The Supreme Court has today released its decision in Yan v Mainzeal Property and Construction Limited (in liquidation) [1] (Mainzeal), upholding the Court of Appeal’s finding that Mainzeal’s directors were liable for insolvent trading and ordering Mainzeal’s directors to pay $39.8 million plus interest, with the liability of three of the four directors capped at $6.6 million plus interest.
MinterEllisonRuddWatts acted for the liquidators in the Mainzeal litigation.
Significance of decision
A recent amendment to the Goods and Services Tax Act 1985 has clarified that voluntary administrators are personally liable for the GST of companies under their administration.
Recent consideration of statutory insolvent trading duties by appellate courts provides fresh guidance for managing these risks. Three decisions stand out: two recent, one anticipated. Collectively, they provide (or will provide) a critical roadmap for directors operating businesses in precarious financial positions.
The appetiser: Debut Homes
2020 was a Jekyll and Hyde year for insolvency, both for New Zealand and our closest neighbour, Australia.
In our 2019 Litigation Forecast, we said 2020 would see two significant senior court decisions on directors’ duties engaged on insolvency.