
Originally Posted by
Maslins
I imagine every liquidator will have an indemnity of some kind in their paperwork they'll require you to sign before they press ahead. The liquidadator is taking over legal responsibility for your company. They will be doing so based on things you've told them (eg what assets and liabilities the company has). If it later transpires what you said was wrong, regardless of whether you deliberately lied or you were just mistaken, there are situations where this could put the liquidator in a very awkward situation.
Eg a very real situation that MVL Online has sometimes...rarely, but it happens:
- client says their company has £100k cash, no liabilities.
- we're appointed as liquidators based on that,
- we get the £100k, and distribute £75k to the shareholders immediately, temporarily retaining £25k,
- a month later, HMRC flag that the client didn't pay its final £30k CT liability,
- the client double checks, realises this is correct, they forgot to pay it,
We only hold £25k so cannot afford to pay it from company funds. We would not have done the £75k distribution had we known about the £30k CT liability. The client had told us there was no CT liability. The indemnity gives us the legal right to pursue some of the £75k back from the client to settle the company's liability.
In your specific situation you mention that they're trying to indemnify the accountant too? I'm unsure exactly what the situation is there. However, if you're refusing to sign the indemnity, I can understand why the liquidator will refuse to pay out any funds to you until they have HMRC clearance. It will be primarily to prevent the situation I give as an example above.
Re your final couple of lines, I'm unsure if you've legally appointed this liquidator. I would have thought the indemnity would be a standard part of their appointment documents (ie if you didn't sign the indemnity, you won't have appointed them as liquidator), but possibly that isn't the case. If you have appointed them, then not much you can do. Legally they control your company now, not you. Theoretically you could seek to get a different liquidator to take over the case...however you'll likely just end up paying two liquidators that way, and still have to sign an indemnity with the new one.
I would recommend against you doing anything drastic with the company bank account, eg taking out all the money. If you've legally appointed them, then I'm unsure exactly what the consequences would be of you taking all the money now without their blessing, but I think you'd be on very dangerous ground. If you haven't appointed them, then you're not in liquidation yet, so if you took all the funds now it would likely be taxed as a dividend.