Page:UKSRO 1890.pdf/276
| Next. | The remuneration of the special manager (if any): The costs and expenses of any person who makes, or concurs in making, the company's statement of affairs: |
| Next„ | The taxed charges of any shorthand writer appointed to take an examination: Provided that where the shorthand writer is appointed at the instance of the Official Receiver the cost of the shorthand notes shall be deemed to be an expense incurred by the Official Receiver in protecting the property and assets of the Company: |
| Next„ | The Liquidator's necessary disbursements, other than actual expenses of realisation heretofore provided for. |
| Next„ | The costs of any person properly employed by the Liquidator with the sanction of the committee of inspection: |
| Next„ | The remuneration of the Liquidator: |
| Next„ | The actual out-of-pocket expenses necessarily incurred by the committee of inspection, subject to the approval of the Board of Trade. |
Official Receiver as Provisional Liquidator.
32.—(1) After the presentation of a petition, upon the application of a creditor, or of a contributory, or of the company, and upon proof by affidavit of sufficient grounds for the appointment of the Official Receiver as Provisional Liquidator, the Court may, if it thinks fit, and upon such terms as may be just, make such appointment.
(2) An Order appointing the Official Receiver to be Provisional Liquidator prior to the making of a Winding-up Order, shall bear the number of the petition in respect of which it is made, and shall state the nature and short description of the property of which the Official Receiver is ordered to take possession.
Petition.
33. Every petition for the winding up of any company by the Court, or subject to the supervision of the Court, shall be in the Forms No. 12 and 13 in the Appendix, with such variations as circumstances may require.
34. Every petition shall be advertised seven clear days before the hearing, as follows:—
(1) In the case of a company whose registered office, or if there shall be no such office, then whose principal or last known principal place of business is or was situate within ten miles of the principal entrance of the Royal Courts of Justice once in the London Gazette, and once at least in one London daily morning newspaper, or in such other newspaper as the Court directs.