European Insolvency Regulation: Secondary Liquidators' Obligations to Creditors
A secondary liquidator has to tell all the debtor's creditors about the secondary proceedings and must pass to the main liquidator details of any creditors the main liquidator may not know about, so that the main liquidator can notify them of the main proceedings.
For example, a Hungarian liquidator (appointed in territorial proceedings) learns that a German liquidator has previously been appointed in main proceedings. The Hungarian liquidator must inform all creditors in Hungary and elsewhere of the secondary Hungarian proceedings and moreover he or she must provide all creditorsí details to the main German liquidator pursuant to Article 31(1) European Insolvency Regulation
. . . shall immediately communicate any information which may be relevant to the other proceedings. . .î.
The German liquidator will then ìknowî (Article 40) all the creditors and be obliged to notify them of the main proceedings.
In fact, I see risk to both liquidators from aggrieved creditors if this is not done properly. Since creditors are entitled to claim in either or both proceedings, any creditor who received notice of neither could pursue the Hungarian liquidator if he or she failed to give notice of the Hungarian proceedings or, whether or not such notice was given, if the Hungarian liquidator had failed to give the creditorís details to the German liquidator thereby preventing the latter from giving notice of the main proceedings to the creditor in question.
Similarly, the German liquidator would be at risk if he failed to enquire of the Hungarian liquidator about all creditors or if he failed to act on information provided by the Hungarian liquidator.
Since a main liquidator is much more likely to take the steps required of the German liquidator, I think it is the secondary liquidator who is in practice at greater risk because he or she has to take steps that may come a little less naturally.

