MJS Engineering Services Limited enters creditors' voluntary liquidation

MJS Engineering Services Limited, a Birmingham camper van conversion company incorporated in 2016, has entered creditors' voluntary liquidation. Full notice and Companies House record.

Information for general guidance, drawn from the public record. Not legal, financial, or insolvency advice. If you are affected by an insolvency, consult a licensed practitioner or qualified solicitor.

Street View image of 29 Buckingham Road, B36 0JP, Birmingham, the registered office
Street View image of the registered office. © Google.

A Birmingham camper van conversion company has been wound up through a creditors' voluntary liquidation, with a Walsall insolvency practitioner appointed to handle the process.

MJS Engineering Services Limited, which carried out camper van conversion work and was incorporated in December 2016, entered CVL on 18 June 2026. A creditors' voluntary liquidation is an insolvent winding-up resolved by the company's members at the directors' request, without a court order.

The liquidator

Creditors appointed Timothy Frank Corfield of Griffin & King as liquidator. Corfield holds IP number 8202. Griffin & King's offices are at 26/28 Goodall Street, Walsall, West Midlands, and the company's registered office has been updated to that address following the appointment.

MJS Engineering Services Limited's original registered address was 29 Buckingham Road, Birmingham.

The director

Martin John Summers has been the sole director of MJS Engineering Services Limited since the company was incorporated on 14 December 2016. Summers has no resigned-on date recorded at Companies House, meaning he remained a director at the time the CVL was resolved.

Background

The company filed its last accounts as a micro-entity, made up to 31 December 2024. No secured charges are registered against MJS Engineering Services Limited at Companies House, so there are no secured creditors with priority claims over the company's assets.

The notice was published in the London Gazette on 22 June 2026, four days after the appointment date. Creditors wishing to submit a claim should contact Timothy Frank Corfield at Griffin & King.

Common questions

Are you owed money by Mjs Engineering Services Limited?

In a creditors' voluntary liquidation you are an unsecured creditor unless you hold a registered charge or retention of title. The liquidators will write to known creditors with a proof-of-debt form. A statement of affairs prepared by the directors and the chair of the creditors' decision procedure should be available on request. Read more about proof of debt and where you sit in the creditor hierarchy.

Did you work at Mjs Engineering Services Limited?

In a CVL, employees are typically dismissed at or shortly after the liquidator's appointment. Wages owed up to a statutory cap, holiday pay, notice pay and redundancy may be claimable from the Redundancy Payments Service. The liquidators will normally provide RP1 case-reference numbers to the affected staff. See gov.uk: your rights if your employer is insolvent.

Do you hold a deposit, gift card or undelivered order from Mjs Engineering Services Limited?

Customers with paid-but-undelivered orders, gift cards or deposits rank as unsecured creditors in the liquidation. Where you paid by credit card and the amount was over £100, Section 75 of the Consumer Credit Act 1974 may let you claim from the card issuer for breach of contract or misrepresentation by the supplier; the rules apply per item, not per transaction, and the card must be a regulated credit card. Debit-card payments may be recoverable via chargeback.

Are you a director of a company connected to Mjs Engineering Services Limited?

Section 216 of the Insolvency Act 1986 applies the moment the company enters liquidation. If you intend to be involved in another company using the same or a similar name within five years, you must rely on one of the three statutory exceptions and file the relevant notice. Acting in breach is a criminal offence and exposes you to personal liability for the successor's debts.

Sources

Last reviewed by James Waterton on .

AI-drafted (Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.6) from The London Gazette and Companies House records, then human-reviewed by James Waterton before publication. See our methodology and editorial standards.

Sourced from official UK records under the Open Government Licence. Information for general guidance, not legal advice.