Quick answer

Corporate rehabilitation under the Financial Rehabilitation and Insolvency Act (RA 10142) is a process to restore a financially distressed but viable company to solvency, so it can continue operating and pay its creditors over time, instead of being liquidated. When a rehabilitation petition is given due course, the court issues a stay or suspension order that halts creditor actions and enforcement against the debtor, giving it breathing room. A court-approved rehabilitation plan then governs how the company will be restructured and its debts paid. If rehabilitation is not feasible, the alternative is liquidation.

When a company cannot pay its debts as they fall due, the reflex is to imagine it closing and creditors scrambling. But Philippine law offers a different path for businesses that are distressed yet still viable: corporate rehabilitation under the Financial Rehabilitation and Insolvency Act (RA 10142), or FRIA.

Rehabilitation vs. Liquidation

FRIA offers two broad outcomes:

The whole point of rehabilitation is that a going concern is often worth more alive than dead — creditors may recover more from a revived company than from a fire-sale of its assets.

Three Routes to Rehabilitation

FRIA provides several modes:

The Stay (Suspension) Order

The feature that makes rehabilitation possible is the Stay or Suspension Order. When the court gives the petition due course, it issues an order that suspends all actions and proceedings to enforce claims against the debtor and stays the enforcement of any lien or foreclosure. This freezes the creditors and gives the company breathing space to reorganize without being dismembered by individual collection suits. A rehabilitation receiver is typically appointed to oversee the process.

The Rehabilitation Plan

At the heart of the case is the rehabilitation plan — the roadmap for how the company will be restored and its debts paid. A plan may provide for restructuring the debts (extended terms, reduced interest, partial condonation), converting debt to equity, new financing, asset sales, and operational changes. The court approves (confirms) the plan after the process the law requires, and once confirmed, the plan binds the debtor and its creditors, including those who did not consent, subject to FRIA’s protections. Failure to implement a confirmed plan can lead to conversion to liquidation.

Practical Advice

Frequently Asked Questions

What is corporate rehabilitation? A process under FRIA (RA 10142) to restore a financially distressed but viable company to solvency so it can keep operating and pay creditors over time under a court-approved plan, instead of being liquidated.

What does a stay order do? When a rehabilitation petition is given due course, the court issues a stay or suspension order that halts all creditor actions and enforcement against the debtor, including foreclosures, giving the company room to reorganize.

What is a rehabilitation plan? The roadmap for restoring the company and paying its debts, which may restructure debts, convert debt to equity, bring in new financing, or sell assets. Once confirmed by the court, it binds the debtor and creditors, including non-consenting ones.

What happens if rehabilitation is not feasible? The alternative is liquidation, where the company is wound up, its assets sold, and the proceeds distributed to creditors in the order of preference. A failed rehabilitation can be converted to liquidation.

This commentary is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. For guidance specific to your situation, please consult a licensed attorney.

If your company is in financial distress or you are a creditor of one, our firm can advise you on rehabilitation and your options under FRIA. You may reach us via Viber or WhatsApp, call us at 0995 433 5550, or send an email to vivasnobles@gmail.com. We look forward to hearing from you.