National Report of the Netherlands on the New Services Directive

2008 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hans van Meerten
Author(s):  
Faber Dennis ◽  
Vermunt Niels

This chapter discusses the law on creditor claims in the Netherlands. It deals with insolvency claims, administration claims, and non-enforceable claims in turn. Each section covers: the definition and scope of the claim; rules for submission, verification, and satisfaction or admission of claims; ranking of claims; and voting and other participation rights in insolvency proceedings. In essence, holders of insolvency claims (‘insolvency creditors’) are entitled to the liquidation proceeds of the debtor’s insolvency estate after the full discharge of the administration claims. Insolvency creditors (except secured creditors) can only pursue payment by submitting their claims for admission in the proceedings. Administration claims have to be satisfied in priority to insolvency claims and need not be submitted in the claims verification procedure. Holders of such claims (‘administration creditors’) can take recourse against assets comprised in the insolvency estate. Holders of non-enforceable claims can only seek recourse after the insolvency proceedings are terminated (provided that the debtor continues to exist).


Author(s):  
Dennis Faber ◽  
Niels Vermunt

The origin of the current statutory regime dealing with contracts in insolvency dates back to the enactment of the Bankruptcy Code in 1893. The Bankruptcy Code entered into force on 1 September 1896 (and still applies today). Limited changes have subsequently been implemented to improve the statutory treatment of contracts in insolvency. Various proposals submitted in (draft) bills and in legal literature to modernize the existing legal framework have largely been disregarded by the legislator.


The first principles of insolvency law applicable in a sovereign Dutch nation can be traced back to the Ordinance of Antwerp of 28 January 1515. As a predecessor of insolvency legislation elsewhere in Europe, the Ordinance contained core principles and features still deemed fundamental to a modern insolvency law system (e.g. the collective nature of the insolvency proceedings, the appointment of an insolvency administrator, the prohibition against concealing property of the debtor, the application of the pari passu principle and the existence of preferential debts).


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