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- Point in Time (01/04/1996)
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Version Superseded: 01/04/2008
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Bankruptcy (Scotland) Act 1985 (repealed), Section 67 is up to date with all changes known to be in force on or before 12 November 2024. There are changes that may be brought into force at a future date. Changes that have been made appear in the content and are referenced with annotations.
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(1)A debtor who during the relevant period makes a false statement in relation to his assets or his business or financial affairs to any creditor or to any person concerned in the administration of his estate shall be guilty of an offence, unless he shows that he neither knew nor had reason to believe that his statement was false.
(2)A debtor, or other person acting in his interest whether with or without his authority, who during the relevant period destroys, damages, conceals or removes from Scotland any part of the debtor’s estate or any document relating to his assets or his business or financial affairs shall be guilty of an offence, unless the debtor or other person shows that he did not do so with intent to prejudice the creditors.
(3)A debtor who is absent from Scotland and who after the date of sequestration of his estate fails, when required by the court, to come to Scotland for any purpose connected with the administration of his estate, shall be guilty of an offence.
(4)A debtor, or other person acting in his interest whether with or without his authority, who during the relevant period falsifies any document relating to the debtor’s assets or his business or financial affairs, shall be guilty of an offence, unless the debtor or other person shows that he had no intention to mislead the permanent trustee, a commissioner or any creditor.
(5)If a debtor whose estate is sequestrated—
(a)knows that a person has falsified any document relating to the debtor’s assets or his business or financial affairs; and
(b)fails, within one month of the date of acquiring such knowledge, to report his knowledge to the interim or permanent trustee,
he shall be guilty of an offence.
(6)A person who is absolutely insolvent and who during the relevant period transfers anything to another person for an inadequate consideration or grants any unfair preference to any of his creditors shall be guilty of an offence, unless the transferor or grantor shows that he did not do so with intent to prejudice the creditors.
(7)A debtor who is engaged in trade or business shall be guilty of an offence if at any time in the period of one year ending with the date of sequestration of his estate, he pledges or disposes of, otherwise than in the ordinary course of his trade or business, any property which he has obtained on credit and has not paid for unless he shows that he did not intend to prejudice his creditors.
(8)A debtor who is engaged in trade or business shall be guilty of an offence if at any time in the period of 2 years ending with the date of sequestration, he has failed to keep or preserve such records as are necessary to give a fair view of the state of his assets or his business and financial affairs and to explain his transactions, unless he shows that such failure was neither reckless nor dishonest:
Provided that a debtor shall not be guilty of an offence under this subsection if, at the date of sequestration, his unsecured liabilities did not exceed the prescribed amount; but, for the purposes of this proviso, if at any time the amount of a debt (or part of a debt) over which a security is held exceeds the value of the security, that debt (or part) shall be deemed at that time to be unsecured to the extent of the excess.
(9)If a debtor, either alone or jointly with another person, obtains credit to the extent of £100 (or such other sum as may be prescribed) or more without giving the person from whom he obtained it the relevant information about his status he shall be guilty of an offence.
(10)For the purposes of subsection (9) above—
(a)“debtor” means—
(i)a debtor whose estate has been sequestrated; or
(ii)a person who has been adjudged bankrupt in England and Wales or Northern Ireland,
and who, in either case, has not been discharged;
(b)the reference to the debtor obtaining credit includes a reference to a case where goods are hired to him under a hire-purchase agreement or agreed to be sold to him under a conditional sale agreement; and
(c)the relevant information about the status of the debtor is the information that his estate has been sequestrated and that he has not received his discharge or, as the case may be, that he is an undischarged bankrupt in England and Wales or Northern Ireland.
(11)In this section—
(a)“the relevant period” means the period commencing one year immediately before the date of sequestration of the debtor’s estate and ending with his discharge;
(b)references to intent to prejudice creditors shall include references to intent to prejudice an individual creditor.
(12)A person convicted of any offence under this section shall be liable—
(a)on summary conviction, to a fine not exceeding the statutory maximum or—
(i)to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 3 months; or
(ii)if he has previously been convicted of an offence inferring dishonest appropriation of property or an attempt at such appropriation, to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 6 months,
or (in the case of either sub-paragraph) to both such fine and such imprisonment; or
(b)on conviction on indictment to a fine or—
(i)in the case of an offence under subsection (1), (2), (4) or (7) above to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 5 years,
(ii)in any other case to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 2 years.
or (in the case of either sub-paragraph) to both such fine and such imprisonment.
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