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Company Directors' Responsibilities to Creditors (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,773
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Company Directors' Responsibilities to Creditors (Paperback)
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This timely work is the first to comprehensively examine directors'
responsibilities to creditors in times of financial strife, as well
as addressing when these responsibilities arise, and what directors
should have to do to ensure that they comply with their
obligations. Keay explores the relevant issues from doctrinal,
normative and comparative perspectives and addresses the question
as to when directors are liable for wrongful trading, fraudulent
trading or breach of their duties to creditors and whether
directors should be held responsible for the before mentioned.
Besides the relevant UK legislation and case law, legislation and
case law from Australia, Canada, Ireland and the United States are
examined and compared and reforms which take into account the aims
and rationale of the relevant legislation as well as creditors'
interests are proposed and assessed. Importantly, new approaches
for courts which would make the nature of the responsibility and
its timing more precise are suggested. Company directors have
certain responsibilities to creditors of their companies. In
particular, they should avoid fraudulent and wrongful trading and
consider, as part of their duties, the interests of creditors when
their companies might be, or are, in financial difficulty. The work
is precipitated by the lack of coherence in the consideration of
wrongful trading and the recent delivery of important cases on
fraudulent trading. Also, this timely work is the first to
comprehensively examine directors' responsibilities to creditors in
times of financial strife, as well as addressing when these
responsibilities arise, and what directors should have to do to
ensure that they comply with their obligations. Keay explores the
relevant issues from doctrinal, normative and comparative
perspectives and seeks to address the question as to when directors
are liable for wrongful trading, fraudulent trading or breach of
their duties to creditors and whether directors should be held
responsible for wrongful trading and failing to consider the
interests of creditors. Besides the relevant UK legislation and
case law, legislation and case law from Australia, Canada, Ireland
and the United States are examined and compared, and reforms which
take into account the aims and rationale of the relevant
legislation as well as creditors' interests are proposed and
assessed. Importantly, new approaches for courts which would make
the nature of the responsibility and its timing more precise are
suggested.
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