Although
the Bankruptcy Act provides some benefits to the stakeholders, the Act suffers
from several loopholes. For example, the Act failed to address corporate body
and cross-border bankruptcy issues. Though the Companies Act, 1994 contains
some of the aspects of corporate body bankruptcy in different forms, the
Bankruptcy Act should include corporate bankruptcy and also cross-border
bankruptcy following the UNCITRAL Model Law on Cross-Border Insolvency.
In
Bangladesh, bankruptcy is governed by the Bankruptcy Act, 1997. An individual
can be declared 'bankrupt' through an order of adjudication by the bankruptcy
court if he commits an act of bankruptcy as described in section 9 of the said
Act. The Act provides opportunities to both creditors and debtors to initiate
bankruptcy proceedings. However, a debtor is usually reluctant to initiate such
proceedings due to some adverse legal consequences and social dogma attached to
the word 'bankrupt'. As a result, full potential of bankruptcy by debtor is
still a realm which remains to be explored extensively.
After
a legally specific act of bankruptcy is committed by the debtor, a petition may
be presented before the bankruptcy court by the debtor himself or the creditors
to publish an order of bankruptcy. According to section 13 of the Act, in case
of petition by the debtor himself, certain conditions must be complied with,
e.g. (i) he has to mention specifically in his plaint that he is unable to pay
his debt and (ii) the amount of debt is minimum 20,000 or due to his
incapability of paying debt he is not under arrest or detained in prison in the
process of execution by court or his property is not attached amid the filing
of plaint.
The
petition for bankruptcy by the debtor is required to include certain
information, e.g. a specific statement of his incapability to pay debt, the
amount of claim against him, the detail description of his total property and
the value thereof, a declaration of his will to submit all his properties with
accounts book before the court and a statement with regard to his previous
declaration of bankruptcy or application for being bankrupt (if any) etc.
After
hearing both parties, the bankruptcy court can pass an order of adjudication
declaring the debtor as 'bankrupt' and fix a date for hearing to determine
whether the bankrupt will be declared as discharged or not. While determining
the issue the court may take into consideration the normal behaviour and other
activities of debtor during the continuance of the process or beforehand. For
bankruptcy by the debtor a separate petition for discharge is not necessary
rather his petition for bankruptcy will be considered for the discharge as
well. When an order of adjudication is made, the bankrupt individual has to
assist in the realisation of his property and the distribution of the proceeds
thereof among the creditors. Any court in which a suit or other proceeding in
relation to a claim for money or other property is pending against a debtor
will, on proof that an order of bankruptcy has been made against him, transfer
it to the bankruptcy court which has made the order of bankruptcy.
Sections
50, 60 and 94 of the Act impose some obligations and restrictions on a
bankrupt, for whom no order of discharge is passed. For instance, he is to
delegate his all property except maintenance cost of himself and his family and
required to submit, after every six months, the report containing ins and outs
of his acquired property of any kind within six months. Furthermore, he will
not be allowed to leave Bangladesh without prior permission of the court.
Moreover, he will be disqualified from being an elected member of house of the
nation or any other statutory organisation or acquiring nomination,
participating in the meeting or casting vote for such purpose, being a
receiver, being appointed as judges, magistrates, justices of the peace or
being employed in the service of the republic and taking loan from any
financial institutions. Having satisfied as to the intention of debtor to
defeat the creditors the court may nullify any transfer of property made within
15 years before the order of adjudication is published except the properties
sold for a proper value or acquired by way of inheritance. Additionally, the
undischarged bankrupt will be barred from being a director of a company.
Flip
side of the coin is that a debtor enjoys, before or after publishing an order
of bankruptcy, some immunities and protections under this Act. According to
section 32 of the Act, the following exempted properties of a bankrupt
individual will not liable to be taken over or vested, i.e. the instruments or
tool the debtor uses, cloths, household appliance and any other necessary
instruments of his family, the debtor's non-mortgaged living house the area of
which is not more than 2500 square ft in urban areas and 5000 square ft in
local areas and the total price of these instruments cannot be more than Taka 3
Lac. Likewise, on application, the eligible debtor may be, during the
continuance of the proceedings or afterwards, provided with an order of reorganisation
to repay the debts subject to the consent of two thirds of the creditors. In
addition to that the insolvent will be entitled to apply for an order of
protection to be protected from any kind of arrest or detention against debts
and to that effect the court may order for such protection and necessary
actions. Under section 31(3) of the Act, during the continuance of the
proceedings no creditor is allowed to claim any relief or take any step against
the estate or exempted property without permission from the court.
Moreover,
section 51 extends some additional perks to a bankrupt individual who has been
discharged by the court, i.e. he will be freed from any type of claims,
liabilities and debts except any debt due to the Government; any debt or
liability incurred by means of any fraud or fraudulent breach of trust to which
he was a party; any debt or liability in respect of which he has obtained
forbearance by any fraud to which he was a party. In addition to that a
discharged bankrupt will be entitled to claim the bar against all liabilities
arising before the petition is presented.
Although the Bankruptcy Act provides some benefits to the stakeholders, the Act suffers from several loopholes. For example, the Act failed to address corporate body and cross-border bankruptcy issues. Though the Companies Act, 1994 contains some of the aspects of corporate body bankruptcy in different forms, the Bankruptcy Act should include corporate bankruptcy and also cross-border bankruptcy following the UNCITRAL Model Law on Cross-Border Insolvency. Moreover, any arrest or attachment of property in the process of recovery of money should not be a bar in order to file a petition by the debtor for initiating bankruptcy proceedings in favour of the debtor himself because such arrested individual or owner of the attached property should not be deprived of right to be bankrupt. The provisions regarding reorganisation plan is of subjective nature where no special criterions have been set which may give rise to arbitrary actions by the receiver. Alternative dispute resolution mechanism should be improved. Being laws of similar nature the Artha Rin Adalat Ain, 2003 and the Bankruptcy Act, 1997 should complement each other. However, no such correspondence is tried rather the cases are adjudicated in the different courts. Despite there being some downsides, bankruptcy by the debtor could give a bankrupt individual a fresh start and has the potential of being an armour for a distressed debtor in lieu of
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