17 March 2026

Shareholder Debt: RNM Enterprises v. Prasad

  

Using their RNM Enterprises Ltd company bank account as a personal piggy bank saw Monish Prasad and mother Asha ordered to pay $631,500 after the company went into liquidation insolvent.

Using company cash to meet personal expenses left them with a debt owed the company, recorded in company accounting records as a shareholder current account.

Auckland transport company RNM Enterprises Ltd was forced into liquidation by unpaid creditors in June 2023.

Loss of a major client, difficulty in getting drivers and increasing costs were blamed for the insolvency.

Investigations by RNM Enterprises’ liquidator identified substantial sums of cash borrowed from the company by the two shareholders over a two year period ending March 2023.  This included payments for gym membership, hotel accommodation, movie tickets, monthly Sky subscriptions and credit card payments plus large cash drawings.

These withdrawals amount to borrowings from the company, repayable on demand, Justice Anderson ruled.

Mother and son were ordered to repay $631,591.

They did not appear in court to defend the liquidator’s claim.

RNM Enterprises Ltd v. Prasad – High Court (17.03.26)

26.104

Trust Distribution: re McAulay-Inui Family Trust

  

Just before her death in 2023, Maureen McAulay changed her will leaving all assets to her family trust, with trustees then left to decide on distribution of her property on death.  Inevitably, her two children then disagreed with trustees’ allocation of their late mother’s assets.  Litigation followed.

Daughter Isa, living in New Zealand as a solo mother with one child, claimed her brother Yusuke’s share should be reduced because of financial assistance he had received during their mother’s lifetime.  The High Court was told Yusuke lives in Japan, with their grandmother.

Before her death, Maureen signed a ‘memorandum of guidance’ for her trustees asking that a cash gift of $35,000 be made to Isa’s son and the balance of her property be divided between her two children after considering their ‘reasonable needs and requirements.’

What amounts to ‘reasonable needs and requirements’ opened up a war of words between the two siblings over what they had already received and what they needed now.

In cash terms, there is a net sum of about $680,000 available for distribution, with the lion’s share potentially going to Ina after allowance by the trustees for cash payments received by Yusuke from his mother during her lifetime.

The court was told Ina objected to no allowance being made for about $168,000 given to Yusuke after sale of an Auckland Beach Haven property, previously owned by their mother’s family trust.

In the High Court, Justice Powell ruled this was not a payment to Yusuke from the trust.

The court was told Yusuke signed the agreement to buy Beach Haven, but title was taken in name of the family trust and the trust paid the purchase price.

It was sold two years later, on completion of renovations paid for by Yusuke.

The $168,000 capital gain on sale was agreed with his mother as payment to Yusuke for his work on renovating the property, Justice Powell ruled.

Justice Powell used Trusts Act powers to approve the trustees proposed equal distribution of trust assets between the two siblings.

Yusuke agreed to repay loans previously received.  The $168,000 Beach Haven capital gain did not have to be repaid.

The $35,000 gift to Ina’s son is to be held in trust until he reaches age eighteen.

re McAulay-Inui Family Trust – High Court (17.03.26)

26.106

Arbitration: Revyre Global v. Tyre Collection Services

  

Leaving machinery on site as leverage to get paid one million dollars in a dispute with a former investor was dismissed by the High Court as selective interpretation by Auckland waste processor Revyre Global of an arbitrator’s award.

If not removed promptly, Daryl Shackleton’s Tyre Collection Services Ltd can dismantle and dispose of the machinery.  Revyre Global Ltd’s controlling shareholder Shaun Zukor fears Tyre Collection might then dump it on the roadside next to its Canterbury Rolleston plant.

This dispute followed a 2024 business deal that went sour.

Revyre is a start-up company planning to chip old tyres into crumb, with this product repurposed.

The High Court was told of a May 2024 deal with Revyre purchasing Tyre Collection’s existing plant and machinery, part-paid by interests associated with Mr Shackleton taking a ten per cent stake in Revyre.

Their business relationship soon collapsed, going to arbitration.

In an interim December 2025 award, the arbitrator stated Revyre was entitled to one million dollar damages for misrepresentation with Tyre Collection and Mr Shackleton both responsible to pay.

In turn, the award stated that Revyre was entitled to dismantle and remove machinery it had purchased, currently on site at Tyre Collection Ltd.

A stand-off followed.

Revyre said it first needed Mr Shackelton to pay the one million dollar interim award, providing cash needed to extract the equipment.

Mr Shackleton said the equipment had to go now; Tyre Collection has a potential buyer for the site, he said.  Failing removal, Revyre’s equipment will be dumped, he said. 

Revyre asked for urgent High Court intervention.

Terms of the arbitrator’s interim award allowed Revyre to set a timeframe within which the equipment had to be removed, Revyre said.

Revyre was attempting to have it both ways, Justice Paulsen ruled.

It pushed for a prompt arbitration ruling claiming it needed to recover its equipment as a matter of critical business necessity for Revyre’s business operations to continue.

Having pushed for, and obtained, an interim arbitration award, Revyre was now stalling on any need to quickly remove the equipment it had purchased and supposedly desperately needed.

It was not appropriate for the High Court to intervene over threats to dump the equipment, Justice Paulsen ruled.

The arbitration award gave Revyre access to Tyre Collection’s site with ‘immediate effect,’ he said.

There was no intention that Tyre Collection be required to keep and maintain the equipment for an indefinite period pending a decision by Revyre for its removal, Justice Paulsen said.

The court was told Tyre Collection is challenging the one million dollar damages award.

Revyre Global Ltd v. Tyre Collection Services Ltd – High Court (17.03.26)

26.105

16 March 2026

Trustee: Steedman v. Steedman

  

Holding staunch views regarding Maori sovereignty does not excuse failure to properly act as trustee of a land trust, the Maori Land Court ruled when removing Opae Steedman and Taihi Paul from their positions as trustees of an ahu whenua trust for land near Taihape in the central North Island.

Already under court supervision, they were removed for their role in approving a long-term lease of trust land to interests associated with Mr Steedman while under court orders to not make any significant decisions as trustees without prior court approval.

The ahu whenua trust was established in 1985 to better manage customary Maori landholdings.

Mr Steedman came to be appointed trustee on strength of beneficiaries’ belief that his energy and enthusiasm would advance their economic interests.

Some beneficiaries later complained to the Maori Land Court with allegations of Mr Steedman’s lack of accountability and transparency, lack of leadership and general incompetence.

He was put under court supervision, together with fellow trustee Ms Paul.

At a November 2025 court hearing into Mr Steedman’s ongoing conduct, the Maori Land Court heard for the first time that the two trustees had approved a five year lease of trust land, with a right of renewal, to a second trust associated with Mr Steedman.

Asked to explain, Mr Steedman said this was neither a major decision nor a long-term one.

Judge Warren ruled the lease was a clear contravention of an earlier court order that no major decisions be made without court approval.

Regardless of Mr Steedman’s strong views on Maori sovereignty, this was a serious breach of trustee duties imposed by Te Ture Whenua Maori Act, he said.

Both Mr Steedman and Ms Paul were removed as trustees with immediate effect.

Mr Steedman’s passion is at times seriously misplaced, creating a risk to trust assets, Judge Warren said.

Steedman v. Steedman – Maori Land Court (16.03.26)

26.103

13 March 2026

Family Trust: Renall v. Renall

  

Discretionary beneficiaries of family trusts have no direct entitlement to trust assets; a rule frustrating Garry Renall in dispute with brother Ian over allegations Ian is getting a cheap deal in sale of trust property.

The two brothers, together with sister Jennifer, are discretionary beneficiaries of a family trust set up by their parents in 1996.  Major asset is two adjoining properties at Waiuku near Pukekohe, in South Auckland.

The High Court was told trustees recommended winding up the trust following death of their surviving parent in 2022, their mother Dawn.

Ian is a trustee, together with directors of Pukekohe accounting practice: Campbell Tyson.  

Trustees invited all three beneficiaries to put in an offer for the two properties.

In May 2025, Ian offered $1.12 million.

Evidence was given of Ian failing to stump up with cash on settlement date.

Garry alleges his brother is not only buying at below market rate but that he has his daughter on site as a tenant paying rent at a concessionary rate.

He also has a general complaint that trustees used trust funds to pay for completion of a boundary adjustment benefitting Ian; a cost Ian should have paid, Garry says.

Garry lodged a caveat over title to the trust properties, blocking completion of the sale.

In the High Court, Associate Judge Gellert ruled Garry had no legal standing to register a caveat.

He has no direct claim over trust assets.  At best, he has an indirect entitlement to the proceeds of sale, should the trustees choose to make a distribution to him when cashing up the family trust.

In a May 2025 letter to the three beneficiaries, trustees stated their ‘view’ that cash proceeds from sale would be distributed equally between the three beneficiaries.

This created an expectation that Garry would be treated equally on winding up, Judge Gellert ruled.  But it did not give him any caveatable claim over trust assets.

Judge Gellert ruled the caveat is to remain temporarily, lifted when the sale to Ian is completed and subject to a condition that $200,000 from sale proceeds is to be held in trust, pending final resolution of the family dispute.

Renall v. Renall – High Court (13.03.26)

26.102

12 March 2026

Contract: Era Home Ltd v. Apex Success

  

Claiming to be meat in the sandwich, Auckland property developer Era Home Ltd refused to pay for insulation work alleging it was tricked, thinking its contract was with a long-term supplier, not one of the supplier’s former employees who allegedly sneaked in a quote of his own for the job.  

The High Court ruled that Apex Success Ltd, associated with Dingfeng Lin, was entitled to payment having done the work, regardless of whatever claims Lin’s former employer may have against him for allegedly poaching work.

Evidence was given of Era Home frequently using West Auckland supplier SNUG Insulation Ltd for sub-contracted insulation work.  Dingfeng Lin, known as Frank, was a SNUG employee.

Era Home was not surprised when a March 2023 email came in from Mr Lin’s email address quoting for insulation work at an Era development on Auckland’s North Shore in Forrest Hill.

Era had received an earlier quote some four months previously, also from Mr Lin’s email address, submitting a quote on behalf of SNUG Insulation.

What differed with the later March 2023 quote was an absence of any reference to SNUG; the supplier was named as Apex Success Ltd.  GST number and bank account details differed from those for SNUG.

Era Home was to later tell the High Court it simply assumed SNUG had re-branded as Apex Success.     

After the job was done, Era Home refused to pay Apex’s invoice, claiming it was a SNUG job.  Compounding the problem was the fact SNUG staff did some of the work, apparently subcontracted by Apex.

It is an Apex contract, Associate Judge Lester ruled.

The March 2023 emailed quote is clearly from Apex.  An Apex-styled logo is used.  The email is signed off with ‘Thanks Apex Success Ltd.’

Era Home accepted this quote in having the work done by Apex.

It was ordered to pay a $25,760 Apex invoice within ten days, or face liquidation for non-payment.

Companies Office files record Apex’s owner as Jiehui Cai.

Era Home Ltd v. Apex Success Ltd – High Court (12.03.26)

26.100

Relationship Property: Sugrue v. Lillico

  

A de facto spouse’s relationship property entitlements could be calculated at date of a court hearing despite her claim being filed outside the three year statutory time limit the High Court ruled, allowing Christine Lillico to share in an increased value of a former family home.

Her de facto partner Michael Sugrue argued values should be taken as at date of their separation, some four years previously.  Share of a $170,000 capital appreciation was in dispute.    

Property (Relationships) Act sets a three year time limit for de facto spouse claims to relationship property.

Mr Lillico got Family Court approval to bring her claim out of time.

The High Court was told Mr Sugrue purchased the property in 1988.

Ms Lillico lived there with him over the period 2010-2018.

Three years into their relationship, she signed a property sharing agreement at Mr Sugrue’s behest, setting out a formula for division of relationship property should their relationship end.  She was to receive half the value of their home after deduction for any balance owed on his mortgage and a further deduction of $380,000 being their agreed value of Mr Sugrue’s house when their relationship started.

Mr Sugrue said this formula should apply to values as at 2018, when they separated; $40,500 being Ms Lillico’s share.

Since that date, a mortgage over the property has been partly repaid and the property value has increased.

Mr Sugrue claimed his former spouse should not benefit from windfall gains flowing from her own delay in filing a claim.

The general rule is that property valuations in a disputed relationship property claim are calculated as at date of a court hearing.

Justice Paulsen ruled there was no reason to depart from the general rule in this case.

Their relationship property agreement did not spell out a date from which valuations should be calculated.

Mr Sugrue’s reluctance to engage with Ms Lillico’s claim in part explained delays in getting to a court hearing, he said.

Values assessed as at the initial Family Court hearing date resulted in Mr Sugrue being ordered to pay Ms Lillico $74,900.

Sugrue v. Lillico – High Court (12.03.26)

26.101

11 March 2026

Option: Darlow v. Halpin

  

Barbara Morris intended that son Richard be given the option to buy her plant nursery at Pokeno on her death, paying current market price.  Disputes between siblings, delays in appointing executors following her 2021 death and further delays in completing a planned subdivision of land containing the nursery have caused legal chaos.

As a first step, the High Court was asked to interpret Ms Morris’ will.

At extremes: Richard could be allowed to buy the disputed land cheaply; or alternatively, lose entirely the right to buy.

In a will signed in 2014, Ms Morris gave son Richard the option to buy forty hectares of land she owned on O’Leary Road in Pokeno, south of Auckland.

Wanting to ensure little delay in winding up her estate, the will specified that executors must offer this option to Richard within six months of her death; the price assessed at current ‘government valuation,’ if less than six months old, failing that at current market value fixed by a valuer.

Ms Morris later amended her 2014 will with a 2019 codicil: gifting part of the land to Richard on her death; the existing option remaining, entitling Richard to purchase the balance.

The price paid by Richard falls into the residue of Ms Morris’ estate, to be divided equally between her four children, including Richard.  

Infighting between siblings led to executors named in Ms Morris’ will declining to accept appointment.

Delays in finding replacement executors meant new executors were not appointed until six months and six days after Ms Morris’ death.

Richard’s option to buy no longer existed, siblings claim.

Justice Robinson ruled the six month time limit from death for an option to buy was not critical.

Ms Morris intended her estate be wound up promptly.  The six month period in her will emphasised this.  But other terms of her will, allowing executors to carry on her nursery business while a subdivision she proposed was completed, signals that offering Richard an option to buy may take more than six months, Justice Robinson ruled.

Valuing the land offered to Richard was problematic.

 ‘Government valuation’ of land does not exist.  Justice Robinson interpreted this phrase in Ms Morris’ will to mean current rating valuation.

Richard claimed he is entitled to buy at the rating valuation as at their mother’s death.

Justice Robinson ordered a new valuation be prepared by a registered valuer; the 2020 rating valuation is more than twelve months old.

A 2022 valuer’s report valued the land at four million dollars.

The court was told disaffected siblings have court proceedings underway, challenging validity of both the 2014 will and subsequent codicil.  They claim an unsigned 2018 document should stand as their mother’s final will.

If successful, the High Court’s interpretation of her 2014 will becomes redundant.

Darlow v. Halpin – High Court (11.03.26)

26.099

Fraudulent Calumny: Lowe v. Ngan

  

Claiming fraudulent calumny, Wellington property investor Peter Ngan accused his sister Helen Young of poisoning his relationship with their half-sibling Tengor Ngan resulting in Tengor cutting Peter out of his inheritance; a share of Tengor’s $3.24 million estate.

This is the first time fraudulent calumny has been claimed in a New Zealand court as grounds to invalidate a will.

The rules have been around for over 150 years, requiring proof of deliberate or reckless behaviour designed to have a ‘natural beneficiary’ left out of, or cut out of, a will.

In England, claims of fraudulent calumny have seen a recent revival; mainly unsuccessful.

Expect numbers of claims to increase as disaffected children of the baby boomer generation fight over their deceased parents’ riches.

In the New Zealand High Court, Justice La Hood ruled there was no clear and cogent evidence to support Helen Young’s claims that brother Peter Ngan was a fraudster, mismanaging half-sibling Tengor’s properties and cheating Tengor out of money due.

Helen is a person quick to make judgements based on a cursory assessment of limited information and difficult to budge from those judgements once made, Justice La Hood said.

Her view that Peter defrauded Tengor is incorrect, but genuinely held, Justice La Hood ruled.  

Being genuinely mistaken negated any suggestion Helen acted fraudulently in lobbying her half-sibling Tengor to cut her brother out of his will.

Her brother Peter was awarded assets from Tengor Ngan’s estate valued at $800,000 on a Law Reform (Testamentary Promises) Act claim; receiving two flats on Angus Avenue in Wellington inner city suburb Berhampore which would otherwise have been inherited by Helen’s children.

Four days of High Court evidence was taken up detailing the relationship between Tengor and his half-siblings.

The court was told Tengor came to New Zealand as a refugee from China in the 1940s, fleeing ahead of invading Japanese forces.

He never married.  He had no children.

He lived a very frugal life, building up a suite of rental properties.

When Tengor was in his early seventies, he approached half-brother Peter to take over management of his flats.  Peter, with his spouse, was also a residential landlord with some of his flats in the same block as Tengor’s.

The High Court was told of an informal hand-shake deal around 2005 in which Peter would manage Tengor’s flats for a fifty/fifty share of net rentals with Peter to inherit a ‘fair share’ of Tengor’s assets on death.

Tengor has five half-siblings.  As Tengor aged, there was growing interest amongst these half-siblings over potential inheritances from child-less Tengor.

Evidence was given of Helen’s growing belief that Peter was cheating Tengor of his agreed half-share of rentals.

Armed with some of Peter’s accounting records, she contacted both Tengor and Tengor’s solicitor mounting a concentrated campaign alleging fraud by Peter.

Peter’s protestations to the contrary were not helped by Peter failing to provide detailed monthly accounting summaries to Tengor and his habit of deducting sums for personal expenses incurred on Tengor’s behalf.

These loose accounting procedures led to apparent misunderstandings on Helen’s part over the distinction between business expenses and personal expenses, plus what was valid capital expenditure, Justice La Hood ruled.

The court was told of Tengor’s bank account being temporarily frozen on allegations of elder abuse and complaints of theft made to the police.  Police declined to prosecute.

On Tengor’s death in 2024 at age 94, Peter learnt he was not a beneficiary.

This had been foreshadowed by an emotional meeting between the two in August 2021 in which Tengor, relying on Helen’s comments, accused Peter of dishonesty.

At various times, both Helen and Peter lobbied Tengor seeking to direct changes to his will, the court was told.

In October 2021, Tengor signed what became his final will.

Peter was left nothing.

Two flats which were bequeathed to Peter in an earlier will were instead gifted to Helen’s two children.

These two flats were subsequently awarded to Peter as compensation on his successful Law Reform (Testamentary Promises) Act claim.

Justice La Hood ruled the seventeen years’ service Peter provided to his half-brother as both professional and personal services followed on from the 2005 promise he would receive in return a ‘fair share’ of Tengor’s estate.

Value of the two flats he receives amounts to a little less than a quarter of total estate value.

Lowe v. Ngan – High Court (11.03.26)

26.098

School Funds: Board of Trustees v. LGY

  

Using school funds to have family tag along on an authorised school trip can be grounds for dismissal, with the Employment Court ordering reinstatement of a school deputy principal while an investigation continues.  Recent law changes block, in future, orders for interim reinstatement where an employee’s behaviour is at issue.

Names of the school and deputy principal were supressed by the Employment Court.

The court was told she had worked at the school for nearly thirty years; starting as a teacher, rising later to deputy principal.

In both 2019 and 2023 she organised fundraising campaigns enabling students to attend World of Wearable Arts shows in Wellington.  Also funded for travel and attendance were parent helpers, many of whom helped with the fundraising.

A parent complained after the 2023 trip that school funds were spent on tickets for members of the employee’s family.

The school board of trustees responded that it ‘totally and strongly rejects any suggestion of misuse of money.’

Eleven months later, the board fired her.

The Employment Court was told further information about her testy workplace relationship with some staff had now come to light, some of these complaints stretching back for over a decade.

Misuse of school funds for the Wearable Arts shows was the primary reason for termination, the board said.  This misappropriation amounted to dishonesty, it said.

It is entitled to require a greater level of trust in a senior employee who has delegated powers to deal with school funds, the board said.

The employee strongly denies there has been any misappropriation.  She has receipts for money spent on fundraising where she did not seek reimbursement; sufficient money to cover family member trip costs, she says.

Pending a full inquiry by the school board into all allegations, the Employment Court ordered her reinstatement, through a managed reintegration process overseen by Business, Innovation and Employment’s mediation service.

For future cases, interim reinstatement will not be an option, the Employment Court pointed out.

A 2026 amendment to the Employment Relations Act blocks reinstatement or compensation for personal grievance cases where the employee’s behaviour contributed to the problem.

These new rules apply to cases filed since the amendment.

Board of Trustees v. LGY – Employment Court (11.03.26)

26.097

09 March 2026

Will: re Henning Testamentary Trust

  

While their father thought it best to keep his daughter at a distance from any inheritance, leaving her a life interest only in her half share of his estate, her brother disagreed, later supporting a High Court application allowing her to inherit.

Grace Hanning was aged seventeen when their father signed what was his final will; dividing his assets in half on death: half gifted outright to his son Jack, the balance gifted to trustees on trust for the benefit of Grace.

Grace admitted she was going through a ‘tough period’ at this time.

Their father died six years later, in 2024.

The High Court was told the funds held in trust for Grace were used to buy a house in the Auckland suburb of Massey, where Grace lives with her two children.

Exigencies of trust law meant Grace was required to pay rent to the trust, set at $635 per week, with Grace having to negotiate with trustees for ongoing repairs needed at the property.

Rent payments were necessary because neither Grace, nor her children, would ever get full ownership of trust assets.

Terms of their father’s will state that on Grace’s death all trust assets are to go to her brother Jack and his children.

The High Court was told Jack considers it unfair that he and his family stand to eventually inherit what is in effect his sister’s half share of their father’s estate.

He supported the trustees’ application to have terms of the trust amended.

Using Trust Act powers, Justice MacGillivray terminated the trust, ordering all trust assets immediately be handed over to Grace.

Most affected are Jack and his children, who otherwise stood to inherit.

Jack had considered the financial consequences to both himself and his children when supporting termination of the trust, Justice MacGillivray said.

re Testamentary Trust of Alistair Graham Hanning – High Court (9.03.26)

26.096

Marae Trust: Miru v. Te Awa

  

Paying $20,000 marae funds across to her brother Kereama Te Awa for his private use was a breach of trust.  Maori Land Court ordered repayment within a month.  Failing that, sister Georgina Te Awa and two other Waiotea marae trustees complicit in the wrongfully payment are liable to make good the loss.

Waiotea marae sits on the northern reaches of Kaipara Harbour in Northland, with beach access for vehicles.  The sole building on site is seldom used, needing repairs.

Maori Land Court was told some money has been collected over time from various sources with long-term plans to upgrade the building.

Marae trustee Mikaera Miru objected to fellow trustees arranging a $20,000 withdrawal from the marae bank account, funds drawn down with a cheque made out to cash.

This money wound up in the hands of hapu member Kereama Te Awa, a non-trustee, variously described as payment for his firewood business and to pay off a loan on his excavator.

In the Maori Land Court, Judge Williams dismissed explanations that marae funds could be used at any time to help hapu members in need of cash.

Marae funds can never be used for personal benefit, he ruled.

Funds are held in trust for marae purposes.

Trustees Georgina Te Awa, Nathan Tana and Joseph Miru were held personally liable to make good any losses should recipient Kereama Te Awa not repay the money.

Judge Williams took steps to remove all three as marae trustees.

He was critical of both their breach of trust and the abuse they directed at the court.

Mikaera Miru told the court payment has gone to whanau having gang affiliations.  There is a serious risk the money will not be recovered, he said.

Miru v. Te Awa – Maori Land Court (9.03.26)

26.095

06 March 2026

Monopoly: Commerce Commission v. Alderson Logistics

  

Andrew and Susan Alderson’s transport company enjoyed a monopoly over supply of bulk wood shavings to Waikato poultry farmers after buying up the then two top suppliers in 2022, a business strategy later costing their business a $420,000 Commerce Act penalty for anti-competitive behaviour.  This monopoly was broken by new suppliers entering the market some thirty months later, offering a better deal.

Based in Auckland, Alderson Logistics Group provides transport services across the North Island.

The High Court was told of Aldersons’ policy decision in late 2021 to gain control of trucking operations delivering bedding for goats and chickens in the Waikato.

Alderson Group purchased two suppliers which between them then controlled eighty per cent of the market, buying up wood shavings from timber mills for delivery to goat and chicken farmers.   

There is no bedding product substitution available for chickens; Primary Industries requires use of untreated wood shavings for poultry welfare.  There are limited product alternatives for goat bedding.

The two acquisitions gave Aldersons a monopoly for supply in the Waikato.

Aldersons’ legal advisers for the purchases did not suggest Commerce Commission clearance might first be required.  Commission sprung into action only after a customer’s complaint. 

The High Court was told prices for supply increased markedly after Aldersons’ acquisitions.

This was justified by a ‘supply shock’ from mid-2023, Aldersons said.

A number of timber mills in the region closed down.

And Aldersons was in competition for wood shavings from a new industry, manufacturing wood pellets from shavings for use as heating fuel.

Commerce Commission intervention saw a 2024 agreement that Alderson Group would divest part of its wood shavings/animal bedding operations, accepting a warning for its prior anti-competitive merger.

Ultimately, there was no divestment.

A formal sale process was initiated through an investment bank.

There was interest from only one prospective buyer.  No sale was inked.

Commerce Commission changed tack, cancelling the need for divestment, taking High Court action declaring Alderson Group breached Commerce Act merger rules.

Approving an agreed settlement, Justice Gardiner imposed a $420,000 fine.

Alderson Group’s financial details were supressed.

Alderson claims it ran at a financial loss for the years 2023-25, with further losses forecast for the 2026 year.

Commerce Commission v. Alderson Logistics Ltd – High Court (6.03.26)

26.094

04 March 2026

Price-fixing: Commerce Commission v.Aramex

  

After courier company Aramex admitted a 2021 tie-up with logistics company Zappy amounted to cartel behaviour, High Court approved a $700,000 penalty negotiated between Aramex and Commerce Commission.  Zappy agreed not to poach Aramex customers without prior approval, and if approved, not to undercut Aramex fees. 

Singapore-owned Aramex NZ gained a New Zealand foothold with its 2016 purchase of Fastway Couriers.

Aramex is now the third largest courier company in New Zealand, with over three hundred individual courier-franchised territories in operation. 

In late 2021, Aramex negotiated a re-sellers agreement with Zappy, then known as Payport.

Zappy owns cloud-based software used to track courier deliveries in real time, a system integrated across New Zealand’s retail and transport industries.

Aramex told the High Court that the 2021 agreement was drawn up by its national sales manager who simply copied a template document used previously by a Fastway subsidiary, deleting names of the original contracting parties and substituting Aramex and Zappy as the new contracting parties.

No one read the document in any detail.

Aramex was unaware clauses in this contract breached the Commerce Act.

The High Court was told the cartel agreement was scrapped as soon as a Commerce Commission investigation commenced.  Aramex co-operated fully with the investigation.

Commission said the extent of any financial benefit gained by Aramex could not be quantified.

Aramex claims there was ever only one instance of Zappy making contact to co-ordinate pricing for a courier contract.

Commerce Commission v. Aramex New Zealand Holdings Ltd – High Court (4.03.26)

26.093

Banking: Financial Markets Authority v. ASB

  

ASB was ordered to pay a $2.1 million penalty after overcharging customers for nearly a decade, with the penalty increased in part because of its failure to act promptly on staff warnings.

In 2013, a member of the Bank’s wealth team was told to shut up after sending some sixty emails to his line manager warning that client insurance policy discounts were being wrongly calculated.

It was not until 2021, after a then recent royal commission on banking in Australia heavily criticised operation of retail banks, that ASB senior management sat up and took notice of the problem.

The High Court was told that since 2011 ASB staff had been miscalculating some insurance premium discounts for policies sold on behalf of IAG Insurance.

Confusion saw premium discounts not being given when bank customers had more than one qualifying IAG policy, and also discounts wrongly given when customers had more than one policy which included caravan and motorbike policies which were not eligible for a premium discount.

ASB and IAG jointly agreed to reimburse affected customers; ASB’s share being $2.9 million.

The High Court was also told ASB did not apply promised bank fee reductions for many FastNet business customers for the period 2011 through to 2020.

ASB senior management did not become aware of the extent of the problem until a mid-2019 ‘deep dive,’ following up complaints from business customers.

The fact bank fees were disclosed on business customer accounts as a single line item kept the issue hidden for years.  Anomalies only became apparent after some business customers asked for a detailed breakdown of fees charged.

Errors were found in 21 per cent of business accounts.

ASB told the High Court that the mistake was unintentional, not pursued for financial gain.

Errors arose because granting a fee concession was a manual procedure.  The Bank had no systems in place to ensure discounts were properly applied.

ASB self-reported its mistakes to Financial Markets Authority, admitting to breaches of the Financial Markets Conduct Act; making false and misleading statements in its provision of financial services.  Advertised discounts were not applied as promised.

ASB negotiated a $2.1 million penalty with Financial Markets Authority.

This penalty was approved by the High Court.

FMA has first claim on this money; recovering its costs.

Financial Markets Authority v. ASB Bank – High Court (4.03.26)

26.092