Commonwealth Repealed Acts
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This legislation has been repealed.
CORPORATIONS LAW- SECT 440G
Duties of court officer in relation to property of company
- (1)
- This section applies where an officer of a
court (in this section called the court officer), being:
- (a)
- a sheriff; or
- (b)
- the registrar or other appropriate officer of the court;
receives written notice of the fact that a company is under
administration.
- (2)
- During the administration, the
court officer cannot:
- (a)
- take action to sell property of the company under a process of
execution; or
- (b)
- pay to a person (other than the administrator):
- (i)
- proceeds of selling property of the company (at any time) under a
process of execution; or
- (ii)
- money of the company seized (at any time) under a process of
execution; or
- (iii)
- money paid (at any time) to avoid seizure or sale of property
of the company under a process of execution; or
- (c)
- take action in
relation to the attachment of a debt due to the company; or
- (d)
- pay to a person (other than the administrator) money received
because of the attachment of such a debt.
- (3)
- The court officer must deliver to the
administrator any property of the company that is in the court officer's
possession under a process of execution (whenever begun).
- (4)
- The court officer must pay to the administrator all proceeds or
money of a kind referred to in paragraph (2)(b) or (d) that:
- (a)
- are in the court officer's
possession; or
- (b)
- have been paid into the court and have not since been paid out.
- (5)
- The costs of the execution or attachment
are a first charge on property delivered under subsection (3) or proceeds or
money paid under subsection (4).
- (6)
- In order to give effect to a charge under subsection (5) on
proceeds or money, the court officer may retain, on behalf of the person
entitled to the charge, so much of the proceeds or money as the court officer
thinks necessary.
- (7)
- The Court may, if it is satisfied that it is appropriate to do
so, permit the court officer to take action, or to make a payment, that
subsection (2) would otherwise prevent.
- (8)
- A person who buys property in good faith under a sale under a
process of execution gets a good title to the property as against the company
and the administrator, despite anything else in this section.
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