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Sequestration is a Court procedure. A debtor or creditor, or a trustee under a trust deed, can ask the Court to make an individual or a business bankrupt. After notice, the Court will decide whether or not to make an order.
The date of sequestration is the date when the Court first considers the matter. In the case of a creditor’s or trustee’s petition, the sequestration is therefore “backdated” to when the debtor was first cited to appear.
The Court can appoint an interim trustee on the warrant to cite - in other words until the Court decides what to do. That is unusual. The interim trustee is usually only appointed when the Court decide to make the estate bankrupt. The interim trustee then has to call a meeting for the creditors to elect a permanent trustee (although where she herself acts the Accountant in Bankruptcy can decide there is no purpose in such a meeting.)
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