Case Note: Re Cardinia Nominees Pty Ltd [2013] NSWSC 32
Facts of the case
Cardinia Nominees Pty Ltd (Cardinia) agreed to lend Inika Pty Ltd (Inika) the sum of $750,000, in exchange for the issue of convertible bonds to Cardinia. The loan was secured by a charge in favour of Cardinia over the whole of Inika’s assets.
A Supreme Court decision has delivered a hefty blow to holders of HIH Holdings (NZ) convertible notes leaving them with little hope of recovering any of their investment.
The NSW Government has accepted some of the key recommendations of the Recommendations of the Independent Inquiry in Construction Industry Insolvency in NSW, including the introduction of bonds. We know that the Government will:
This is the second case in which the New South Wales Supreme Court has granted an extension of time for registration of a security interest on the Personal Property Securities Register where the delay is accidental or due to inadvertence. However, the extension in this case was conditional firstly, by preserving the priority of another security interest which had been registered in the meantime and secondly, because there was insufficient evidence of the financial position of the grantor to establish that an extension was unlikely to prejudice other creditors or shareholde
The recent New South Wales Supreme Court decision In re MF Global Australia Ltd (in liq) No 2 [2012] NSWSC 1426 confirmed that the remuneration, costs and expenses incurred by liquidators in preserving, recovering and realising trust assets should be paid out of the trust property generally, rather than being restricted to assets held on trust for the benefit of the company itself.
Part 1 of a two-part analysis of the recommendations of the NSW Construction Industry Insolvency Inquiry.
Part 2 of a two-part analysis of the recommendations of the NSW Construction Industry Insolvency Inquiry. Part 1 considered the proposed NSW Building and Construction Commission.
The Inquiry aims to safeguard the interests of sub-contractors and was initiated by the NSW Government following a year marred by high levels of insolvency in the NSW construction industry.
The period for submissions on wide-ranging reforms to the NSW construction industry recommended by the Independent Inquiry into Construction Industry Insolvency in NSW is closing soon.
The recent New South Wales Supreme Court (Court) decision in In re MF Global Australia Ltd (in liq) No 2 [2012] NSWSC 1426 (23 November 2012) confirms that liquidators who properly incur costs and expenses in seeking court directions regarding the distribution of trust property and, in recovering such property, will generally be able to recover their relevant remuneration, costs and expenses from that trust property.
In August 2012 the NSW Government commissioned an Independent Inquiry into Construction Industry Insolvency. The Inquiry was asked to assess the causes and extent of insolvency in the building and construction industry and to recommend measures to better protect subcontractors from the effects of insolvency.