The law and practice of contractual receivership

The law of contractual receivership has evolved quietly over a period of one hundred and fifty years or so. The institution of receivership started out as a mortgagee's remedy, but has proved remarkably adaptable to the commercial needs of large financial organisations, so much so that it has e...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Frisby, Sandra
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2001
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11097/
_version_ 1848791193174933504
author Frisby, Sandra
author_facet Frisby, Sandra
author_sort Frisby, Sandra
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description The law of contractual receivership has evolved quietly over a period of one hundred and fifty years or so. The institution of receivership started out as a mortgagee's remedy, but has proved remarkably adaptable to the commercial needs of large financial organisations, so much so that it has enjoyed ascendancy as a method of debt enforcement for the latter half of the twentieth century. This thesis attempts to chart the developmental process of receivership law, and to evaluate both judicial and legislative responses to the particular issues of policy it raises. In particular, it investigates the impact of receivership, both in legal and practical terms, on the various parties interested, in their various capacities, in the corporate entity. The main body of the thesis addresses this question from a number of perspectives. Corporate insolvency affects a wide variety of constituents. Receivership, as an insolvency regime, is frequently criticised as overly biased in favour of powerful financial institutions at the expense of both the corporation itself and its other stakeholders. By affording a contractually appointed receiver dominion over the entirety of the company's property, and by sanctioning the proposition that his decisions be informed exclusively by his appointor's interests, this censure of the law might appear justified. Alternatively, proponents of receivership have promoted the institution as a 'rescue' mechanism, a means by which viable companies, or viable sectors of their businesses, may be nurtured back to productivity and profitability. These two conflicting views will be examined in the final Chapter, in the light of recent reform initiatives which appear to envisage at least some minor modification to the existing 'balance of power'.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T18:24:37Z
format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
id nottingham-11097
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T18:24:37Z
publishDate 2001
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-110972025-02-28T11:11:14Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11097/ The law and practice of contractual receivership Frisby, Sandra The law of contractual receivership has evolved quietly over a period of one hundred and fifty years or so. The institution of receivership started out as a mortgagee's remedy, but has proved remarkably adaptable to the commercial needs of large financial organisations, so much so that it has enjoyed ascendancy as a method of debt enforcement for the latter half of the twentieth century. This thesis attempts to chart the developmental process of receivership law, and to evaluate both judicial and legislative responses to the particular issues of policy it raises. In particular, it investigates the impact of receivership, both in legal and practical terms, on the various parties interested, in their various capacities, in the corporate entity. The main body of the thesis addresses this question from a number of perspectives. Corporate insolvency affects a wide variety of constituents. Receivership, as an insolvency regime, is frequently criticised as overly biased in favour of powerful financial institutions at the expense of both the corporation itself and its other stakeholders. By affording a contractually appointed receiver dominion over the entirety of the company's property, and by sanctioning the proposition that his decisions be informed exclusively by his appointor's interests, this censure of the law might appear justified. Alternatively, proponents of receivership have promoted the institution as a 'rescue' mechanism, a means by which viable companies, or viable sectors of their businesses, may be nurtured back to productivity and profitability. These two conflicting views will be examined in the final Chapter, in the light of recent reform initiatives which appear to envisage at least some minor modification to the existing 'balance of power'. 2001-07-09 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11097/1/364447_vol1.pdf Frisby, Sandra (2001) The law and practice of contractual receivership. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. receivership contractual law insolvency bankruptcy
spellingShingle receivership
contractual
law
insolvency
bankruptcy
Frisby, Sandra
The law and practice of contractual receivership
title The law and practice of contractual receivership
title_full The law and practice of contractual receivership
title_fullStr The law and practice of contractual receivership
title_full_unstemmed The law and practice of contractual receivership
title_short The law and practice of contractual receivership
title_sort law and practice of contractual receivership
topic receivership
contractual
law
insolvency
bankruptcy
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11097/