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The Probert Encyclopaedia of Money

LIQUIDATOR

A liquidator is a person appointed by a court, or by the members of a company or its creditors, to regularise the company's affairs on a liquidation. In the case of a members' voluntary liquidation, it is the members of the company who appoint the liquidator. In a creditors' voluntary liquidation, the liquidator may be appointed by company members before the meeting of creditors or by the creditors themselves at the meeting; in the former case the liquidator can only exercise his powers with the consent of the court. If two liquidators are appointed, the court resolves which one is to act. In a compulsory liquidation, the court appoints a provisional
liquidator after the winding-up petition has been presented; after the order has been granted, the court appoints the official receiver as liquidator, until or unless another officer is appointed. The liquidator is in a relationship of trust with the company and the creditors as a body; if he is appointed in a compulsory liquidation, he is an officer of the court, is under statutory obligations, and may not profit from his position. A
liquidator must be a qualified insolvency practitioner, according to the Insolvency Act (1986). Under this Act, insolvency practitioners must meet certain statutory requirements, including membership of an approved professional body (such as the Insolvency Practitioners' Association or the Institute of Chartered Accountants) . On appointment, the liquidator assumes control of the company, collects the assets, pays the debts, and distributes any surplus to company members according to their rights. In the case of a compulsory liquidation, the liquidator is supervised by the court, the liquidation committee, and the Department of Trade and Industry. He receives a statement of affairs from the company officers and must report on these to the court.
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