
DOCA Release Clauses: What Creditors Need to Know Before Voting
What Is a DOCA Release Clause? When a company enters voluntary administration, creditors face a critical decision: vote for a Deed of Company Arrangement (DOCA)

What Is a DOCA Release Clause? When a company enters voluntary administration, creditors face a critical decision: vote for a Deed of Company Arrangement (DOCA)

⚡ Key Takeaways A garnishee order is a court order that intercepts money owed to a judgment debtor — from their employer or bank —

Director Disputes in Australia: The 7 Red Flags Every Shareholder Should Watch For Director and shareholder disputes are one of the fastest-growing areas of commercial

ASIC has doubled its investigations and is targeting directors’ duties, insolvent trading, and phoenix activity in 2026. What Queensland directors need to know to protect themselves.

QBCC Licensing Changes 2026: What Queensland Builders and Contractors Need to Know Author: Mark Harley, Principal Solicitor, Boss Lawyers If you hold a QBCC licence

Queensland construction insolvencies continue at pace. Open Projects Group (OPG), described as South East Queensland’s largest full-service shopfitting and construction company, was placed into creditors’

A director who is not doing their job — or worse, actively damaging the company — is one of the most disruptive problems a business

A creditor can wind up a company that won’t pay its debts. Boss Lawyers explains the complete winding up process — from statutory demand to court order — and when it makes sense to use it.

Queensland Insolvencies Are Surging — Directors Must Act Now Queensland is recording some of its highest business insolvency numbers in recent memory. According to data

Your business partner just transferred company funds to a new entity he controls. Your competitor is about to publish a statement you know is false

Related Reading Government creditors and the good faith defence Full federal court decision on s 588fda Protecting yourself from liquidator claims This is general information

Can a Creditor Wind Up a Company That Owes Them Money? Yes — a creditor owed at least $4,000 can apply to a court to