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An insolvent fuel company is managed by a court-appointed receiver. [11] A U.S. District Judge appointed a receiver for the multi-level marketing company Equinox International in August 1999. [12] As of 2007, the receiver was authorized to distribute settlement funds from the now-defunct company to approved claimants. [13]
A receivership is when an external administrator known as a "receiver" (usually a "receiver and manager" if it requires controlling the company) is appointed by a secured creditor to sell off a company's assets in order to repay the secured debt, or by the court to protect the company's assets or carry out other tasks. [1]
Where a receiver stands appointed for a continuous period of three days or more, an examiner cannot be appointed. [16] The period of three days runs from the appointment of the receiver and it is not open to a petitioner to argue that the period has not started to run based on an alleged infirmity in the appointment. [17]
The judge, Marshall Piccinini, said he should have appointed the receiver sooner to help preserve Erie Rise's assets, now at about $1.9 million in public money.
acting as interim receiver or provisional liquidator: At any time after a petition for an insolvency order under section 122 of the Insolvency Act 1986 (c. 45) has been presented, the court may appoint the OR as interim receiver (for an individual) or as provisional liquidator (for a company). This is to protect a debtor's property, or take ...
A judge has appointed a receiver for the vacant Latitude Five25 apartments on the Near East Side. The receiver will create a plan to rehab the site.
Provisional liquidation is a process which exists as part of the corporate insolvency laws of a number of common law jurisdictions whereby after the lodging of a petition for the winding-up of a company by the court, but before the court hears and determines the petition, the court may appoint a liquidator on a "provisional" basis. [1]
Receiver, a person who receives goods in a distribution center; Receiver, in receivership, a person appointed as a custodian of another entity's property by a court of law or a creditor of the owner, pending a lawsuit or bankruptcy; Metropolitan Police Receiver, formerly the chief financial officer of the London Metropolitan Police