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Commissioner of Bankruptcy (England and Wales)

A Commissioner of Bankruptcy (England and Wales) was, from 1571 to 1883, an official appointed (initially by commission of the Lord Chancellor) to administer the estate of a bankrupt with full power to dispose of all his lands and tenements.[1][2] Bankrupts were defined as insolvent persons engaged in trade or business and kept distinct from other insolvents until 1861. The proceedings of that administration were the distribution of the property of an insolvent person to that person's creditors in proportion to the debts.

  1. ^ W Blackstone, Comm. Laws Eng. II. 285
  2. ^ Commissioner of bankrupt. Oxford English Dictionary, Oxford University Press, 2013

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