Showing posts with label NAB. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NAB. Show all posts

Thursday, 12 February 2015

Bankruptcy notice reactivated as Paola Toppi successfully defends former friend's high court appeal

Paola Toppi, co-owner of the popular Machiavelli restaurant on Clarence Street, has resurrected bankruptcy proceedings against her former friend and business partner Dolores Lavin after the High Court yesterday threw out Lavin's application to have an earlier decision of the Supreme Court overturned.

As of today Lavin has 13 days to comply with a demand she pay Toppi and her husband Neil Cunningham up to $1.2 million. It's almost 10 years since the pair began borrowing millions of dollars from NAB to start and fund their Luxe Studios photographic business.

By 2009 the relationship had soured. Accusations of gambling debts emerged. Toppi was locked out of the Luxe premises on Liverpool Street Darlinghurst. She retaliated, installing receivers in January, 2010. They sold off the Liverpool Street property in June of that year for $4.9 million. NAB then commenced recovery proceedings against all three and their related entities, seeking an additional $4.25 million.

Toppi and Cunningham eventually made good their $2.9 million share of their obligation as co-sureties to NAB by selling their home, although they wore a $1 million haircut on the sale because an earlier offer of $5.6 million had to be declined because at the time the offer was made, the Liverpool Street property had not sold.

Lavin meanwhile had made her own settlement with NAB, paying out $1.35 million and negotiating a deed of settlement that included a covenant from the bank that it would not sue her in relation to the matter. Toppi and Cunningham reasoned that Lavin, as a co-surety to the loans from the beginning, appeared to have extricated herself for a lot less than it had cost them. They initiated proceedings to recover around $800,000. Lavin for that matter launched action to recover $400,000 in excess interest she said accrued because of Toppi's decision to appoint receivers.

Ultimately Toppi and Cunningham's action led to a judgment debt and the issuing of a bankruptcy notice against Lavin in 2013. There have been multiple stays but yesterday's High Court ruling is the end of the line for Lavin in terms of avenues of appeal. The clock is ticking. A creditor's petition hearing must be considered imminent unless Lavin can engineer an alternative.

Toppi and Cunningham were represented by Beazley Singleton Lawyers whilst Lavin was represented by Websters Lawyers.

For an in-depth account of this sorry saga see: Toppi seeking to bankrupt ex-bestie. The High Court's determination can be read at: Lavin v Toppi [2015] HCA 4 (11 February 2015)


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Tuesday, 17 June 2014

Toppi seeking to bankrupt ex-bestie

Luxe Studios is now at 279 - 283 Liverpool Street
Photo: SiN Images
Paola Toppi's lawyers will appeal a judgement handed down in the Federal Circuit Court last week which further delays bankruptcy proceedings the Sydney restaurateur initiated last year against her former friend, the photographic agent Dolores Lavin.

Philip Beazley of Beazley Singleton Lawyers, confirmed yesterday that he will file an appeal on behalf of Toppi against the June 13, 2014 judgement of Nicholas Manousaridis.

The judge ruled last week that the period for compliance with a bankruptcy notice served on Lavin by Toppi and her husband Neil Cunningham on November 29, 2013 be extended for a fourth time to allow Lavin to make an application for special leave to appeal to the High Court.

Lavin is seeking to appeal the decision of the NSW Supreme Court of Appeal, which last month dismissed her application to have an earlier judgement ordering her to pay Toppi $871,016.56c overturned.

The earlier judgement, handed down on September 12, 2013, gave Toppi and Cunningham the green light to serve Lavin with the bankruptcy notice but
 by the time they did, Lavin had already filed an appeal. 

Since then, Lavin has applied to have the period for compliance with the bankruptcy notice extended three times while waiting for her appeal to be heard. In the course of obtaining extensions, Lavin has also won an order staying execution of the Supreme Court judgement. But the Court of Appeal dismissed her application on May 23, 2014. 

According to the Manousaridis judgement of June 13, the extensions in the notice compliance period have been essential in enabling Lavin to avoid committing an act of bankruptcy, an event which would potentially expose her to devastating loss.

Thursday, 15 November 2012

Damelian declares bankruptcy - Wily gets the gig.

INSOLVENT auto boss Rick Damelian has declared himself bankrupt, heading off a creditors petition hearing scheduled for next week.

SiN learnt today that the Australian Armenian from Uruguay took matters into his own hands on November 9, appointing Armstrong Wily's Andrew Wily as his trustee in bankruptcy.

Wily told SiN that secured lender NAB would now move to take possession of Damelian's multimillion dollar home at McMahons Point.

Damelian had been scheduled to face a creditors petition hearing next Tuesday brought by Steve Sherman and Jim Sarantinos.

The Ferrier Hodgson duo are receivers appointed to Damelian Automobile Pty Limited.

In August the NSW Supreme Court ordered Damelian to pay almost $1.9 million in outstanding loans to Damelian Automobile, which had been the main trading entity of his once sprawling auto empire.


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Wednesday, 29 August 2012

Palm Beach down one bankrupt thanks to Interpol

Vanessa Morris-Jackson leaving
Federal Magistrates Court.
Photo: SiN Images
IT'S not often the burghers of Palm Beach have Interpol to thank for curtailing their community's recondite colony of bankrupts.

Usually the insolvency trustee's personal insolvency agreements limit bankrupt populations in exclusive suburbs, but this time the world police can take the credit.

And while the restraint is probably temporary, the fact remains that since July, bankrupt British businessman Tony Morris has been prevented from returning to his clifftop mansion on Whale Beach Road thanks to a so-called "red flag" attached to his passport.

The flag's presence is not so surprising. Until recently the UK authorities believed Mr Morris harboured an immoderate passion for the contents of certain British pension funds.



Monday, 7 May 2012

Short Memory erased as GE awaits a buyer


The Sea Ray formerly known as Short Memory.
Photo: SiN Images 
IT'S unlikely that Short Memory, a vessel formerly stabled with late marine czar Andrew Short, is far from the recollection of the credit and risk specialists at GE commercial lending.

The finance house repossessed its vessel back in September 2011, a month before Andrew Short Marine went into liquidation.

And since GE recovered the Sea Ray 585, it's been racking up berthing and other fees at the exclusive d'Albora Marina at Cabarita on Sydney Harbour.

Tuesday, 13 December 2011

NAB on the hook for $58 million

Chris Hill and Alan Hayes from PPB Advisory are nominally in charge of HP Industries (Hollywood Plastics) after the steel and plastic packaging group’s directors appointed the pair voluntary administrators last Tuesday.