The impact of insolvency on corporate contracts: a comparative study of the UK and US insolvency law regimes

Parties who contract at arm’s length are bound by the terms of their contracts, provided the contracts do not contravene a rule of law or public policy. The commencement of formal insolvency proceedings may however limit the ability of a debtor to perform its pre-petition contractual obligations, re...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Udofia, Kubianga Michael
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/27878/
_version_ 1848793461045592064
author Udofia, Kubianga Michael
author_facet Udofia, Kubianga Michael
author_sort Udofia, Kubianga Michael
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Parties who contract at arm’s length are bound by the terms of their contracts, provided the contracts do not contravene a rule of law or public policy. The commencement of formal insolvency proceedings may however limit the ability of a debtor to perform its pre-petition contractual obligations, resulting to liabilities to creditors. Accordingly, a formal insolvency procedure ensures an orderly and efficient resolution of the debtor’s affairs -- maximising realisations to creditors or rescuing the corporate debtor as a going concern. To achieve this purpose, unilateral contract enforcement efforts and rights are replaced by a mandatory regime characterised by collectivity and equality in treatment of similarly situated creditors. This thesis comparatively evaluates the impact of the commencement of formal insolvency proceedings on corporate contracts in the UK and US. It examines the extent to which pre-petition contractual bargains are suspended, adjusted or avoided by the supervening insolvency law regime in the jurisdictions. The thesis adopts a thematic approach to examine how the legal frameworks in the jurisdictions manage the inevitable conflict between the policy considerations of contract law and those of insolvency law. The extent to which insolvency law should interfere with pre-insolvency contractual arrangements and entitlements has always been a contentious and keenly debated issue. No doubt, insolvency law has a greater number of interests to protect outside the interests of pre-petition contracting parties. These include the general body of creditors, employees, post-petition creditors etc. Nevertheless, in the absence of compelling and well-articulated policy justification, formal insolvency ought not to be a forum for the stripping of property rights or the pursuit of redistributional goals.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T19:00:40Z
format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
id nottingham-27878
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T19:00:40Z
publishDate 2014
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-278782025-02-28T11:32:39Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/27878/ The impact of insolvency on corporate contracts: a comparative study of the UK and US insolvency law regimes Udofia, Kubianga Michael Parties who contract at arm’s length are bound by the terms of their contracts, provided the contracts do not contravene a rule of law or public policy. The commencement of formal insolvency proceedings may however limit the ability of a debtor to perform its pre-petition contractual obligations, resulting to liabilities to creditors. Accordingly, a formal insolvency procedure ensures an orderly and efficient resolution of the debtor’s affairs -- maximising realisations to creditors or rescuing the corporate debtor as a going concern. To achieve this purpose, unilateral contract enforcement efforts and rights are replaced by a mandatory regime characterised by collectivity and equality in treatment of similarly situated creditors. This thesis comparatively evaluates the impact of the commencement of formal insolvency proceedings on corporate contracts in the UK and US. It examines the extent to which pre-petition contractual bargains are suspended, adjusted or avoided by the supervening insolvency law regime in the jurisdictions. The thesis adopts a thematic approach to examine how the legal frameworks in the jurisdictions manage the inevitable conflict between the policy considerations of contract law and those of insolvency law. The extent to which insolvency law should interfere with pre-insolvency contractual arrangements and entitlements has always been a contentious and keenly debated issue. No doubt, insolvency law has a greater number of interests to protect outside the interests of pre-petition contracting parties. These include the general body of creditors, employees, post-petition creditors etc. Nevertheless, in the absence of compelling and well-articulated policy justification, formal insolvency ought not to be a forum for the stripping of property rights or the pursuit of redistributional goals. 2014-12-09 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/27878/1/Thesis%2520Kubi%2520Michael.pdf Udofia, Kubianga Michael (2014) The impact of insolvency on corporate contracts: a comparative study of the UK and US insolvency law regimes. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. contracts insolvency bankruptcy uk usa
spellingShingle contracts
insolvency
bankruptcy
uk
usa
Udofia, Kubianga Michael
The impact of insolvency on corporate contracts: a comparative study of the UK and US insolvency law regimes
title The impact of insolvency on corporate contracts: a comparative study of the UK and US insolvency law regimes
title_full The impact of insolvency on corporate contracts: a comparative study of the UK and US insolvency law regimes
title_fullStr The impact of insolvency on corporate contracts: a comparative study of the UK and US insolvency law regimes
title_full_unstemmed The impact of insolvency on corporate contracts: a comparative study of the UK and US insolvency law regimes
title_short The impact of insolvency on corporate contracts: a comparative study of the UK and US insolvency law regimes
title_sort impact of insolvency on corporate contracts: a comparative study of the uk and us insolvency law regimes
topic contracts
insolvency
bankruptcy
uk
usa
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/27878/