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Subbies await Supreme Court call on voidable transactions

January 17, 2015 by SPCS Leave a Comment

Subcontractors are calling for the Supreme Court to end a nine-month wait for a decision on the ability of liquidators to claw back payments made by insolvent companies to contractors.

In mid-2013, the Court of Appeal ruled that when companies went bust, liquidators could claw back payments made by an insolvent company up to two years before its collapse, a practice known as voidable transactions.

This could include where a sub-contractor had been paid for work they had completed.

Shocked contractors appealed the decision to the Supreme Court.

The Supreme Court heard the case in March last year, but no decision has been published.

Graham Burke, president of the Specialist Trade Contractors Federation which represents more than 5700 contracting firms, said: “While this decision is pending, thousands of businesses remain in a no-man’s land with regard to voidable transactions.”

“Under the Court of Appeal ruling, any service you supply and are paid for afterwards is a voidable transaction.

“That affects every business in New Zealand which provides goods and services on account. However, the building trade is particularly aware of this because there are more insolvencies in the construction sector than in other sector.”

Voidable transactions are intended to ensure all creditors of insolvent companies are treated equally, but Burke said funds clawed back from subcontractors ended up being paid out to pay liquidators’ fees, employees of the company that went bust, and the Inland Revenue.

Contractors, who are generally unsecured creditors, are at the bottom of the heap when it comes to being paid in a liquidation, Burke said.

“The current ruling means that contractors who complete a contract properly and have paid their suppliers and staff, cannot have certainty that payments they have received will not be recovered,” Burke said.

Until the Court of Appeal decision, it had been thought that providing a contractor was paid for work done, then they were safe from having money clawed back.

No longer being able to rely on that created a great deal of uncertainty, and was upsetting business planning, he said.

“This makes it difficult for small business to plan to invest and grow,” Burke said.

“The contracting market is currently buoyant but there have been some high profile insolvencies in recent years. The issue of voidable transactions needs to be resolved so businesses can make decisions about investing in areas such as new equipment, training staff and expanding their businesses to meet the growing demand.”

If the Supreme Court does not reverse the Court of Appeal’s judgement, the federation would campaign for politicians to draft new laws.

“If we don’t get a favourable decision, we need a political one,” Burke said.

“It’s not only about our industry. The whole economy needs certainty.”

The Court of Appeal judgement “flies in the face of natural justice”, he said.

Taupo-based Mike Field, owner of Fences & Kerbs, was one of the contractor companies involved in the Supreme Court case.

Fences & Kerbs did concreting and steel foundation work on a pipeline being built for Contact Energy at Wairakei by Contract Engineering in 2010, and was paid $58,000 in two instalments between August and September of that year.

Contract Engineering went into liquidation in July 2011 and its liquidators served a notice to set aside the payments to Fences & Kerbs.

Field’s case, grouped together with two others, were the subject of the Supreme Court hearing, and if the Court of Appeal decision is allowed to stand, Fences & Kerbs will have to pay back the $58,000.

“What I have decided is they can all go to hell as far as I am concerned,” Field said.

“The only hope we have got is that the Supreme Court likes sticking it to the Court of Appeal. It’s over-turned that many decisions.”

The Supreme Court is currently closed and unavailable for comment.

Source

Stuff News Businessday. Story by Rob Stock. Thursday January 15, 2015.

http://www.stuff.co.nz/business/better-business/65065594/Subbies-await-Supreme-Court-call-on-voidable-transactions

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Filed Under: Enforcement Tagged With: claw back payments, liquidation, liquidators, voidable transactions

Fraud Office defends difficult prosecution involving acquittal of 2 of 3 SCF chiefs

October 17, 2014 by SPCS Leave a Comment

The Serious Fraud Office (SFO) is defending its decision to bring charges against three former South Canterbury Finance (SCF) heads after two of the trio were acquitted yesterday.

Former South Canterbury Finance chief executive Lachie McLeod, 50, and former director, accountant Robert White, 70, were found not guilty on all charges by Justice Paul Heath after a long and complex trial.

The pair are now considering legal action against the Serious Fraud Office (SFO) for bringing the charges.

Former director, lawyer Edward Oral Sullivan, 72, was found guilty on five of nine charges, including making false statements and misuse of a document for pecuniary advantage. [He was director of SCF for 20 years from 23/04/90 to 31/03/10].

The SFO’s director, Julie Read, referred to the difficulties in bringing a case of this nature before the court. “This was a difficult and complex prosecution,” she said. [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Crime, Enforcement Tagged With: Edward Oral Sullivan, Edward Sullivan, SCF, Serious Fraud Office, SFO, South Canterbury Finance

Bankrupt insurance company boss gets four-and-a-half years jail for fraud

October 17, 2014 by SPCS Leave a Comment

GRANT MALCOLM HERBERT – former insurance company boss – and now a bankrupt – has been jailed for four years and six months after his conviction last month on 24 fraud charges.

Insurance broker Grant Herbert leaves the Auckland District Court. Photo / Dean Purcell

Grant Malcolm Herbert was sentenced in the Auckland District Court. [Photo credit / Dean Purcell. NZ Herald]

Herbert was owner and managing director from 1991 of insurance brokerage Herbert Insurance Group, which collapsed in March 2011.

An investigation by the Serious Fraud Office found that he had received premiums from clients but failed to forward about $2.5 million of it to insurers, having some customers uninsured, the court heard. [Read more…]

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Filed Under: Crime, Enforcement Tagged With: Crimes Act, Fraud, Grant Herbert, Grant Malcolm Herbert, Herbert Insurance Group, Secret Commissions Act, Serious Fraud Office, theft by a person

Kiwi postal service ‘horrified’ by possible link to ISIS

October 14, 2014 by SPCS Leave a Comment

The website khilafah.is, with suspected links to ISIS (so-called “Islamic State”) was traced back to a web hosting company in Iceland over the weekend, but ISNIC director Jens Petur told Icelandic newspaper Visir that the URL was registered on September 14th to a man who lives in New Zealand.

“Right now the situation is that we have an URL with an .is suffix at ISNIC, according to the registration details the owner is living in New Zealand while the webhost is located in Hamburg, Germany.”

Mr Petur said it is the first time the country has had to shut down a website because of its content.

While the website has been shut down, INSIC says it has no power to delete the URL unless it receives a court order, or it is proven whoever registered the domain filed incorrect registration details.

For more see: http://tvnz.co.nz/national-news/kiwi-postal-service-horrified-possible-link-isis-6105879

Note: Obtaining a court order to shut down an  offensive website can prove very expensive and time consuming. Trying to prove that the person who registered the domain field used incorrect registration details can also be very difficult, particularly when the person responsible for posting and controlling the offensive website content, is of such a pathetic cowardly character, that he deviously tries to remain anonymous by hiding behind a proxy domain name registrant. The malicious activities of a banned New Zealand company director who published recently on an overseas hosted website, numerous defamatory and malicious diatribes against a person whose views he opposes, used this same cowardly tactic used by terrorists and purveyors of internet paedophile material, and his actions have been reported to the NZ Police.

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Filed Under: Enforcement Tagged With: ISIS, Islamic State, offensive websites

ISIS – Islamic State – suspected link to NZ Companies Office Listings

October 14, 2014 by SPCS Leave a Comment

A website suspected of being created by the Middle Eastern terror group Islamic State has been registered to an office in Parnell, Auckland, close to the home of the Prime Minister John Key.

Website Khilafah.is was closed down by Iceland overnight as controller of the country’s suffix address name.

Documentation for the web listing shows it was registered to Suite 4551, 17B Farnham St, Parnell, Auckland.
Its owner is described as Azym Abdullah.

Managing Director of Private Box Ltd, Gareth Foster, of Porirua, told TV One News they do provide a mail drop service for Suite 4551 on 17b Farnham St, but said the website’s domain was registered to a Azym Abdullah, who is not a customer of Private Box.

“We will be working with authorities to identify what relationship this account has with the person or website in question (if any),” Mr Foster told TV One News.

On the New Zealand Companies Office listings, the Parnell suite is the registered office for at least 63 companies, including a number that have been struck off.

Under New Zealand’s company system, registration can be done on line with virtual offices providing a legal entity for mail drops.

It is not the first time New Zealand virtual offices and shell companies have been caught up in international security.

Full Story: http://www.stuff.co.nz/national/10613951/Islamic-State-site-linked-to-New-Zealand-office

Also see: http://tvnz.co.nz/national-news/kiwi-postal-service-horrified-possible-link-isis-6105879

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Filed Under: Enforcement Tagged With: international security, IS, ISIS, Islamic State website, Middle Eastern terror group, New Zealand's company system, NZ Companies Office, shell companies, Suite 4551 17B Farham St, virtual offices

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