Singapore legislation

Section 100

of Insolvency, Restructuring and Dissolution Act 2018

Section 100

Power to deal with charged property, etc.

(1)

The judicial manager of a company may dispose of or otherwise exercise the judicial manager’s powers in relation to any property of the company, which is subject to a security to which this subsection applies, as if the property were not subject to the security.

(2)

Where, on application by the judicial manager of a company, the Court is satisfied that the disposal (with or without other assets or property) —

(a)

of any property of the company subject to a security to which this subsection applies; or

(b)

of any goods under a hire-purchase agreement, chattels leasing agreement or retention of title agreement,would be likely to promote one or more of the purposes of judicial management under section 89(1), the Court may by order authorise the judicial manager to dispose of the property, as if the property were not subject to the security, or to dispose of the goods, as if all rights of the owner of the goods under the hire-purchase agreement, chattels leasing agreement or retention of title agreement were vested in the company.

(3)

Subsection (1) applies to any security that, as created, was a floating charge, and subsection (2) applies to any other security.

(4)

Where any property is disposed of under subsection (1), the holder of the security has the same priority, in respect of any property of the company directly or indirectly representing the property disposed of, as the holder would have had in respect of the property subject to the security.

(5)

It is a condition of an order made under subsection (2) that —

(a)

the net proceeds of the disposal must be applied towards discharging the sums secured by the security or payable under the hire-purchase agreement, chattels leasing agreement or retention of title agreement; and

(b)

where the net proceeds of the disposal are less than the sums secured by the security or payable under any of those agreements, the holder of the security or the owner of the goods (as the case may be) may prove on a winding up for any balance due to the holder or the owner.

(6)

Where a condition imposed under subsection (5) relates to 2 or more securities, that condition requires the net proceeds of the disposal to be applied towards discharging the sums secured by those securities in the order of their priorities.

(7)

The judicial manager must give 7 days’ notice, of an application by the judicial manager to the Court to dispose of property subject to a security under subsection (2), to the holder of the security or to the owner of the goods which are subject to any of the agreements mentioned in that subsection, and the holder or the owner (as the case may be) may oppose the disposal of the property.

(8)

Where the Court makes an order under subsection (2), the judicial manager must lodge a copy of the order, within 14 days after the making of the order, with the Registrar of Companies.

(9)

If the judicial manager, without reasonable excuse, fails to comply with subsection (7) or (8), the judicial manager shall be guilty of an offence and shall be liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding $5,000 and also to a default penalty.

(10)

Nothing in this section affects an application to the Court under section 115.