The Petition<\/strong><\/h3>\nThe Petitioners presented a winding up petition against Padma Fund LP (the \u201cPartnership<\/strong>\u201d) seeking an order that the Partnership be wound up pursuant to section 92(d) of the Companies Act (2021 Revision) (the \u201cCompanies Act<\/strong>\u201d), as applied by section 36(3) of the Exempted Limited Partnership Act (2021 Revision) (the \u201cELP Act<\/strong>\u201d), on the ground that the Partnership was unable to pay its debts having failed to satisfy a statutory demand served on the Partnership for payment of an arbitral costs award for approx. US$14 million.<\/p>\nThe Partnership, acting by its General Partner, opposed the Petition on five grounds:<\/p>\n
\n- the Petition was procedurally defective and the Court had no jurisdiction to make the orders sought;<\/li>\n
- the Statutory Demand relied upon to evidence insolvency was defective and invalid due to (i) its failure to comply with the applicable rules and (ii) it having been served on the Partnership which has no legal personality;<\/li>\n
- the Petition debt was disputed bona fide<\/em> on substantial grounds;<\/li>\n
- the Partnership (acting by its General Partner) has a cross-claim against the Petitioners for approx. US$1.4 billion which exceeded the amount of the alleged petition debt; and<\/li>\n
- the Petition had been presented for a collateral and improper purpose and was an abuse of process.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n
Whilst the Court heard submissions on all five grounds, the Court only considered it necessary to determine the jurisdiction argument, ruling in the General Partner\u2019s favour and dismissing the Petition as an abuse of process.<\/p>\n