Contact with chambers should be made through the Practice Management Team. They are happy to discuss client requirements and provide further information on such matters as the expertise and experience of individual members, fees, working practices and languages spoken. We have members able to work in French, German, Italian, Spanish, Dutch, Swedish, Greek and Chinese (Mandarin).
Outside working hours, a member of our team is always available to be contacted on matters of an urgent nature. Contact should be made using the Chambers main number or email.
For our Singapore office, for client enquiries please contact our Head of Business Development for Asia Pacific, Katie-Beth Jones, and for all other queries please contact Lynn Quek. Out of office hours calls will automatically be diverted to our practice management team in London.
28 Maxwell Road
#02-03 Maxwell Chambers Suites
Singapore 069120
singapore@twentyessex.com
t: +65 62257230
Contact with chambers should be made through the Practice Management Team. They are happy to discuss client requirements and provide further information on such matters as the expertise and experience of individual members, fees, working practices and languages spoken. We have members able to work in French, German, Italian, Spanish, Dutch, Swedish, Greek and Chinese (Mandarin).
Outside working hours, a member of our team is always available to be contacted on matters of an urgent nature. Contact should be made using the Chambers main number or email.
For our Singapore office, for client enquiries please contact our Head of Business Development for Asia Pacific, Katie-Beth Jones, and for all other queries please contact Lynn Quek. Out of office hours calls will automatically be diverted to our practice management team in London.
28 Maxwell Road
#02-03 Maxwell Chambers Suites
Singapore 069120
singapore@twentyessex.com
t: +65 62257230
Is it time to dispose of the definition of disposition in the Cayman Islands Companies Act (2023 Revision)? In this briefing, the authors Stephen Atherton KC and Sarah Tresman advance the argument that differences between the Cayman Islands legislation and its UK equivalent, the Insolvency Act 1986, in how key terms are defined – and indeed, whether they are defined at all – creates a series of problematic and unnecessary consequences, particularly with respect to the potential for success of a liquidator’s claims under section 146(2).
The authors highlight that, with respect to a liquidator’s claims under this section, the current definition and application of ‘disposition’, the key term in the Caymans legislation:
The authors conclude that: “… for the sake of coherence and, more importantly, to make the relevant section far more effective in addressing what was plainly the mischief at which section 146(2) was directed, the Cayman Islands legislature should either remove entirely the definition given to ‘disposition’, or refine it (for example) to remove the reference to a ‘disposition’ constituting a transaction, ‘by which any legal or equitable interest in property is created, transferred or extinguished’.”