BANKRUPTCY AND INTEREST CLAIMS IN THE DUTCH CARIBBEAN
Bankruptcy vs non-bankruptcy claims
There are special statutory provisions regarding agreed interest rates, for instance, in a contract between the creditor and a party who subsequently goes bankrupt, during a bankruptcy (faillissement) and moratorium on payements (surseance van betaling). It is explicitly stated in the Netherlands Antilles Bankruptcy Decree (Faillissementsbesluit 1931) that only the interest accumulated prior to a pronunciation of bankruptcy may be paid from the bankruptcy assets (faillissementsboedel). In the event of a moratorium on payments a similar provision exists.
Bankruptcy does not mean that the bankrupt party ceases to be a debtor of non-verifiable claims. If at …
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DUTCH CARIBBEAN LAW REGARDING CORPORATE AUTHORITY
Trade Register should be checked
Netherlands Antilles law provides that, subject to restrictions laid down by the Netherlands Antilles Corporate Code or a corporation’s articles of association, the board of directors of a corporation shall be competent to represent the corporation, e.g. a limited liability company (NV or BV). In the event of the corporation having several managing directors, any managing director shall be competent, insofar as not otherwise provided by the articles of association. The articles of association may also grant other officers, to be designated by or pursuant to the articles, representative authority, whether or not together with …
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THE DUTCH CARIBBEAN PRIVATE FOUNDATION AND ITS SUPERVISORY DIRECTORS
Only natural persons may be appointed
The articles of incorporation of a Private Foundation (PF) may provide, if so desired, that the authority of the board to make distributions is subject to the consent of the founder, a Supervisory Board or another body established within the PF e.g. an Advisory Board.
It should be noted that a corporate body that is not designated as a Supervisory Board but that has the characteristics of a Supervisory Board may qualify as such under Netherlands Antilles law. If this is the case, the following is applicable:
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TEXAS BILLIONAIRE ALLEN STANFORD ACCUSED OF FRAUD
Stanford fraud charges tricker panic
Fraud charges laid against Allen Stanford sparked panic across the Caribbean. Stanford and his companies, among them Stanford International Bank Ltd. (a private offshore investment bank in Antigua), Stanford Group Co. and Stanford Capital Management LLC are subject to a fraud inquiry.
According to The Daily Herald “The ripple effects of the “massive ongoing fraud” charges against Texan billionaire Allen Stanford are seeping into the Netherlands Antilles where several people and businesses have invested in Stanford International Bank.” Victims in the Netherlands Antilles and Aruba may contact the …
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THE FORMATION OF A PRIVATE FOUNDATION IN THE DUTCH CARIBBEAN
Formation requires a notarial deed
A Private Foundation (PF) is formed by a notarial instrument executed by a Netherlands Antilles civil law notary and registered in the Register of Foundations at the Chamber of Commerce.
The articles of incorporation of the PF includes the name of the PF and the word PF (or a translation thereof) as part of the name, the object(s) of the PF, the manner of appointment and dismissal of board members, the Island territory where the PF has its seat and the allocation of any liquidation surplus in the case of dissolution of the PF.
The …
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THE OFFERING OF NOTES IN THE DUTCH CARIBBEAN
Only to licensed credit institutions
Any Notes (including rights representing an interest in a Note in global form) that are offered as part of their initial distribution or by way of a re-offering in the Netherlands Antilles, shall, in order to comply with the Netherlands Antilles National Ordinance on the supervision of banking and credit institutions 1994, only be offered, sold, transferred or delivered in the Netherlands Antilles to credit institutions licensed in accordance with the Ordinance or that are in possession of an individual exemption granted by the Central Bank of the Netherlands Antilles.
Insofar as services and/or products …
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THE STRUCTURE OF A DUTCH CARIBBEAN FUND
It is easy and inexpensive to set up a SPV (Special Purpose Vehicle)
From a legal point of view, establishing a fund in Curaçao is very attractive under the corporate law in force since March 1, 2004, whereby a private limited liability company (besloten vennootschap) can be established very quickly and flexibly. Virtually everything is possible with this new legal entity. There is no minimum issued share capital requirement. Incorporation may be done within a day does not require any prior governmental approval. It is possible to split voting rights and dividend rights. There is no statutory requirement to have …
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THE SHAREHOLDERS REGISTER OF A DUTCH CARIBBEAN LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY
Shareholders may inspect the register
Every shareholder of a Netherlands Antilles NV or BV may inspect the register of the company regarding the shares held by them. The articles of association of a particular company may confer the right for inspection on others. In most cases a shareholder may however only inspect the register of the company in so far as the shares held by him are concerned.
Shareholders, who alone or jointly with other shareholders, may cast at least ten percent of the votes with regards to a specific matter, may request in writing that the management or supervisory …
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TRANSFERS FOR NO CONSIDERATION UNDER THE LAWS OF THE DUTCH CARIBBEAN
The law protects creditors
In general the law in the Netherlands Antilles does not prohibit transfers for no consideration. It should however be pointed out that under Netherlands Antilles law, statutory provisions exist which ensure that transactions whose only reason is to disadvantage creditors or make it impossible for them to seek recourse, may not be performed out. For example, Section 3:45, paragraph 1, of the Civil Code states that if, in the performance of a legal act to which he is not obligated, an obligor, knew or ought to have known that this would adversely affect the possibility of …
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GENERAL CONDITIONS UNDER THE LAWS OF THE DUTCH CARIBBEAN
General conditions may be nullified
Since 1 January 2001 the Civil Code (CC) of Aruba and the Netherlands Antilles contains a section on general terms and conditions. By including this section in the CC the legislator tried to strengthen judicial supervision of the terms of general conditions in order to protect contracting parties against the use of general conditions, since they, generally, have no knowledge of, or influence on, the contents of these conditions.
The CC gives a broad definition of general conditions. When a certain clause or condition is used in a number of contracts then the clause or …
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STATUTORY MERGERS IN THE DUTCH CARIBBEAN
A notarial deed is required
A statutory merger involves at least two legal entities. The law uses the terms acquiring and disappearing legal entity. The law specifies that only legal entities having the same legal form may merge, specifying that a BV (closed limited liability company) and a NV (public limited liability company) are considered to be the same. Statutory mergers usually take place within a group of companies.
Essential for a statutory merger is that all assets and liabilities of one legal entity transfer as a whole to another legal entity. An actual transfer does not therefore take place.
THE DISMANTLING OF THE NETHERLANDS ANTILLES
Info Bulletin Dismantling available
The country The Netherlands Antilles (‘het Land de Nederlandse Antillen’) will cease to exist, presumably in 2010. Like Aruba, although slightly different, Curacao and St. Maarten will receive the status of autonomous country within the Kingdom of the Netherlands in accordance with referendums held on both islands. Bonaire, St. Eustatius and Saba will each receive the status of Dutch municipality (a.k.a. Kingdom Island).
The Ministry of Constitutional and Interior Affairs has published a number of info bulletins on the dismantling of the Netherlands Antilles: