skills/legal/creditor-dissolution-notice/SKILL.md
Drafts jurisdiction-compliant Notice to Creditors of Dissolution with claim procedures, statutory bar language, and distribution priority frameworks. Use when drafting creditor notices during corporate dissolution, winding up, or liquidation. Triggers on dissolution notice, creditor notification, claim bar date, corporate wind-up.
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Drafts a creditor dissolution notice that establishes valid claim procedures, deadlines, and statutory bars to protect the dissolving entity from future liabilities. The notice must satisfy both direct-notice and publication requirements under the governing state's business corporation act.
Collect before drafting:
Determine from the governing state statute before drafting:
| Requirement | Typical Range | |---|---| | Claim period — known creditors | 120 days – 2 years | | Claim period — unknown creditors | 2 – 5 years from publication | | Direct notice required for known creditors | Yes in most states | | Publication insertions | 1–4, weekly/consecutive | | Filing with Secretary of State or court | Varies | | Mandatory statutory language for bar | Often required for bar effectiveness | | Font/format requirements | Some states require minimum type size |
Source every entry from the specific state dissolution statute. Do not rely on general ranges.
Draft these eight sections in order:
Corporation name in ALL CAPS as registered. Include notice date — this triggers statutory periods.
State: dissolution filing with [State] Secretary of State, effective date, statutory authority citation, entity identifiers (state ID, EIN), principal office address, and whether voluntary or involuntary.
Each claim must include: claimant identity (name, address, email, phone), amount (broken down by principal/interest/penalties), accrual date, factual and legal basis (contract: agreement date, breached provisions; tort: conduct, causation, legal theory), contingent/unliquidated claim estimates with explanation, and supporting documentation.
Include explicit bar provision adapted to the jurisdiction. The bar must cover: claims against the corporation directly, shareholder distributions, directors/officers in corporate capacity, successor entities, and unknown/undiscovered claims. Where the state mandates specific wording for a valid bar, incorporate it verbatim — paraphrasing may invalidate the notice.
State the distribution waterfall per statute:
Include: asset sufficiency statement if known, reserves for contingent/disputed claims, corporation's right to dispute or reject, and dispute resolution procedures. Note that submission does not constitute admission of liability.
Address if applicable: pending litigation (file through dissolution process or continue to judgment), insurance coverage (D&O, E&O, environmental), long-tail liabilities (reserves or successor arrangements), asset transfers to successor entities, and trust mechanisms for specific claim categories.
Signatory must have actual authority (officer, director, liquidator, trustee). Include publication details (newspaper, county, state, dates). Add certificate of mailing / proof of service for direct-notice creditors. Include statutory authority disclaimer.
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