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Shareholder Loans in Corporate Insolvency – A New Approach to an Old Problem

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 March 2019

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The treatment of shareholder loans in corporate insolvency is a controversial issue in many jurisdictions. On both sides of the Atlantic, lawmakers and courts have struggled to answer the question if and under what circumstances shareholder loans should be treated differently from loans granted by outsiders. In particular, the difficulties turn on three issues: (i) whether shareholder loans should rank pari passu with the claims of outside creditors or whether they should be subordinated; (ii) whether the repayment of shareholder loans should be subject to specific restrictions, particularly in the vicinity of insolvency; and (iii) whether specific restrictions should apply to secured shareholder loans.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 2008 by German Law Journal GbR 

References

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2 See Taylor v. Standard Gas & Electric, 306 U.S. 307 (1939) (on equitable subordination).Google Scholar

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6 E.g., stock corporations (AG), limited partnerships which do not have an individual as their general partner (GmbH & Co. KG) and foreign companies operating mainly in Germany. On the latter, see infra Part E.Google Scholar

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22 InsO § 39 (5), as amended.Google Scholar

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38 InsO § 143 (1).Google Scholar

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45 See supra Part B.II.1. Note that while the exception for small shareholders can easily be explained on the ground that such shareholders will typically not have the same informational advantage as other corporate insiders, the merits of the second exception are dubious as far as repayments are concerned. It may be useful to give an incentive to investors who acquire shares in an attempt to rescue the company by exempting them from the subordination rule. It is difficult to see, however, why such an investor should also be exempt from the repayment restrictions, given that this enables him to abuse of his insider status by causing the repayment of his loan in the vicinity of insolvency.Google Scholar

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52 See the contribution by Matthias Casper in this issue of the German Law Journal.Google Scholar

53 InsO § 135 n. 1. If no insolvency proceedings are commenced, the creditors themselves are entitled to avoid and claim back the security interest under AnfG § 6 n. 1.Google Scholar

54 InsO § 135 n. 1, as amended; cf. also AnfG § 6 n. 1, as amended.Google Scholar

55 Supra Part B.II.1.Google Scholar

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62 See European Insolvency Regulation, art. 3 (1) § 1 and art. 4 (1), Council Regulation 1346/2000, 2000 O.J. (L160) 1 on insolvency proceedings.Google Scholar

63 BTDrucks 16/6140.Google Scholar

64 GmbHG §§ 32a, b will be repealed, and the new provisions will be found in InsO §§ 39, 135 and AnfG § 6 as amended.Google Scholar

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