A Critical and Comparative Analysis on the Effect of Business Rescue on Creditors’ Rights against Sureties

Business rescue proceedings have been introduced into South African company law under chapter 6 of the Companies Act 71 of 2008. The United States Chapter 11 bankruptcy model was closely consulted by the legislature when drafting chapter 6. Further to this and although business rescue has been gener...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Tsangarakis, Andreas
Other Authors: Hutchison, Andrew
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/29546
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-295462020-10-06T05:11:28Z A Critical and Comparative Analysis on the Effect of Business Rescue on Creditors’ Rights against Sureties Tsangarakis, Andreas Hutchison, Andrew Commercial Law Business rescue proceedings have been introduced into South African company law under chapter 6 of the Companies Act 71 of 2008. The United States Chapter 11 bankruptcy model was closely consulted by the legislature when drafting chapter 6. Further to this and although business rescue has been generally well received, there have been legal issues which have arisen in the interpretation of chapter 6. In particular, the issue of creditors' rights against third party sureties of financially distressed companies continues to fall under the spotlight which, in tum, has caused a ripple of commercial uncertainty to filter through to creditors. This issue will be investigated with comparative reference to the position in the United States. In doing so, a critical analysis will be undertaken of the procedures and processes in both of these jurisdictions, whereafter a comparative analysis will be presented. It will be advocated that although the essential difference between the two jurisdictions is the United States' legislative regulation on this issue, South African courts have correctly decided on creditors' rights against third party sureties. Unlike in the United States where conflicting decisions have been delivered, commercial certainty on this issue does in fact exist in South Africa notwithstanding the lack of statutory regulation under the Companies Act. It will be further advocated that although there is potential for this issue to be development under the South African common law when having regard to the decisions in the United States, caution is to be exercised as such development may generate commercial uncertainty. 2019-02-15T07:35:39Z 2019-02-15T07:35:39Z 2018 2019-02-15T07:34:23Z Master Thesis Masters LLM http://hdl.handle.net/11427/29546 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Law Department of Commercial Law
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Commercial Law
spellingShingle Commercial Law
Tsangarakis, Andreas
A Critical and Comparative Analysis on the Effect of Business Rescue on Creditors’ Rights against Sureties
description Business rescue proceedings have been introduced into South African company law under chapter 6 of the Companies Act 71 of 2008. The United States Chapter 11 bankruptcy model was closely consulted by the legislature when drafting chapter 6. Further to this and although business rescue has been generally well received, there have been legal issues which have arisen in the interpretation of chapter 6. In particular, the issue of creditors' rights against third party sureties of financially distressed companies continues to fall under the spotlight which, in tum, has caused a ripple of commercial uncertainty to filter through to creditors. This issue will be investigated with comparative reference to the position in the United States. In doing so, a critical analysis will be undertaken of the procedures and processes in both of these jurisdictions, whereafter a comparative analysis will be presented. It will be advocated that although the essential difference between the two jurisdictions is the United States' legislative regulation on this issue, South African courts have correctly decided on creditors' rights against third party sureties. Unlike in the United States where conflicting decisions have been delivered, commercial certainty on this issue does in fact exist in South Africa notwithstanding the lack of statutory regulation under the Companies Act. It will be further advocated that although there is potential for this issue to be development under the South African common law when having regard to the decisions in the United States, caution is to be exercised as such development may generate commercial uncertainty.
author2 Hutchison, Andrew
author_facet Hutchison, Andrew
Tsangarakis, Andreas
author Tsangarakis, Andreas
author_sort Tsangarakis, Andreas
title A Critical and Comparative Analysis on the Effect of Business Rescue on Creditors’ Rights against Sureties
title_short A Critical and Comparative Analysis on the Effect of Business Rescue on Creditors’ Rights against Sureties
title_full A Critical and Comparative Analysis on the Effect of Business Rescue on Creditors’ Rights against Sureties
title_fullStr A Critical and Comparative Analysis on the Effect of Business Rescue on Creditors’ Rights against Sureties
title_full_unstemmed A Critical and Comparative Analysis on the Effect of Business Rescue on Creditors’ Rights against Sureties
title_sort critical and comparative analysis on the effect of business rescue on creditors’ rights against sureties
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/29546
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