Contractor Among Contractors
There's something nagging at me that if a company is struck off wrongly (ie, with creditors), then the debts can be transferred to the directors. Before a striking off can take place, the company is required to send a notice to creditors of their intention. I suspect that this notice has not been sent to HMRC and therefore there could be repercussions. But i might be wrong - I'm going on memory here.
Godlike
I was intrigued by this, because if the debt cannot somehow be satisfied by action against the former directors it would be pretty easy to go on a fiddling spree (perhaps it is).
Not notifying interested parties (e.g. creditors) within 7 days of submission of the 652a is a criminal offence. £5k, 15 years disqualification.
I cannot find a specific method of transferring the debts to the director(s) however there must be one. The creditors have suffered loss as a result of the criminal action and would have redress through the civil courts.
My old company was struck off in 2002 by companies house - no accounts completed and I think corp tax owing about £7k. HMRC didn't contest closure.
Tone
Godlike
Tone,
Not a problem,provided HMRC were notified (and this can be established) then it is their responsibility to contest. They didn't and were therefore happy. Tough on them.
I am assuming though that you didn't go for ESC 16 clearance because there was no need to take the remaining funds (including their CT) as capital?
In this case part of the undertaking is that you would pay all outstanding monies due to HMRC. If you were in breach of this then, even though they didn't object to the striking off, they would have the right to come after it from you personally.
Since you haven't heard anything for 10 years their prospect of success would be fairly small; indeed it is probably time expired after 6 years anyway.
Super poster
Yes it is.
If a company ceases trading because the business went tits up then you can quite legally phoenix the company, take the good bits and continue trading the next day. It's a pretty bad situation for your creditors but quite often that's the way businesses work. So long as you are not trading fraudulently (eg, deliberately bankrupting the company or paying some creditors while the other others get nothing), or doing it systematically, there is little anyone can do about it too. That's the way business works.
Banned
Nervous Newbie