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Tremark guide to serving statutory demands and insolvency petitions Tremark guide to serving statutory demands and insolvency petitions

A Tremark Guide for Legal Professionals

Statutory Demands and Petitions: The Rules That Bite

Insolvency service is where careless creditors lose winnable cases. A statutory demand served sloppily gives the debtor a set-aside; a bankruptcy petition not served personally simply does not count; a winding-up petition advertised on the wrong day risks dismissal. This guide walks through the service regime of the Insolvency Rules 2016 and its Practice Direction, with the timings, the substituted service formula and the certificates courts actually check.

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The Guide

Insolvency Service, Done Properly

The Civil Procedure Rules largely step aside here. Statutory demands are not court documents at all, and petitions carry their own strict service code under Schedule 4 to the Insolvency Rules 2016. These ten sections take you through individuals then companies: demands, evasive debtors, petitions, substituted service orders, the Gazette, and the certificates that make or break the eventual order.

Individuals

Demands and Petitions Against Individuals

Sections one to five cover the personal insolvency route: serving the statutory demand, handling evasion with the Practice Direction formula, and the strict personal service rule for petitions.

1

Why insolvency service is stricter

A claim form starts an argument between two parties. A statutory demand or petition starts a process that can end in bankruptcy or liquidation, affecting every creditor and stripping a person or company of control of their affairs. Courts police the gateway accordingly.

The rulebook also changes. A statutory demand is not issued by a court and carries no seal; the Insolvency Practice Direction confirms it is not a court document, so CPR Part 6 does not govern it. Instead, service is controlled by the Insolvency (England and Wales) Rules 2016, its Schedule 4, and the Practice Direction on Insolvency Proceedings.

The consequences of sloppiness are concrete: demands set aside, petitions dismissed with costs, and in the worst cases bankruptcy orders annulled because the foundation was never properly laid. Everything in this guide exists to keep your matter off that list.

2

Serving a statutory demand on an individual

Rule 10.2 sets the standard: the creditor must do all that is reasonable to bring the demand to the debtor's attention and, if practicable in the particular circumstances, serve it personally. Personal service is not absolutely mandatory for a demand, but it is the default, and everything else is measured against it.

Why the emphasis? Because the demand's non-payment is the evidence of insolvency your petition will stand on. Rule 10.3 requires a certificate of service of the demand, verified by a statement of truth and accompanied by a copy of the demand, to be filed with the petition, and the court can refuse to accept a petition where service does not measure up.

The debtor's clocks start at service: 18 days to apply to set the demand aside, three weeks to comply before a petition can be presented. A crisp, provable service date anchors both. Our own statutory demand guidance page sets out the field process we follow on every one.

3

When the debtor avoids: the Practice Direction formula

Debtors expecting a demand sometimes stop answering the door. The Practice Direction, paragraphs 11.2 and 12.7, provides the recognised sequence which, if followed and evidenced, lets a demand be served by other means and still support a petition.

  • Attend in person. Make a personal call at the debtor's residence and place of business, where both are known.
  • Write with an appointment. If unsuccessful, deliver a first class letter proposing a specific time and place for service, giving at least two business days' notice, and warning that if the appointment is not kept the demand will be served by post or letterbox, with the court asked to treat that as good service.
  • Attend the appointment and enquire. Ask whether the debtor still lives at or frequents the address and whether letters are reaching them; record the answers.
  • Use the solicitor route. If the debtor is represented, attempt to arrange service through their solicitor, who may accept a demand on the client's behalf.
  • Then serve by post or letterbox, exactly as the letter warned, and write up the whole sequence for the certificate.

Skip steps and it shows. In Emmott v Michael Wilson and Partners the court found a demand ineffective where no personal service was attempted and the formula was ignored, resetting the service date to when the debtor admitted receiving it by email. The formula is short; follow all of it.

4

Bankruptcy petitions: personal service, no shortcuts

The petition raises the bar. Under Schedule 4 to the 2016 Rules, a bankruptcy petition must be served personally on the debtor: physically handed over by someone who can later certify it. If the debtor refuses to take the papers, the server states what they are and leaves them with or as near as practicable to the debtor; anything less is not personal service.

Two comforts creditors reach for do not exist here. A solicitor cannot accept service of a bankruptcy petition on a client's behalf, the Practice Direction says so in terms, even though they can accept a statutory demand. And the creditor cannot decide unilaterally, as they effectively can with a demand, that personal service is impracticable and post it instead.

The only route around personal service is a court order, covered next. Until you hold one, the petition travels hand to hand, which is why professional servers, identity checks and contemporaneous attendance notes dominate this corner of practice.

5

Substituted service orders for the petition

Where personal service genuinely cannot be achieved, the creditor applies to the court for an order permitting service by other means. The evidential threshold mirrors the demand formula: the court expects to see the personal calls, the appointment letter with its two business days' notice, the enquiries made, and will typically infer the debtor is keeping out of the way.

The usual order permits service by first class post, sometimes email, to a specified address, commonly with service deemed to occur seven days later. Read your order carefully: the deemed date drives the hearing timetable.

One detail that catches people at the hearing: where the petition is served under a substituted service order, Schedule 4 requires the certificate of service to have the sealed copy of that order attached. A certificate without the sealed order exhibited is a defective certificate, and defective certificates are how hearing dates get lost. Assemble the pack the day service is effected, not the night before court.

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Why an Accredited Partner Matters

Every statutory demand and petition we serve is evidenced to the standard the insolvency courts demand, contemporaneous notes, correct certificates, sealed orders exhibited where required, because a petition is only as strong as the service behind it.

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Companies and Timing

Corporate Demands, Winding-Up and the Calendar

Sections six to ten turn to companies: registered office service, winding-up petitions and the Gazette, then the timing traps, certificates and a practical playbook that ties it together.

6

Company statutory demands: the registered office rule

Against a company the demand mechanics simplify. Section 123(1)(a) of the Insolvency Act 1986 deems a company unable to pay its debts where a written demand for more than the statutory minimum has been left at its registered office and three weeks pass without payment, security or compound to the creditor's reasonable satisfaction.

Left at is the operative phrase: delivery to the registered office, evidenced by the person who attended, is the classic method, and attended delivery beats post precisely because it can be proved. Note the differences from the personal regime: there is no 18-day set-aside procedure for company demands; a company disputing the debt instead applies to restrain presentation or advertisement of any petition, usually by injunction, arguing the debt is genuinely disputed.

That asymmetry cuts both ways. Creditors get a simpler route; but serving a company demand on a genuinely disputed debt invites an injunction application with indemnity costs attached. Serve confidently only where the debt is clean.

7

Winding-up petitions and the Gazette

Service of a winding-up petition is prescribed by Schedule 4. The petition is served at the company's registered office by handing it to a person who acknowledges being a director, officer or employee, or someone authorised to accept it; if no such person is available, by depositing it at or near the registered office so it is likely to come to attention.

Where registered office service is not practicable, the Rules cascade to the company's last known principal place of business, or to a director, and ultimately the court can direct another method. Each fallback needs its justification recorded, because the certificate must tell that story.

Then comes the step everyone remembers and still fumbles: advertisement. Notice of the petition must appear in the Gazette, and the timing is fixed, not less than seven business days after service on the company, and not less than seven business days before the hearing. Advertise early and you have jumped the gun on a company that might have paid; advertise late and the hearing is in jeopardy. Diarise both edges the day service is confirmed.

8

The timing traps, gathered in one place

Insolvency deadlines interlock, and most procedural disasters are calendar failures. The ones that matter most:

  • 18 days from service of a personal statutory demand for the debtor to apply to set it aside; an application stops the compliance clock.
  • 21 days for compliance with the demand, personal or corporate, before a petition can be presented on it.
  • 14 days minimum between service of a bankruptcy petition and its hearing, so serve promptly once the date is listed.
  • Seven business days, twice, for the winding-up Gazette notice: at least seven after service, at least seven before the hearing.
  • Deemed dates under orders. Substituted service orders commonly deem service seven days after posting; the hearing countdown runs from that deemed date, not the postmark.

A single shared timeline per matter, updated the moment service is effected, prevents nearly all of it. We provide service dates same-day for exactly this reason.

9

Certificates of service that survive scrutiny

Insolvency courts read certificates. Schedule 4 prescribes their content, and registrars and judges check them against it before making orders that end companies and bankrupt individuals. A compliant certificate identifies the document served, the person who served it, the date, time, place and manner of service, and the person served or how the deposit was effected.

The recurring omissions: the copy demand not attached to the rule 10.3 certificate filed with a bankruptcy petition; the sealed substituted service order not annexed; vagueness about how identity was confirmed on a personal serve; and certificates signed by someone other than the person who actually attended.

The fix is process, not heroics. Our servers complete attendance notes at the door, certificates are drawn from those notes the same day, exhibits are compiled immediately, and the pack that reaches you is the pack the court will accept. Boring, deliberately.

10

A creditor's playbook, start to finish

Assembled into a sequence, the regime looks like this. Verify the debt is undisputed and the debtor's address is current, trace first if in doubt. Serve the demand personally where practicable; if evasion appears, run the Practice Direction formula to the letter and document it. Diarise the 18-day and 21-day marks from the provable service date.

On non-compliance, prepare the petition with the rule 10.3 certificate and copy demand attached. Bankruptcy petitions: personal service only, at least 14 days before the hearing, with a substituted service order, sealed copy in hand, where the debtor hides. Winding-up petitions: Schedule 4 service at the registered office, then the Gazette inside its seven-and-seven window.

At every step the deliverable is the same: a service event that is quick, correct and provable. That is the entire product we sell, and after three decades of demands and petitions, the insolvency courts' expectations hold no surprises for us. Instruct early, and the calendar becomes your weapon instead of your risk.

Complete

Served, certified, petition-proof.

You now hold the full service map for demands and petitions, individual and corporate, including the substituted service formula most people only half remember. Five questions below to test the recall before your next instruction.

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Common Questions

Frequently asked questions

The statutory demand and petition service questions creditors and IPs raise most often.

Not absolutely, but rule 10.2 requires the creditor to do all that is reasonable to bring it to the debtor's attention and to serve personally if practicable. If you bypass personal service without working through the recognised steps, expect the court to question whether the demand supports your petition.
The application, made within 18 days of service, stops the compliance clock and prevents presentation of a petition while it is pending. Demands are commonly set aside where the debt is genuinely disputed on substantial grounds or a valid cross-claim equals or exceeds it, another reason to serve only on clean debts.
Once three weeks have passed from service without payment, security or compound, and no set-aside application is pending, the petition can be presented. The certificate of service of the demand, with a copy of the demand, must be filed with it under rule 10.3.
Yes, if done correctly. The server must tell the debtor the nature of the documents and leave them with or as near as practicable to the debtor. A contemporaneous note of exactly what was said and where the papers were left turns the refusal into unchallengeable personal service.
Electronic communication can form part of doing all that is reasonable to bring a demand to the debtor's attention, and courts have treated admitted email receipt as the effective service date. As a primary method it is fragile; as a supplement to the Practice Direction steps, properly evidenced, it can help.
By leaving the written demand at the company's registered office, section 123(1)(a) of the Insolvency Act 1986. Attended delivery, evidenced by the person who attended, is the standard we recommend because it is the version that proves itself later.
No, there is no set-aside procedure for corporate demands. A company disputing the debt instead applies to restrain presentation or advertisement of a winding-up petition, and creditors who petition on genuinely disputed debts face those injunctions with costs consequences.
Same-day confirmation of the service event, a compliant certificate drawn from the attending agent's contemporaneous notes, all required exhibits, copy demand, sealed orders, and a witness statement where the matter is likely to be contested. In short, the evidence pack the insolvency court expects, first time.

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