Rowena Page#7388

Rowena Page

Rowena specialises in commercial chancery litigation, with particular expertise in the areas of insolvency, commercial law and fraud. Her practice has both a national and an international focus, with many cases incorporating, or consisting of, cross-border or international disputes. 

Rowena is a robust and confident advocate, with extensive court experience. Her practice embraces all aspects of commercial and insolvency litigation (both personal and corporate), with particular expertise in breach of directors’ duties claims, officeholder claims, fraud, and all aspects of asset tracing/asset recovery. Much of Rowena’s work takes place in the High Court and the Insolvency and Companies Court. 

Clients commend Rowena on her thorough, commercially focused advice and her strength as an advocate. 

Rowena is called to the Bar of the Eastern Caribbean Supreme Court, British Virgin Islands and sits as a Deputy Insolvency and Companies Court Judge in the High Court in London.

Panel

  • Contributing Author

Qualified Year

  • 2012

Education

  • University of Cambridge (2008-2011)

1 Contributions by Rowena Page

Insolvency office-holders: preservation, retention and disclosure of documents; inspection rights, privilege and Civil Procedure Rules (England and Wales)
PRACTICE NOTES
Insolvency office-holders: preservation, retention and disclosure of documents; inspection rights, privilege and Civil Procedure Rules (England and Wales)
The duty of insolvency office-holders to preserve information and its relationship with the Civil Procedure Rules The entitlements and obligations of insolvency office-holders regarding records, and the information contained within them, derive from, and are constrained by, the Insolvency Act 1986 (IA 1986), the Insolvency (England and Wales) Rules 2016 (IR 2016), SI 2016/1024, the Insolvency Regulations 1994 (IR 1994), SI 1994/2507, together with the Civil Procedure Rules 1998, SI 1998/3132. In the course of administering an insolvent estate, an office-holder may acquire, retain, or produce multiple types of documents. Such rights and responsibilities relate to both the papers themselves and the data they hold, and exist by virtue of those instruments and remain subject to their provisions. This includes procedural duties and constraints...
Restructuring & Insolvency
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