APPARENT INSOLVENCY
Page 2 of form 2 contains eight paragraphs we refer to below. If one or more of these conditions applies to you, you are apparently insolvent and you must enter, on this part of the form, the number or numbers of the paragraphs which apply to you.
1. Following a decree against you, a creditor has served a charge for payment and you have not paid within the days allowed for payment.
2. A summary warrant has been granted against you to recover rates, council tax, other taxes, and so on and some of your goods have been attached (or someone has attempted to attach them) to the warrant and 14 days have passed. (Attaching them to the warrant means the creditor wants to sell the goods they have given details of on the warrant to get back the money you owe.)
3. The Court of Session has granted a decree of adjudication transferring your house (or other heritable property) to a creditor.
4. Your landlord has obtained a decree for sequestration for rent.
5. Following action by a creditor in a court in England or Wales, the court has made a receiving order against you.
6. One of your creditors has served a notice called a statutory demand upon you in respect of a debt of £750 or more and three weeks after the date of the notice you have still not paid that debt or told the creditor (by sending them a letter by recorded delivery) that you do not owe him the money or that the debt is not due for payment.
7. You have been sequestrated or made bankrupt in England, Wales or Northern Ireland.
8. A debt payment programme you were party to has been revoked under the Debt Arrangement and Attachment (Scotland) Act 2002 and a debt being paid under the programme is constituted by decree or document of debt as defined in section 10 (attachment) of that Act.