ELECTRONIC MONEY INSTITUTIONS IN ARUBA

A license is required

The European Central Bank defines e-money as follows (a non-legal definition): “E-money can be defined as any amount of monetary value represented by a claim issued on a prepaid basis, stored in an electronic medium (for example, a card or computer) and accepted as a means of payment by undertakings other than the issuer, predominantly for small-value transactions (for example, the settlement of modest transactions over the Internet and of parking or telephone charges and payment for public transport services).” (Electronic Money Institutions. Current trends, regulatory issues and future prospects. Legal Working Paper Series, No. 7/2008).


Read the rest »

24
Oct 2013
CATEGORY

Finance

COMMENTS No Comments

ASSET PROTECTION IN CURACAO

Curaçao: a jurisdiction not to be missed

A Curaçao private foundation or a trust is often used for asset protection and privacy purposes. The Curaçao private foundation and the Curaçao trust must be set up by a notarial deed executed before a civil law notary in Curaçao. Both the private foundation and the trust are a very flexible solution for asset protection and privacy purposes. A private foundation, for instance, can be easily implemented in international holding structures through Curaçao and is very suitable for family asset protection. By means of a letter of wishes or provisions in the articles …
Read the rest »

20
Aug 2013
CATEGORY

Finance

COMMENTS No Comments

THE CURACAO TRUST

Can be used as protected or segregated cell company

On 1 January 2012, new legislation entered into force according to which it is now possible to set up a trust (Curacao Trust) similar to the trust in Anglo-Saxon common law jurisdictions. The introduction of the Curacao Trust serves as an important instrument which could be used within financial transactions in the Caribbean as a significant part of these transactions are initiated from common law jurisdictions.

The Curacao Trust can be used for different purposes, such as, for example:

  • To set aside capital for children’s upbringing, education or maintenance
  • Estate planning

  • Read the rest »

    02
    Aug 2013
    CATEGORY

    Finance

    COMMENTS No Comments

    CONFLICTING INTERESTS IN CURACAO INSOLVENCY LAW (part 8)

    Final remarks

    The receiver can be faced with a multitude of conflicting interests. Often he will be able to reach a weighing of interests relatively quickly and without many problems, but sometimes he has to balance on a thin bankruptcy tightrope. In doing so the law offers him hardly any support and neither does case law due to it being strongly case-based, although there is the reassuring fact that from a liability point of view many of his decisions should ‘only’ be able to bear a limited review.

    However, the receiver personally being faced with a conflict of interest, which …
    Read the rest »

    01
    Feb 2013
    CATEGORY

    Legal

    COMMENTS No Comments

    CONFLICTING INTERESTS IN CURACAO INSOLVENCY LAW (part 7)

    Conflicting interests in connection with consolidated business operations

    When multiple companies of the same group go bankrupt, it can be of major importance for a creditor of one of these companies to know how the winding up is developing of one or more of the other companies. Particularly when a consolidated bankruptcy is involved, the creditors will have to be alert. In connection with a consolidated bankruptcy, there will in actual fact be one single joined estate. If this is the case, in the various bankruptcies one single joint creditors’ meeting must be held of which all the creditors of …
    Read the rest »

    25
    Jan 2013
    CATEGORY

    Legal

    COMMENTS No Comments

    CONFLICTING INTERESTS IN CURACAO INSOLVENCY LAW (part 6)

    Conflicting interests of different bankruptcy estates

    The management of different but associated bankruptcy estates can be entrusted to one and the same person who therefore is appointed several times as receiver. In this connection group relationships come to mind. It is true that in connection with different estates with one and the same person as receiver, companies not affiliated in a group also come to mind, but this will probably not often occur. Regularly, (members of) groups go bankrupt (for instance RSV, OGEM, DAF, Fokker, Infotheek Groep, Bredero, Text Lite, Mediasafe, Medicopharma, Palthe, Verto, Wyers, HCS, UPC, Van der Moolen, …
    Read the rest »

    18
    Jan 2013
    CATEGORY

    Legal

    COMMENTS No Comments

    CONFLICTING INTERESTS IN CURACAO INSOLVENCY LAW (part 5)

    Different types of interests

    A receiver cannot escape the weighing of interests. Such a weighing should be verifiable. The line of thought followed by the receiver should be clear. Particularly because, apart from his liability and remuneration, these being of a different order, he has no self-interest in the winding-up of the bankrupt estate, the receiver is the obvious person to weigh the interests. If required he can and will himself be assisted by an expert. In connection with bigger bankruptcies or when a business is continued, it is for instance sensible also to appoint as receivers one or more …
    Read the rest »

    11
    Jan 2013
    CATEGORY

    Legal

    COMMENTS No Comments

    CONFLICTING INTERESTS IN CURACAO INSOLVENCY LAW (part 4)

    The receiver and personal interests

    The duties of the receiver are to represent the interests of others. When his personal interests are affected he must observe extreme restraint and openness. If there is a conflict of interest or if a semblance of it has been created, he ought to withdraw as the receiver. The receiver is not allowed to sell goods forming part of the estate to himself, even if this would have been allowed by the supervisory judge (direct conflicting interest). Even bidding in a public auction he has organized is in my opinion not compatible with the independence …
    Read the rest »

    04
    Jan 2013
    CATEGORY

    Legal

    COMMENTS No Comments

    CONFLICTING INTERESTS IN CURACAO INSOLVENCY LAW (part 3)

    Conflicting interests of the receiver/advocate and his law firm

    A receiver must be able to take decisions freely and be able to weigh the interests involved in a bankruptcy against each other in an objective and unbiased manner. Before accepting an appointment as receiver, the respective person must make certain that he is free to act as such. If he had been the advocate (lawyer, attorney) of the bankrupt or of his shareholder or managing director before the bankruptcy order, despite his qualities he is presumed to be unable to act as such, at any rate any semblance of bias …
    Read the rest »

    28
    Dec 2012
    CATEGORY

    Legal

    COMMENTS No Comments

    CONFLICTING INTERESTS IN CURACAO INSOLVENCY LAW (part 2)

    The liability of the receiver

    The special characteristics of the duty of a receiver bring with them that his liability, if any, must be assessed against a standard of due care which has been tuned to this. This standard boils down to the fact that a receiver ought to act as can reasonably be required of a receiver having sufficient insight and experience and performing his duties conscientiously and with dedication. Knowledge and experience exceeding the minimum requirements can to a certain extent color the standard in a concrete case: after all there is nothing against taking as a starting …
    Read the rest »

    21
    Dec 2012
    CATEGORY

    Legal

    COMMENTS No Comments

    CONFLICTING INTERESTS IN CURACAO INSOLVENCY LAW (part 1)

    The receiver is sometimes described as an octopus

    The receiver (trustee in bankruptcy) as an octopus: this means that in connection with each appointment he is in a way thrown in at the deep end because he has to make himself familiar with the relevant issues in a very short period and because of the number of interests involved in a bankruptcy and these being partly contradictory he often needs eight arms in order to cope with all the requirements and demands. One could just as well describe the receiver as a jack-of-all trades.

    The receiver must make choices and …
    Read the rest »

    14
    Dec 2012
    CATEGORY

    Legal

    COMMENTS No Comments

    SYMPOSIUM ON 35 YEARS OF THE CURACAO BAR ASSOCIATION (16 NOVEMBER 2012)

    Presentation by Karel Frielink – President (part 2)

    Civil Litigation Law should be better

    So now I will deal with the subject of this symposium. I begin straight away with a provoking statement: Our Civil Litigation Law should be better. This goes further than it ‘could’ be better. However, we shouldn’t only think about the question of how the law should be improved but also about the question of whether or not judges and advocates (attorneys, lawyers) are operating optimally and whether adjustments to the system can contribute to a better operation and to a better administration of justice. And …
    Read the rest »

    07
    Dec 2012
    CATEGORY

    Legal

    COMMENTS No Comments