Hi,
A solvent company has very recently been voluntarily dissolved due to Director retirement, however Director loan assets have been left in the bank account, which can no longer be accesed.
The Director loan is detailed in the final accounts.
In addition HMRC have made a repayment which as far as I am aware, can be processed through the company bank account once access is restored. This repayment was received after the date of dissolvment.
I understand that the company will need to be restored to gain access to the assets, but am unsure of which process can be used for voluntary dissolved companies. Can an application indeed be made to Companies House, or can this only be performed by applying to Court for a Court order?
If using N208 to apply to court, who is the defendant, the Companies Registrar, or the original company and Director. Appologies if this is a basic question, however I can't find reference information.
My belief is this should be a straightforward legal issue, which can be readily claimed by an individual, or is it a legal minefield something that only a Solicitor should persue?
A solvent company has very recently been voluntarily dissolved due to Director retirement, however Director loan assets have been left in the bank account, which can no longer be accesed.
The Director loan is detailed in the final accounts.
In addition HMRC have made a repayment which as far as I am aware, can be processed through the company bank account once access is restored. This repayment was received after the date of dissolvment.
I understand that the company will need to be restored to gain access to the assets, but am unsure of which process can be used for voluntary dissolved companies. Can an application indeed be made to Companies House, or can this only be performed by applying to Court for a Court order?
If using N208 to apply to court, who is the defendant, the Companies Registrar, or the original company and Director. Appologies if this is a basic question, however I can't find reference information.
My belief is this should be a straightforward legal issue, which can be readily claimed by an individual, or is it a legal minefield something that only a Solicitor should persue?
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