Sometimes a company will be in the situation where it has ceased to trade and has no assets and we are asked by a director whether they should bother to liquidate the company.
After all, is it not an option for the director to do nothing and let a creditor pay to have the Court order the winding-up of the company rather than the director paying for a Creditors Voluntary Liquidation?
We say that’s a bad approach for the following reasons:
Problems with the ATO - A director runs the risk that the ATO will one day serve a Director Penalty Notice on the company and the directors which can make the directors personally liable for the company’s debt to the ATO. If a director abandons the company but doesn’t liquidate the company then there is a significant risk that Legal Notices and the Director Penalty Notice will not be received by a Director – the unfortunate effect is that the director becomes personally liable for the ATO debt.
Problems with other creditors – When a company simply ceases to trade and there are outstanding creditors, then those creditors will continue to pursue the company for payment. Sometimes that will be by way of Legal Notices and sometimes a continual stream of irate phone calls from creditors. The only effective way to stop the hassles is to put the company into liquidation and thereafter creditors are dealt with by the liquidator, not the directors.
"…after I gave Dissolve the go-ahead I received the No Asset Liquidation Package within two hours and I had the company in liquidation the next morning."...
Jenny, Director of a Fashion Retailer
"I’ve now referred two liquidations to Dissolve and in both cases my clients were amazed at the ease of the appointment process and how quickly the liquidation was finished."...
Simon, Partner of a Sydney Accounting Firm.
"Cliff and his staff provided a fast, efficient and friendly service. The process was simplified and all steps were communicated well. The price was exactly as advertised with...
Steven, Director of a Property Development Company.