In re Daisytek-ISA Ltd and others: 2004

The court was asked where the centre of main interests of French and German subsidiaries of ISA International plc was situated for the purposes of article 3.1 of the Regulation.
Held: After referring to recital (13) to the Regulation, to the commentary at paragraph 75 of the Virgos-Schmit Report and to the registrar’s decision in Skjevesland: ‘In my view the most important ‘third parties’ referred to in recital 13 are the potential creditors. In the case of a trading company the most important groups of potential creditors are likely to be its financiers and its trade suppliers. The evidence in this case is that the financing of the business of the German companies by a factoring agreement was organised for them by International in Bradford and that 70% of goods supplied to the German companies are supplied under contracts made by International in Bradford. It appears that a large majority of potential creditors by value (which I regard as the relevant criterion) know that Bradford is where many important functions of the German companies are carried out.’

Judges:

Judge McGonigal

Citations:

[2004] BPIR 30

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedSkjevesland v Geveran Trading Company Limited ChD 2002
The registrar had decided that the debtor’s centre of main interests was situated in Switzerland.
Held: Article 3 of Regulation (EC) 1346/2000 did not displace the bankruptcy jurisdiction which (as the registrar found) the High Court would . .

Cited by:

CitedShierson v Vlieland-Boddy CA 27-Jul-2005
The debtor claimed that he could not be served with an insolvency petition, being resident in Spain.
Held: The court was to look to where was the centre of his main interests to determine whether to open insolvency proceedings. On that basis, . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Insolvency

Updated: 14 May 2022; Ref: scu.249853