Questions with Complete Solutions
What is insolvency? - Correct Answers: Insolvency is a legal status of a natural or juristic person when
their liabilities exceed their assets and are unable to pay their debts. They have to be legally declared
insolvent by a court
Aims and objectives of the law of insolvency? - Correct Answers: 1. To allow creditors to be paid in order
of preference
2. To maximise assets for distribution among creditors (which is done by minimising legal costs if each
creditor had to sue separately and mechanisms for investigation are created which allows the uncover
of hide assets/ fraud)
3. Prevent the debtor from further diminishing their estate by taking the control of their assets out of
their hands and into their trustee
4. Benefit creditors (not a punishment for the debtor)
What is sequestration? - Correct Answers: This is the process whereby the assets of the debtor are taken
over by the trustee, sold and divided amongst the creditors.
Only natural persons, partnerships and trusts can be sequestrated.
It is also known as winding up and is governed by the Insolvency act / Common law
What is liquidation? - Correct Answers: This is winding up of juristic persons and the assets are taken out
of the hands of the directors and into the liquidator. The company is then dissolved.
This is governed by the insolvency act, companies act and the close corporations act
,Secured creditor - Correct Answers: This is the creditor who will be paid first.
E.g. a bank with a mortgage bond
Preferment creditor - Correct Answers: SARS have a preferment claim, and so will be paid after the
secured creditor
Concurrent creditors - Correct Answers: Creditors who will be paid after the secured and preferment
creditors.
They will be paid Xc in every rand
X = (money left to pay creditors) / (total outstanding debt)
What is concursus creditorum? - Correct Answers: This means the position of every creditor is frozen at
the date of sequestration or liquidation and cannot do anything to move up the order of preference
What are the manners of sequestration? - Correct Answers: 1. Voluntary surrender
2. Compulsory sequestration
3. Friendly sequestration
only a high court can make a sequestration order
What is voluntary surrender? - Correct Answers: This is when the debtor applies to the court to be
sequestrated and the debtor is then absolved from any of their debts incurred before the sequestration.
(The creditors cannot sue him and need to claim against his estate with the trustee)
What is the effect of people married ICOP and partnerships and sequestration? - Correct Answers: There
is a single joint estate with ICOP and so both spouses need to apply for sequestration and the joint
estate and both are then declared insolvent.
With partnerships, all partners must apply for sequestration of the partnership estate AND their
individual estate.
, What are substantive requirements for voluntary sequestration? - Correct Answers: These requirements
must be met and it is still up to the court's discretion to grant the sequestration:
1. The debtor is insolvent
2. there are enough assets to cover the costs of sequestration
3. A non-negligible dividend must be paid to creditor so that there will be a benefit for creditors.
(nothing under 10c in WC and under 20c in Gauteng). It is not set out what is too small and the court has
held 5c to be non-negligible
4. All procedures and formalities are followed
If the person is too broke to be sequestrated they may be referred for a debt review.
What is compulsory sequestration? - Correct Answers: This is when the creditor/s apply for the
sequestration of the debtor's estate (partnerships and marriages ICOP apply).
The onus lies on the creditor
What are the requirements for a compulsory sequestration? - Correct Answers: 1. The creditor must be
entitled to make the application (has a claim of more than R100 or collectively more than R200)
2. The creditor must prove the debtor is insolvent or has committed an act of insolvency
3. There must be reason that the sequestration will be to the advantage of the creditors
4. Procedural requirements must have been met