Phoenix company

A phoenix company is a commercial entity which has emerged from the collapse of another through insolvency. Unlike "bottom of the harbour" and similar schemes that strictly focus on asset stripping, the new company is set up to trade in the same or similar trading activities as the former, and is able to present the appearance of "business as usual" to its customers. It has been described as "one that that arises amidst or from the disarray and demise of its predecessor."[1]

Nature of phoenix activity

Types of phoenix company operators

A study by the Australian Securities and Investments Commission has identified three groups of operators that practice phoenix activity:[2]

Group Description
Innocent phoenix operators A business gets into a position of doubtful solvency or insolvency, and directors try and recover as much as possible from the business before it collapses.
Occupational hazard The nature of the industry may potentially heighten the risk of phoenix activity. Once a company has collapsed, the operators of the business may have little option but to return to the same industry in the form of a new business.
Careerist offenders These operators purposely structure their operations in order to engage in phoenix activity and to avoid detection. These offenders are often selective as to which debts they will pay throughout the life of the company.

Such activity can also be characterized as either "basic" (involving replacement of one entity by another) or "sophisticated" (which has regard for the intricacies of corporate groups, where management and directors may misuse the concept of the corporate veil).[1]

Certain sectors see more frequent phoenix activity than others. In the events industry, public relations and marketing agencies are known to "phoenix" regularly.[3]

Phoenix scenarios

Phoenix activity is generally observed to occur through the following scenarios:[4]

Group Description
"One after the other" A closely held company is formed, which operates for a period of 624 months. During that time, it accumulates large debts, stalls creditors for as long as possible, and, when pressure becomes too great, it goes into liquidation. Another company, frequently with a very similar name, purchases the productive assets and takes over the operations of the failing company. Often the new company operates out of the same premises, with the same suppliers, employees and customers.
Management company The productive assets are kept in a management company, which is kept solvent. A second labour supply company employs the workers and conducts the principal business operations. Profits are stripped from the second company through high rates charged for the use of the first company's assets, which leaves the second with insufficient funds to pay its liabilities. Eventually, the second company will be liquidated, with little to no capital reserves, and a new one will rise in its stead.
Labour hire This structure utilizes a management company, a sales company and a labour hire company. The sales company receives all the income arising from the business, while the management company charges the sales company for the use of the assets. The labour hire company employs the workers, for which the net pay is reimbursed by the sales company but not the payroll deductions or taxes. Often the labour hire company is a façade, merely issuing payment summaries, while the sales company pays the workers directly. Eventually the labour hire company is forced into liquidation, while the underlying assets are preserved in the management company.
Shadow directors Former directors can control a company through spouses, relatives and associates. There is little to prevent a disqualified director from giving advice as an employee of a successor company.

Indicators

The primary identifiers of phoenix activity have been described as "a deliberate and often cyclical misuse of the corporate form accompanied by a fraudulent scheme to evade creditors".[5] Several common characteristics have been identified as indicating harmful phoenix activity:[6]

  1. the failed entity is formed with only a nominal share capital
  2. the failed entity is under-capitalized
  3. the directors/managers/controllers of the failed and successor company are the same
  4. the failed entity is trading whilst insolvent
  5. assets of the failed company are depleted shortly before the cessation of business
  6. the failed company makes preferential payments to key creditors to assure supply to the successor companyE
  7. the failed entity was operated to evade prior liabilities
  8. the successor company operates in the same industry
  9. the successor company trades with the same or similar name
  10. the successor company commences trading immediately prior to, or within 12 months of, the cessation of the failed entity
  11. assets of the failed company are transferred at below market value to the successor company
  12. many of the employees of the failed company are re-employed by the successor company

United Kingdom

Company law in the UK has been formed to enable such activity in order to protect and promote entrepreneurship, by reducing risk and improving the chances of continued trading and business development. The National Fraud Authority has observed that:

It is perfectly legal to form a new company from the remains of a failed company. Any director of a failed company can become a director of a new company unless he or she is:

Other less scrupulous directors may undertake such activity in order to evade liabilities to workers that accrue from continuous employment, such as the right to claim for unfair dismissal, or to receive statutory redundancy payments. The Employment Appeal Tribunal has held that such moves are generally barred under s. 218 of the Employment Rights Act 1996.[7]

The law allows the directors of a failed company to be reinstated in the same, or similar posts in the phoenix company, within limits. The Company Directors Disqualification Act 1986 prohibits directors whose conduct led to the insolvency of a company from taking on similar roles elsewhere for a prescribed length of time. S. 216 of the Insolvency Act 1986 provides for both criminal and civil liability where directors or shadow directors of a company that has entered into liquidation become a director, or otherwise involved in the formation or management of another company that operates under the same or a similar name to the insolvent one, within the following twelve months of such liquidation.[lower-alpha 1][8] Remedies include petitioning the High Court to wind up a company, as in the 2014 case of Pinecom Services Limited and Pine Commodities Ltd (which had continued a business previously shut down in the public interest).[9]

Criticism

There has been criticism in both the media[10] and in Parliamentary quarters, as to the adverse effect on small to medium-sized suppliers to a failed company, whose position as creditors leaves them having to write off bad debt from the former company, with the phoenix company having shed all liability to cover the debt.[11] Moreover, the House of Commons' Business and Enterprise Select Committee also raised concerns that the law may "adversely affect competitors, who will continue to carry costs which the phoenix company has shed."[12]

Australia

Phoenix activity was identified in government reports as early as 1994,[13] and the 2003 Final Report of the Royal Commission into the Building and Construction Industry devoted a chapter to its practice in that sector of the economy.[14]

It has attracted the attention of the Australian Securities and Investment Commission, the Australian Taxation Office and the Fair Work Ombudsman, who have been pursuing those undertaking such practices to evade liability under their respective statutes.[lower-alpha 2][15] The Treasurer of Australia issued proposals in 2009 on options to deal with fraudulent phoenix activity,[16] and the Parliament of Australia passed several Acts in 2012 as a result.[lower-alpha 3] An exposure draft was also issued for comment on the question of whether to assign joint and several liability to directors of phoenix companies in certain circumstances,[17] but limited legislation directed at illegal phoenix activity was passed.[18] In 2015 two significant government reports were released that included a consideration of how best to address phoenix activity: the Productivity Commission Report Business Set Up, Transfer and Closure,[19] and the Senate Economic References Committee Report: I just want to be paid: Insolvency in the Australian Construction Industry.[20] Despite the frequency and volume to attention given to phoenix activity by government and regulators, scholars note that "[t]here is no law in Australia that defines 'phoenix activity' , nor declares it illegal";[5] "phoenix activity is an operational term, not a legal one".[5]

The economic cost of phoenix activity has been estimated in 1996 by the Australian Securities Commission,[21] and in 2012 by the Fair Work Ombudsman.[22] While there is economic cost associated with all phoenix activity, the underlying behaviour is not always illegal and this makes estimating the economic costs associated with illegal phoenix activity extremely difficult.[5]

Enforcement activity has been active under the Corporations Act:

  • Several significant cases have dealt with the liability of directors conducting such activity.[lower-alpha 4]
  • In ASIC v Somerville,[24] the New South Wales Supreme Court, in a significant extension of liability, found that a legal advisor was not just complicit in certain directors’ breaches of duty, but was in fact instrumental in structuring new companies into which the assets of various insolvent companies were transferred.[25] ASIC only sought disqualification for the advisor, but there has been debate as to whether it should have also sought compensation for creditors or a penalty in the circumstances.[26]

The Fair Work Ombudsman has also investigated several high-profile cases:[27]

  • An abattoir business in New South Wales was pursued several times: initially for closing a business, terminating the staff, and setting up a new one while refusing to rehire ex-employees who were union members;[28] and later for hiring workers through a separate subsidiary who worked for another connected company, and then draining the first company of funds after terminating several workers, before sending it into liquidation.[29]
  • A sole director of a transport company was fined for forcing a company into liquidation in order to avoid a claim by an employee for underpayment of wages.[30]

Further reading

Notes

  1. Except where leave of the court has been granted, or prescribed circumstances are met, in which case Part 4, Chapter 22 of the Insolvency Rules 1986 governs the manner in which notice must be given to creditors.
  2. being, respectively, the Corporations Act 2001, the taxation and superannuation statutes, and the Fair Work Act 2009
  3. Corporations Amendment (Phoenixing and Other Measures) Act 2012, Act No. 48 of 2012 and Tax Laws Amendment (2012 Measures No. 2) Act 2012, Act No. 99 of 2012
  4. Jeffree v National Companies and Securities Commission, [1990] WAR 183 (where a director transferred the business name and assets from one company to another, in order to avoid paying an arbitration award); R v Heilbronn [1999] QCA 95, (1999) 150 FLR 43 (26 March 1999) (where the director of a company with substantial sales tax liabilities stripped the company of its assets and transferred them to another company, and then to a third company, while carrying on the same business under the same trading name, and without adequate consideration being given in each transfer to satisfy outstanding liabilities).[23]

References

  1. 1 2 Margret & Peck 2015, p. 109.
  2. Cole 2003, pp. 118–119.
  3. David Quainton (12 December 2008). "Phoenixing: Tempers flare as the phoenix rises". Event Magazine.
  4. Roach 2010, pp. 96–97.
  5. 1 2 3 4 Matthew, Anne F. (2015). "The conundrum of phoenix activity: Is further reform necessary?". Insolvency Law Journal 23: 119. Retrieved 18 February 2016.
  6. Roach 2010, pp. 95–96.
  7. "Workers’ rights on insolvency". Thompsons Solicitors. 2 July 2009., discussing Da Silva Junior v Composite Mouldings & Design Ltd, [2008] UKEAT 0241_08_1808 (18 August 2008)
  8. Jim Davies (4 March 2005). "Stop the phoenix rising from the ashes". Accountancy Age.
  9. "Two carbon copy companies that raked in nearly £2m are shut down after Insolvency Service investigation". Insolvency Service. 11 July 2014.
  10. Miller, Robert (28 February 2006). "Phoenix firms spark fly-by-night fears". The Daily Telegraph.
  11. "Government urged to re-think decision not to offer creditors more legal protection from 'phoenix' companies". Forum for Private Business. 27 January 2012.
  12. "3: Confidence in the Insolvency Regime". Sixth Report: The Insolvency Service. Business and Enterprise Committee, House of Commons. 21 April 2009.
  13. Anderson 2012, p. 413.
  14. Cole, Terence (2003). "12: Phoenix Companies". Final Report (PDF) 8. Canberra: Royal Commission into the Building and Construction Industry. pp. 111–217. ISBN 0-642-21080-2.
  15. Anderson & Haller 2014, pp. 472–473.
  16. Actions against Fraudulent Phoenix Activity: Proposals Paper (PDF). Canberra: Commonwealth of Australia. 2009. ISBN 978-0-642-74528-6.
  17. "Exposure Draft: Corporations Amendment (Similar Names) Bill 2012". The Treasury. 20 December 2011.
  18. Corporations Amendment (Phoenixing and Other Measures) Act 2012 (Cth)
  19. Business Set up, Transfer and Closure. Australian Government, Productivity Commission. 2015.
  20. Australia, Senate Economic References Committee, December 2015.
  21. Phoenix Companies and Insolvent Trading Research Paper No 95/01. Australian Securities Commission. 1996.
  22. Phoenix Activity: Sizing the Problem and Matching Solutions. https://www.fairwork.gov.au/about-us/access-accountability-and-reporting/research-reports: Fair Work Ombudsman. 2012.
  23. Anderson 2012, p. 420.
  24. ASIC v Somerville & Ors [2009] NSWSC 934, 77 NSWLR 110 (8 September 2009)
  25. Anderson & Haller 2014, p. 473.
  26. Anderson & Haller 2014, p. 490.
  27. Anderson & Haller 2014, p. 477.
  28. Fair Work Ombudsman v Ramsey Food Processing Pty Ltd [2011] FCA 1176 (19 October 2011)
  29. Fair Work Ombudsman v Ramsey Food Processing Pty Ltd (No 2) [2012] FCA 408 (20 April 2012)
  30. Fair Work Ombudsman v Foure Mile Pty Ltd & Anor [2013] FCCA 682 (28 June 2013)

External links

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