Official Assignee.

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