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Providing a helping hand

 

What should businesses do ‘when the light at the end of the tunnel… is the tax man holding a torch’? In the first of three articles, insolvency expert Peter Windatt examines the role insolvency practitioners play when they take on a new client.

Getting into financial difficulty is nothing new. Those who start a business of their own – whether a sole trader, partnership or limited company – are, by definition, optimists.

No pessimist would start off on this course – look at all the hurdles to be jumped, the risks to family stability, the hours that most sole traders / start-up directors have to dedicate to getting their show on the road.

And then they discover that it isn’t enough to be the best engineer, designer of websites or whatever. In their spare time they have to keep the books, sort out the payroll and PAYE, account for the VAT and do the 101 other things they don’t teach you, well, anywhere really.

Few companies fail because the founder wasn’t a good enough engineer etc. Practically all fail because of their inability to manage. Whether through feast or famine. One of the surprising facts of the insolvency profession is that we generally get busier coming out of recession than we do going in. It is the large sales order that comes in when they’ve been hanging on by the skin of their teeth for so long. It looks like the answer to their prayers, but they find that they can’t get the supplies to service the order. They are overtrading, pushing all credit limits and the overdraft is at the limit.

Something has to give. A supplier refuses to supply without cash on delivery, or a receipt takes longer than expected, and they can’t pay the wages. And then our phone rings and we are asked if it is too late to help the client out of trouble.

The earlier a business recovery and/or insolvency expert is called in the greater the options open to the client are likely to be. Leave it longer and the scope for implementing some type of rescue narrows.

It is probably the ‘I’ word that scares people off talking to an insolvency practitioner (IP). However, provided that the IP consulted is from amongst the majority who will give the best advice to the person they are advising, irrespective of the fee outcome for themselves, you can be certain of good, solid and, essentially, practical ways to take the business forward; hopefully without needing the recourse of formal insolvency proceedings.

‘I urge all accountants to form a relationship with an IP – get to know and trust someone before you need them. What you are seeking is the survival of your own client base – not another job for the insolvency professionals.’

initial meeting
So, how does an initial meeting with an IP usually run? Clearly there will be different approaches among firms and among individuals within firms. I start by listening to the proprietor/director explain where they believe they are now and how they think they got there. I seek to dispel some of the myths and legends that surround insolvency by getting them to reflect on what the worst thing that could possibly happen might be. By looking at the worst case scenario I can deal with some of the horrors the directors believe might await them. They can then build from solid and well-informed foundations.

Only by addressing their fears and helping them to understand what might happen, and in what order, can they then take steps to address the situation facing them. Nine times out of ten the worst is not as bad as they fear. And then informed consideration of the alternatives gives the directors a purpose. Against a backdrop of understanding the various risks involved, this approach undoubtedly helps free them up to make plans for a better way forward.

The adage ‘if you fail to plan you should plan to fail’ is often applied to businesses starting up. This is doubly true at this early stage of insolvency. Directors should document what they are doing and why they are doing it. They should also record, on at least a weekly if not a daily basis, key events from each day and the actions taken in respect of them – demands received and how they were responded to, conversations with key investors/lenders, undertakings given to suppliers and promises received from customers which served to encourage their continuation.

liability
One of the main fears of directors is that they might be made personally liable for the debts of their company. They believed that by trading through a ‘limited liability company’ they were free from all liabilities should things go wrong. Of course, if they are a sole trader or partner in an unlimited partnership their personal assets are always at risk if things go awry.

Now, they have heard about ‘wrongful’ and ‘fraudulent’ trading. The lesser of the two, and by far the more likely to be pursued due to the lower burden of proof required, is wrongful trading (S214 Insolvency Act 1986).

In brief, if a director causes a company to trade after the time that he knew, or ought to have known, that there was no reasonable prospect of avoiding insolvent liquidation s/he can be held personally liable (jointly and severally with the company, and possibly other directors) for the debts incurred after that date.

But what was the date – who decides? The liquidator may have a first attempt at deciding upon the date. Of course, he is coming to the events after they have happened. Everything looks so much clearer and the consequences of actions are laid out for all to consider – the 20:20 vision of hindsight.

The courts might agree upon the date determined by the liquidator and might order that the director(s) become liable for the debts incurred after that date, and for the costs, and, while they are at it, agree to disqualify the directors from being involved with a company in the future for a number of years – thereby taking away the prospects of generating the income to pay those sums.

disqualification of directors
Are directors automatically disqualified when a company goes into liquidation? In most forms of insolvency the IP has a duty, within six months of appointment, to report to the DTI on the conduct of the directors (including anyone who was a director in the three years immediately prior to the insolvency) and their fitness to be directors again in the future. Disqualification can be for up to 15 years. If disqualified the person can only be involved with or concerned in the promotion,formation or management of a limited company, without incurring further penalties and personal liability, with the leave of the court. These circumstances, while they do happen, would be exceptional. A bankrupt is automatically disqualified from directorship whilst remaining undischarged or subject to a Bankruptcy Restriction Order or Agreement.

One of the difficulties, for the defendant, in disqualification proceedings is that the proceedings happen so long after the event. Actions have to be commenced within two years of the insolvency and will generally commence some 23½ months after the insolvency started. Memories fade in that time. Two years down the line the way that events appear to have unfolded in the business’s dying days may not actually have been how they happened.

For example, a letter dated 1 May and posted first class will be considered to have been received on the second business day after date of posting – ‘surely in the knowledge of that letter the directors acted rashly when on the 4 May they ordered…’. The fact that a postal strike had taken place around then, or the local post office suffered a fire and the letter was not received at all or until 10 May could well have been forgotten, vague recollections of there being ‘something up with the post’ around that time while standing in the dock appear as lame excuses rather than as sound reasons.

However, the well advised director will, having met with a business recovery and/or insolvency expert, have kept something like a page a day diary recording, contemporaneously, notes of significant happenings, decisions, milestones achieved/missed following their initial meeting with an IP. That diary will serve to support a defence and assist in showing that actions taken were reasonable in light of what was actually known rather than what is surmised long after the day. Disqualification is certainly nowhere close to being sought in all cases. However, the number of disqualifications is rising and now there is more emphasis on getting directors to consent to disqualification – thereby avoiding the estimated £10/£15/£20k+ costs of losing any defence (let alone finding the funds to defend yourself).

form a relationship
With all the recent legislative changes – and with case law moving the goal posts for IPs and others with an interest in this area – it is always sensible to take advice at the first signs of trouble.

To this end I urge all accountants to form a relationship with an IP – get to know and trust someone before you need them. What you are seeking is the survival of your own client base – not another job for the insolvency professionals.

Peter Windatt is a licensed insolvency practitioner and director of BRI Business Recovery and Insolvency. Peter is a former ACCA Council member and now serves ACCA as President of the Bedford, Luton and Northampton Members’ Network and as a director of the Joint Insolvency Examination Board and by sitting on various allied committees.

 
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