English Court Rules on Request for Transfer of Assets in International Insolvency Case

The English Court of Appeal dismissed an appeal by the Australian liquidators of HIH Casualty and General Insurance Limited (“HIH”). The question before the court was whether it had jurisdiction to entertain a request under the Insolvency Act for directions to the liquidators in England to transfer assets collected by them to the liquidators in an Australian liquidation. The court considered whether such a transfer would interfere with the statutory scheme imposed on those assets by the Insolvency Act and whether or not the court should exercise its discretion in favor of such a transfer. The Court found that if the companies were in liquidation in England, the court would have jurisdiction to entertain a request under section 426 of the Insolvency Act for directions to the liquidators in England to transfer the assets collected by them to the liquidators in the principal liquidation, even though the result would interfere with the statutory scheme imposed on those assets by the Insolvency Act.

The Court held that if section 426 could authorize a transfer then the only question would be whether the court should exercise its discretion to do so. In exercising its discretion, the court had to consider the prejudice to the interests of some creditors of such a transfer. In this case, the Court of Appeal held that it would not direct a transfer of the English assets by the English provisional liquidators to the Australian liquidators because to do so would prejudice the interests of many of the creditors. Accordingly, the appeal was dismissed. HIH Casualty & General Insurance Ltd & Ors v. McMahon, [2006] EWCA Civ 732 (June 9, 2006).

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