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Understanding how to challenge a liquidator decision in Italy is critical for creditors, directors and minority shareholders who believe a liquidator has acted outside the scope of their powers, sold assets at undervalue, or failed to protect creditors’ interests during a voluntary or judicial liquidation. The process is governed primarily by the Codice della crisi d’impresa e dell’insolvenza (CCII, D. Lgs. 12 January 2019, n. 14), which consolidated Italian insolvency procedure into a single code. Two developments in 2026 have materially changed how these challenges are framed: the Supreme Court’s Ordinance No.
6666 of 20 March 2026, which tightened the evidentiary threshold for converting a voluntary liquidation into a judicial one, and EU Directive 2026/799, which harmonises avoidance actions and cross‑border powers across Member States. This guide sets out the eligibility requirements, step‑by‑step filing procedure, required documents, deadlines, costs and common pitfalls so that any party with standing can act quickly and effectively.
Italian law draws a fundamental distinction between liquidazione volontaria (voluntary liquidation) and liquidazione giudiziale (judicial liquidation). In a voluntary liquidation, the liquidator (liquidatore) is appointed by the shareholders pursuant to Articles 2484–2487 of the Italian Civil Code, and their mandate is to wind up the company’s affairs, realise assets and distribute proceeds to creditors. In a judicial liquidation, the successor to the former fallimento procedure, the liquidator (curatore) is appointed by the Tribunale and operates under direct court supervision.
Challenges to a liquidator’s conduct can arise in either context. The grounds typically involve one or more of the following: the liquidator has exceeded the powers granted by the shareholders’ resolution or court order; they have disposed of assets at a price significantly below market value; they have failed to convene creditors’ meetings as required; they have entered into transactions tainted by conflicts of interest; or they have neglected to pursue actions against directors for breach of duty. Under Article 37 CCII, creditors and certain other parties have the right to petition the competent Tribunale for judicial liquidation if the company meets the statutory insolvency criteria, but following Cassazione Ordinance No.
6666/2026, a petitioner can no longer rely solely on a “static” patrimonial deficit. Instead, the court requires evidence that the voluntary liquidation is structurally inadequate to satisfy creditors, for example, that the liquidator has been passive, that asset realisations have stalled, or that the timeline for completing the wind‑up is unreasonable.
At the EU level, Directive (EU) 2026/799 introduces harmonised rules on avoidance actions (transactions entered into before or during insolvency that prejudice creditors) and grants courts improved powers to obtain bank and financial information across borders. While Member States must still transpose the Directive into national law, early indications suggest that Italian legislators will integrate these provisions into the CCII framework, expanding the toolkit available to creditors who challenge a liquidator’s decisions involving cross‑border assets or counterparties.
Before filing a challenge, the applicant must confirm that they have standing, that a valid ground exists, and that they are filing before the correct court.
The competent court is the Tribunale in the judicial district where the company has its registered office (or, in some cases, where its centre of main interests is located). Jurisdiction must be verified at the outset, as filing in the wrong court will result in delay and additional costs.
The following procedure applies to a creditor or other entitled party seeking to challenge a liquidator’s act or to petition for judicial liquidation. Timelines are indicative and vary by Tribunale; verify each deadline with the specific court registry.
| Step | Who Does It | Typical Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1, Preserve evidence and demand explanations (formal PEC) | Creditor / director / counsel | Immediate, within 72 hours |
| 2, Call creditors’ meeting or request urgent creditor vote | Creditor (if quorum met) or court on petition | 7–15 days to convene |
| 3, File petition for review / opposizione at the Tribunale | Creditor / counsel | Filing immediate; judge sets hearing within 15–45 days |
| 4, Request interim measures (injunction / suspension of the contested act) | Creditor via Tribunale | Emergency order within days; lasts until main hearing |
| 5, Main hearing and production of expert evidence (perizia) | Parties + court‑appointed experts | 30–90 days depending on complexity |
| 6, Judgment and possible appeal | Parties (Tribunale → Corte d’Appello → Cassazione) | Appeal: 30 days from notification of judgment |
Act within 72 hours of becoming aware of the disputed act. Send a formal demand for explanations to the liquidator via PEC (posta elettronica certificata, Italy’s certified email system), retaining the full transmission receipt and delivery confirmation. Simultaneously, instruct counsel to issue a litigation‑hold notice internally and to any relevant third parties (banks, notaries, counterparties to the disputed transaction). If the challenge concerns a sale of assets, obtain an independent preliminary valuation immediately, this evidence will be essential at every subsequent stage.
Where the company’s constitutional documents or the CCII provide for creditor consultation, request that the liquidator convene a creditors’ meeting. If the liquidator refuses or is unresponsive, the creditor may petition the Tribunale directly to order a meeting. The purpose is to build a formal record of creditor dissatisfaction and, where possible, to obtain a creditors’ resolution supporting the challenge. In practice, this step takes 7–15 days and serves both a procedural and a tactical function: it demonstrates to the court that the creditor exhausted informal remedies before filing.
Prepare and file a formal petition (ricorso) or opposition (opposizione) with the competent Tribunale. The petition should be structured as follows:
The judge will typically schedule a hearing within 15–45 days for urgent matters. For petitions seeking judicial liquidation under Article 37 CCII, the court will also hear the debtor company and the liquidator before deciding.
Where the contested act risks causing irreversible prejudice, for example, the imminent completion of a sale at undervalue or the dissipation of funds, the creditor should request an emergency injunction or suspension order. Italian courts can issue such orders within days of the filing if the applicant demonstrates both fumus boni iuris (a prima facie case) and periculum in mora (risk of irreparable harm from delay). The order remains in effect until the main hearing.
At the hearing, both parties present their arguments and evidence. The court may appoint an independent expert (consulente tecnico d’ufficio / CTU) to value the disputed assets or assess the adequacy of the liquidation process. Expert reports typically take 30–90 days and form a key part of the court’s decision‑making. The petitioner should prepare a detailed counter‑valuation report if challenging a disposal at undervalue, and should ensure that all PEC correspondence, board minutes and financial statements are in the court file.
The Tribunale will issue a judgment either granting or dismissing the petition. If the petition is granted, the court may annul the contested act, order the replacement of the liquidator, or open judicial liquidation proceedings. If the petitioner is unsuccessful, they may appeal the liquidator decision to the Corte d’Appello within 30 days of notification of the judgment. Further appeal to the Corte di Cassazione is available on points of law only. Following a successful challenge, the petitioner should coordinate with the new liquidator or curatore to ensure that remedial steps (asset recovery, reversal of transactions, creditor distributions) are implemented promptly.
Assembling the correct documentation before filing is essential. Missing or incomplete documents are the single most common cause of procedural delay. The table below lists the documents needed for a challenge, together with notes on who issues each document and any format requirements.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Copy of the liquidator’s contested resolution or act | From company records; certified copy required. Include board or shareholders’ minutes and any PEC notification. Issuer: company / liquidator. |
| Company balance sheets and latest financial statements | Issued and signed by the company; attach audit reports where available. Validity: most recent fiscal year plus any interim reports. |
| Registry of Enterprises extract (Visura Camerale) | Issued by Registro Imprese / Camera di Commercio. Shows company registration, liquidator appointment, legal representatives and current status. |
| PEC notice and communication evidence | Full sender/recipient headers showing date, time, delivery and read receipts. Essential for proving notice was served. |
| Creditor proof of claim (invoices, contracts, court titles) | Issuer: creditor / courts. Provide certified copies of all underlying documentation. |
| Expert valuation / perizia (if contesting sale at undervalue) | Prepared by an independent qualified expert. Include expert’s CV and methodology statement. |
| Minutes of shareholders’ meetings and liquidator reports | From company records. Necessary to demonstrate the liquidator’s conduct and decision‑making pattern. |
| Power of attorney for counsel (procura alle liti) | Notarised or signed power appointing legal counsel. May be attached to PEC filing. |
For foreign creditors, all documents originating outside Italy must be accompanied by certified translations into Italian and, where applicable, apostilled or legalised in accordance with the Hague Convention. Failure to provide compliant translations will result in the court refusing to admit the evidence.
Timing is critical at every stage of the challenge procedure. The deadlines below are drawn from the CCII and general Italian procedural rules; however, individual Tribunali may apply local practice directions that affect scheduling. Always confirm deadlines with the specific court registry.
| Deadline | Time Span | Source / Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Preserve evidence and send formal PEC demand | Immediate, within 72 hours of awareness | Practical recommendation; no statutory outer limit, but delay weakens the case |
| File initial petition / opposizione | As soon as practicable after PEC exchange | No fixed statutory window for most challenges, but urgency is presumed |
| Court hearing date (urgent matters) | 15–45 days from filing | Set by the judge; varies by Tribunale workload |
| Expert report completion | 30–90 days from appointment | Court sets the deadline; extensions possible on application |
| Appeal of Tribunale judgment | 30 days from notification of judgment | Standard civil procedure appellate deadline |
| Registry filing of liquidation resolution | Within 30 days of shareholder resolution | Registro Imprese requirement; non‑compliance may trigger penalties |
| EU Directive 2026/799 transposition | Pending, check national implementation timeline | Member States must transpose; monitor Gazzetta Ufficiale for implementing decree |
The 2026 Cassazione ruling (Ordinance No. 6666) has a practical effect on deadlines: because creditors must now gather evidence of the voluntary liquidation’s structural inadequacy, not merely a balance‑sheet deficit, the preparation phase before filing takes longer. Industry observers expect this to add 2–4 weeks to the pre‑filing timeline in complex cases.
The costs of challenging a liquidator’s decision vary significantly by case complexity, claim value and the specific Tribunale. The indicative figures below should be verified with local counsel and the court tariff schedule before budgeting.
| Item | Indicative Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Court filing fee / judicial stamp duty (contributo unificato) | Varies by claim value | Scaled tariff; consult local Tribunale schedule |
| Lawyer fees | €2,000 – €20,000+ | Depends on complexity; may include fixed retainer plus hourly rates |
| Expert valuation (perizia) fee | €1,500 – €10,000+ | Court‑appointed or party expert; scope‑dependent |
| Registro Imprese certificates and filing fees | €10 – €100 (approx.) | Payable via PagoPA through the Camera di Commercio portal |
| Potential tax implications (capital gains / transaction reversal) | Case‑specific | Reversal of a completed sale may trigger tax consequences; consult tax counsel |
Where a creditor successfully challenges a liquidator’s act, the court may order the liquidator (or the company) to bear the petitioner’s costs. In practice, cost recovery depends on the financial position of the company in liquidation and is not guaranteed.
Two developments in 2026 have altered the landscape for parties seeking to challenge a liquidator in Italy.
Cassazione Ordinance No. 6666/2026 (20 March 2026) addressed the standard of proof required to open judicial liquidation against a company already undergoing voluntary liquidation. The Supreme Court held that a simple patrimonial imbalance (liabilities exceeding assets on the balance sheet) is insufficient. Instead, the petitioning creditor must demonstrate that the voluntary liquidation is structurally inadequate, meaning that there is concrete evidence the process is failing to realise assets, that the liquidator has been passive or conflicted, or that the projected timeline for completing the wind‑up is unreasonable relative to creditors’ interests.
The likely practical effect is that creditors must now invest more time in pre‑filing evidence gathering, including obtaining independent asset valuations, analysing the liquidator’s reporting history, and documenting any delays or omissions.
EU Directive 2026/799 (Insolvency Harmonisation Directive) introduces harmonised rules on avoidance actions, enabling creditors and insolvency practitioners to challenge transactions that prejudice creditors under a more consistent EU‑wide framework. The Directive also improves courts’ powers to obtain bank and financial information across borders, which is significant for Italian proceedings where assets or counterparties are located in other Member States. Italy’s transposition of the Directive is pending; interested parties should monitor the Gazzetta Ufficiale for the implementing decree.
Challenging a liquidator’s decision in Italy requires a structured approach: confirming standing, gathering robust evidence, filing promptly with the correct court, and pursuing interim measures where irreversible harm is at risk. The 2026 developments, Cassazione Ordinance No. 6666 and EU Directive 2026/799, have raised the evidentiary bar for creditors seeking to convert voluntary liquidations into judicial ones, while simultaneously expanding the procedural tools available for cross‑border claims. The procedure demands precision at every step: missing a 30‑day appeal deadline, failing to preserve PEC communications, or neglecting to obtain an independent expert valuation can each be fatal to an otherwise strong case.
For creditors and directors engaged in or contemplating a challenge, the priority is to act quickly, document thoroughly and secure specialist legal representation before filing.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Maurizio Orlando at Orlando E Associati – Studio Legale, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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