Legal Guidance and Research / Experts / Louise Corcoran
Louise Corcoran#13711

Louise Corcoran

Louise advises a wide variety of clients, including insolvency office-holders, lenders, companies and directors, in relation to the full spectrum of insolvency and restructuring matters.  

Louise has experience of debt restructurings, formal insolvency processes, asset/business acquisitions from distressed companies and corporate reorganisations. She also regularly provides advice on validity of security, directors’ duties and security enforcement strategy.

Louise trained and qualified at a City firm, working there for several years following qualification. She joined the restructuring & insolvency practice at Stevens & Bolton in 2020. 

Panel

  • Contributing Author

2 Contributions by Louise Corcoran

Buying property from an administrator: due diligence, landlord consent, licences, security release and SPA drafting (England and Wales)
PRACTICE NOTES
Buying property from an administrator: due diligence, landlord consent, licences, security release and SPA drafting (England and Wales)
Property often constitutes part of the assets of an insolvent company to be realised by an administrator, and it is frequently crucial to a would-be purchaser wishing to keep the business operating after completion. That said, a purchaser must appreciate that acquiring a property from an insolvent company involves several notable differences, and a distinct strategy is required from that used where the company is solvent. This Practice Note identifies the principal divergences between purchasing property from a solvent company and one in administration, predominantly in the leasehold arena, though many of the observations will likewise be relevant to freehold transactions. Difference in approach compared to a solvent seller of property Buying from an insolvent vendor necessitates a different approach than a transaction with a solvent seller, reflecting the particular context of administration and the nature of the assets being disposed of. Due diligence and timescales Contracts for the sale and purchase of land rest on the legal doctrine of caveat emptor (buyer beware). Consequently, it falls to the buyer to undertake whatever level of due diligence it considers necessary to be satisfied that it wishes to proceed with the acquisition of the property...
Restructuring & Insolvency
Distressed and Accelerated Asset Sales: Legal Framework, Directors’ Duties, Risk Allocation and Process (England and Wales)
PRACTICE NOTES
Distressed and Accelerated Asset Sales: Legal Framework, Directors’ Duties, Risk Allocation and Process (England and Wales)
General overview of asset sales Whether a buyer acquires assets from a solvent owner, or from a distressed seller subject to a formal insolvency process in the asset transaction context, a range of differing legal and practical issues and considerations will arise for those involved on all sides in practice. The Insolvency Act 1986 (IA 1986) sets the rules and regulates various formal insolvency procedures affecting both corporate bodies and individuals alike in defined circumstances. In England and Wales, the principal corporate procedures are administration and liquidation in particular: if the company is in liquidation (compulsory or voluntary) and the appointed liquidator cannot sell the business as a going concern, the liquidator will realise the insolvent company’s assets—ideally as a single job lot where feasible and appropriate, otherwise piecemeal where necessary as needed—to ultimately maximise the funds available for distribution to creditors when a company enters administration, the administrator assumes control of the company’s assets from the directors, with the aim of meeting one of the statutory purposes of administration (see Practice Note: Administration—an introductory guide). In some cases, and from time to time, the administrator will secure the best value for the company’s assets by using a pre-pack sale process...
Restructuring & Insolvency
Expert page AD
If you expected to see yourself on this page, click here.