Re: Signed as a deed
I think you might be mistaken, as the title puts it, this sounds like a personal guarantee, not a company one and obviously this can be confirmed if the OP can provide a copy of it. If the guarantee is signed in the name of the directors on behalf of the company the bank's claim will fail as you quite rightly put it, the company is now dissolved.
However in the case of a personal guarantee this is not the case because the person or persons signing the guarantee are accepting personal liability if the company fails to make its payments. Another example is guarantors being used for tenancy agreements - if the tenant fails to pay then the landlord can seek payment from the guarantor who has agreed to step in the shoes of the tenant and repay the amounts.
Guarantees have been around for god knows how long, there is an endless list of court cases regarding guarantees and to say that they are not enforceable when the courts have been enforcing personal guarantees for many many years is just wrong.
Originally posted by Openlaw15
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However in the case of a personal guarantee this is not the case because the person or persons signing the guarantee are accepting personal liability if the company fails to make its payments. Another example is guarantors being used for tenancy agreements - if the tenant fails to pay then the landlord can seek payment from the guarantor who has agreed to step in the shoes of the tenant and repay the amounts.
Guarantees have been around for god knows how long, there is an endless list of court cases regarding guarantees and to say that they are not enforceable when the courts have been enforcing personal guarantees for many many years is just wrong.
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