ChatterBank1 min ago
Bakker Flower And Seed Merchants
9 Answers
I have a query with Bakker When emailing them I get no reply when phoning them I get sorry unable to help due to circumstances beyond our control Can any one help?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.It looks as if they have had financial problems. Scroll down and you will find an explanation. https:/ /www.ho rtweek. com/fut ure-onl ine-gar dening- sales-b akkers- trouble s/retai l/artic le/1455 834
Thank you all for your help
I have found this
If you have participated in one or more promotional (win) campaigns before 30 January 2018, any prizes will no longer be available for (out) payment. In that case, you may also have a claim against Bakker.com BV You can also submit this claim to the bankruptcy trustee. When submitting a claim, you must enclose copies of all relevant supporting documents.
HOW DO I PHYSICALLY MAKE THIS CLAIM
I have found this
If you have participated in one or more promotional (win) campaigns before 30 January 2018, any prizes will no longer be available for (out) payment. In that case, you may also have a claim against Bakker.com BV You can also submit this claim to the bankruptcy trustee. When submitting a claim, you must enclose copies of all relevant supporting documents.
HOW DO I PHYSICALLY MAKE THIS CLAIM
The bankruptcy is being handled by this guy:
https:/ /www.ce es.nl/n l/ons-t eam/mr- emile-t en-berg e
In the first instance, email him to seek information about making a claim. However when companies go bankrupt there's often very little money left to be shared among creditors. You're often lucky to get just a tiny percentage of what's owed to you.
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In the first instance, email him to seek information about making a claim. However when companies go bankrupt there's often very little money left to be shared among creditors. You're often lucky to get just a tiny percentage of what's owed to you.
That reply simply doesn't make sense.
Bakker was registered in the Netherlands. They were never registered at Companies House in the UK. (It's not like the Toys R Us liquidation, where the US and UK companies were separate entities; Bakker was just a single company). Any claims against Bakker should therefore be handled by the liquidator appointed by the Dutch courts. (i.e. Emile ten Berge). It shouldn't matter which countries those claimants are in.
I still suspect that you're wasting your time anyway. When a company goes bust the first people to get any money that's left over are the secured creditors. (e.g. banks who'd loaned the company money against mortgages on their properties). Next in the queue for payments are the preferential creditors, such as employees who have yet to receive their wages or holiday payments. Only then do unsecured creditors, such as you, come into the reckoning (ahead of shareholders). There's often nothing left to pay anything at all to unsecured creditors or they might get back something like two or three pounds for every one hundred pounds that they were owed.
Bakker was registered in the Netherlands. They were never registered at Companies House in the UK. (It's not like the Toys R Us liquidation, where the US and UK companies were separate entities; Bakker was just a single company). Any claims against Bakker should therefore be handled by the liquidator appointed by the Dutch courts. (i.e. Emile ten Berge). It shouldn't matter which countries those claimants are in.
I still suspect that you're wasting your time anyway. When a company goes bust the first people to get any money that's left over are the secured creditors. (e.g. banks who'd loaned the company money against mortgages on their properties). Next in the queue for payments are the preferential creditors, such as employees who have yet to receive their wages or holiday payments. Only then do unsecured creditors, such as you, come into the reckoning (ahead of shareholders). There's often nothing left to pay anything at all to unsecured creditors or they might get back something like two or three pounds for every one hundred pounds that they were owed.
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