Inspectors' Handbook — Appendix A
Glossary
A
- Act
- Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act, a federal statute of Canada governing bankruptcy and insolvency.
- Advance notice
- A legal document under the Act whereby a secured creditor provides 10 days' notice to an insolvent debtor of its intention to enforce its security.
- Arm's length
- Describes dealings between two parties who are not related by blood or marriage and who are presumed to have approximately equal bargaining power.
- Assets
- Items that are owned and have value; in the context of bankruptcy, it means all the property of the debtor available for the general benefit of creditors.
- Assignment (in bankruptcy)
- Made by insolvent persons who assign all their property to a trustee for the benefit of their creditors.
- Automatic discharge
- Where there is no opposition from the Superintendent, a trustee or a creditor, or in some circumstances, where the bankrupt does not have a significant tax debt, any person who has not refused or neglected to receive counselling services is automatically discharged at the end of the period anticipated by the Act. This period may be 9, 21, 24 or 36 months after the date of the bankruptcy, depending on whether the bankrupt was required to make payments out of his or her income, surplus or not, and whether the bankrupt has previously been bankrupt.
B
- Bankrupt
- A natural person or corporation that has made an assignment or against whom a bankruptcy order has been made; it also means the legal status of that person.
- Bankruptcy
- The state of being bankrupt or the fact of becoming bankrupt.
C
- Charge
- A lien, preference or financial obligation attached to property.
- Collateral
- Property that is pledged as security against a debt.
- Conditional discharge
- Discharge of a bankrupt with specific conditions to be fulfilled before receiving an absolute discharge.
- Conditional sale
- The sale of goods where the buyer receives possession of goods or property, but does not receive title to them until specific conditions are fulfilled.
- Conservatory measures
- Actions taken to preserve the interests of the bankrupt's estate under the Act.
- Corporation
- An entity (usually a business) having authority under law to act as a single person distinct from the shareholders who own it, and having the legal powers that its articles of incorporation grant it.
- Creditor
- One to whom a debt is owed; in insolvency matters, a person or corporation having a claim provable under the Act.
D
- Debt
- Liability on a claim; a specific sum of money due by agreement or otherwise; aggregate of all existing claims against a person or a corporation.
- Debtor
- One who owes an obligation to another, usually to pay money.
- Deemed trust
- A trust established by statute, considered to be a trust even though there may be no assets in it. For example, employee source deductions prescribed in the Income Tax Act are deemed to be held in trust for the Crown.
- Default
- Failure to pay or perform a legal or contractual obligation.
- Discharge
- The release of a debtor from most debts. A bankrupt's discharge may be automatic, suspended, conditional or absolute. The court may also refuse the bankrupt's discharge.
- Dividend
- The proportional share of a bankrupt's estate paid out by the trustee to creditors who have proven claims against that estate.
- Division I Proposal
- An offer made by debtors to their creditors in order to modify their payments. The procedure for a Division I Proposal applies to companies and individuals who want to avail themselves of it. This procedure also allows for restructuring of business debts while the business continues to operate.
- Division II Proposal (Consumer Proposal)
- A simplified proposal for repayment of debt to creditors, available under the Act to a consumer debtor whose aggregate debts, excluding a home mortgage, do not exceed the amount prescribed in the Act.
E
- Equity
- The difference between the market value of an asset and the debt against it.
- Estate
- The aggregate of possessions, including real rights, movable and immovable property, and personal and real property of an individual or a corporation.
- Examination
- Questioning of the bankrupt under oath with respect to the bankrupt's conduct, causes of bankruptcy and disposition of the bankrupt's property. The examination may be conducted by an Official Receiver, a trustee, a creditor or other interested person in accordance with conditions prescribed in the Act.
- Exempt assets
- Assets made exempt from execution or seizure by provincial legislation that are not available to the trustee for the benefit of creditors.
F
- Fair market value
- The price that a buyer would be willing to pay for an asset and the seller would be willing to accept in an open and unrestricted market.
G
- Garnishment
- A legal process whereby a creditor requires a third party to turn over a debtor's property, such as wages or bank accounts, to a creditor.
- General rules
- Rules enacted under the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act.
- Guarantor
- An individual or a corporation that takes on financial responsibility for another's debt.
H
Hypothec
A right on property given to a creditor as performance for an obligation. It confers on the creditor the right to follow the property (even if it undergoes successive changes of ownership), to take possession of it, to take it in payment, or to sell it.
I
- Insolvency
- The condition of being unable to pay debts as they become due or in the ordinary course of business, or having liabilities that exceed the total value of assets.
- Insolvent person
- A person who is not bankrupt and who resides, carries on business, or has property in Canada, whose liabilities to creditors provable as claims under the Act amount to $1000 or more, and:
- who is unable to meet obligations as they become due;
- who has ceased paying current obligations in the ordinary course of business as they become due; or
- the aggregate of whose property is not, at a fair valuation, sufficient, or, if disposed of at a fairly conducted sale under legal process, would not be sufficient to enable payment of all obligations, due and accruing due.
- Inspector
- A person appointed by creditors to represent them before the trustee during the administration of a bankruptcy or proposal.
- Interim receiver
- A trustee appointed by the court to safeguard the estate assets for such time as the court may determine.
J
- Judgment
- A formal decision issued by a court on a matter under its consideration.
L
- Levy
- An assessment payable to the Superintendent of Bankruptcy for the purpose of defraying the expenses of the supervision by the Superintendent in the administration of estates.
- Liabilities
- Financial obligations or debt of an individual or a corporation, including unpaid taxes, salaries, accounts payable, etc.
- Lien
- A legal right or interest that a creditor has in the debtor's property, lasting usually until the debt that it secures is satisfied.
- Liquidation
- The act of converting assets of an individual or a company to cash, especially in bankruptcy or in the dissolution of a corporation.
M
- Monitor
- A person appointed by the court to review and report on day-to-day transactions of a business, usually in the restructuring of an insolvent business.
- Mortgage
- A conveyance of title to property that is given as security for the payment of a debt. Note: In the province of Quebec, it is a real right on property securing the performance of an obligation, without relinquishment of its owner.
O
- Offences
- The offence and sanction provisions are contained in Part VIII of the Act. These are criminal or quasi-criminal in nature; a person guilty of an offence is liable to a fine and/or imprisonment.
- Office of the Superintendent of Bankruptcy (OSB)
- The Office of the Superintendent of Bankruptcy, an agency of Industry Canada, supervises the administration of the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act.
- Official Receiver
- A person appointed by the Governor-in-Council deemed to be an Officer of the Court who performs statutory duties as specified by the Act, such as accepting the documents for the filing of proposals and bankruptcies, examining bankrupts under oath and chairing meetings of creditors.
- Opposition
- An objection to the bankrupt's discharge by the Superintendent, the trustee or a creditor.
- Ordinary creditor
- A creditor with no priority or security under the Act.
- Ordinary resolution
- A resolution carried b the majority of votes (one vote for each dollar of debt) of claims of creditors; disallowed claims do not vote.
P
- Person
- Includes a human being (natural person), a partnership, and a corporation that is recognized by law as having rights and duties.
- Personal bankruptcy – Ordinary Administration
- An Ordinary Administration applies to bankruptcy files of individuals whose realizable assets are estimated to be worth $15,000 or more. This type of bankruptcy procedure provides, for example:
- the publication of a notice of bankruptcy in a local newspaper;
- a meeting of creditors within the 21-day period following the day of bankruptcy;
- the possibility for the creditors to appoint five inspectors; and
- the approval of the trustee's fees by the inspectors.
- Personal bankruptcy – Summary Administration
- A Summary Administration applies to individuals whose realizable assets do not exceed $15,000. The Summary Administration of a bankruptcy estate is a simplified procedure in which, for example:
- there is no publication of the notice of bankruptcy in a local newspaper;
- a meeting of creditors is called only if requested by creditors and according to certain conditions;
- no inspectors are appointed unless the creditors decide to appoint them;
- joint assignments are permitted;
- the trustee's fees are prescribed; and
- the trustee is discharged without a court appearance, except when a creditor or the Superintendent opposes the discharge.
- Power of attorney
- A legal instrument setting out an individual's authority to act as the agent of the person giving the power of attorney.
- Preference
- The payment of money or the granting of security by a debtor that benefits one or more creditors to the detriment of the other creditors.
- Preferred creditor
- A creditor who has been given a priority under the Act over other creditors in the distribution of dividends.
- Priority
- The order in which creditors are ranked for payment of claims provable under the Act.
- Proof of claim
- A creditor's written statement that is submitted to prove the creditor's claim; used as the basis for paying dividends, if accepted by the trustee.
- Property
- Assets, including money, land, movable and immovable property, and personal and real property, situated in Canada or elsewhere.
- Provable claim
- Any liability of the debtor for a debt incurred before the date of the bankruptcy.
- Proxy
- A document signed by a creditor granting another person the authority to represent them at creditors' meetings. The proxy holder can exercise the creditor's right to vote.
Q
- Quorum
- The minimum number of creditors who must be present in person or by proxy to conduct business or to take a vote. At a meeting of creditors, one creditor present, in person or by proxy, who has filed a provable claim with the trustee prior to the meeting, constitutes a quorum.
R
- Receiver
- A person who has taken possession pursuant to a security agreement of substantially all of the inventory, accounts receivable or the other property of the debtor. "Receiver" also includes a person who has been appointed privately pursuant to a security agreement or by an order of the court for the protection or collection of property that is the subject of diverse claims, usually to seize and sell the property of the debtor.
- Registrar
- An officer of a provincial court appointed by the Chief Justice with the powers and jurisdiction as specified under the Act.
- Related persons
- Persons who are connected by a blood relationship, marriage, common-law partnership or adoption; while so related, they are deemed not to deal with each other at arm's length. The Act provides that the definition of related persons extends to corporations, shareholders and directors in certain specified situations.
S
- Secured creditor
- A person holding an instrument, such as a mortgage or hypothecary claim, a lien or a preference on or against the whole or part of the property of a debtor, as security for a debt due to him or her from the debtor.
- Security
- Property or asset given or pledged to guarantee the fulfillment of an obligation, for example, for the payment of a loan.
- Seizure
- The act of taking possession of property by legal right or process.
- Special resolution
- A resolution decided by a majority in number and three-fourths in value of the creditors with proven claims present, in person or by proxy, at a meeting of creditors and voting on the resolution.
- Statement of affairs
- The bankrupt's financial statement or a balance sheet of assets and liabilities showing the estimated value of the debtor's property and the names and addresses of creditors and the amounts owed.
- Stay of proceedings
- Upon the filing of a bankruptcy, a proposal or a notice of intention to make a proposal, no creditor with a claim provable in bankruptcy shall have any remedy against the debtor or the debtor's property or shall commence or continue any action, execution or other proceedings for the recovery of a claim provable in bankruptcy.
- Superintendent of Bankruptcy
- The official appointed by the Governor-in-Council to supervise the administration of all estates and matters to which the Act applies.
- Surplus income
- Amount of a bankrupt's total income that exceeds what is necessary to maintain a reasonable standard of living according to the standards set by the Superintendent. The bankrupt must make payments out of this surplus income to the bankruptcy estate for distribution among the creditors. The amount of these payments is determined by the trustee, in accordance with the standards established by the Superintendent and in view of the personal and family situation of the bankrupt.
T
- Taxation of accounts
- Application for court approval of the fees and disbursements of the trustee, interim receiver or legal counsel.
- Trust
- A property interest held by one person at the request of another for the benefit of a third party.
- Trustee in bankruptcy
- A person licensed by the Superintendent of Bankruptcy to administer bankruptcy and proposal estates.
V
- Voting letter
- A document by which a creditor with a provable claim registers his or her vote.
