01 April 2026

Mortgage Fraud: Song v. Merchant Finance

  

An Auckland $1.8 million mortgage fraud was blocked at the last moment with Westpac freezing funds.  Since the fraudster had vanished without a trace, a High Court order was needed to return funds to Merchant Finance Ltd as the rightful owner.

The High Court was told Merchant Finance approved a $1.8 million dollar loan in May 2025 to be secured over Shenquing Song’s property in Auckland suburb Glendowie.

Ms Song had never applied for a loan.

A fraudster claiming to be Ms Song used a forged passport to fox a mortgage broker, Merchant Finance and sundry lawyers into thinking they were dealing with the real Shenquin Song.

The fraud almost succeeded.  Funds were advanced by Merchant Finance, lawyers innocently acting for the fraudster registered a mortgage in favour of Merchant Finance over the Glendowie property and the funds passed through the lawyers’ trust account into a Westpac account nominated by the supposed Ms Song.

Only then did suspicions of fraud surface.

Westpac froze the funds.

The Registrar-General of Land registered a caveat on title to the Glendowie property, to block further fraudulent activity.

Westpac subsequently transferred the money back into the trust account of lawyers Chan & Co Legal Ltd.  It was now the lawyers’ problem.

It was more than a legal problem for Chan & Co; it was also a practical problem.

Lawyers owe ethical and contractual duties to their clients.

Chan & Co did not where their client was or who she is, other than her not being the real Shenquin Song.

As things stood, Chan & Co were holding funds on behalf of an unknown client as an unsecured $1.8 million loan from Merchant Finance.

To break the impasse, Chan & Co supported a High Court application under Contract and Commercial Law Act declaring the original loan and subsequent mortgage be set aside on grounds of mistake: Merchant Finance thought it was dealing with the real Shenquin Song; the fraudster knew this was untrue and took advantage of this mistake.

Cancellation of the loan contract allowed Chan & Co to return stolen funds to Merchant Finance.

The court was told Merchant Finance said it would release its mortgage after receiving repayment, with the Registrar-General of Land agreeing to then remove the caveat over Ms Song’s Glendowie property.

Song v. Merchant Finance Ltd – High Court (1.04.26)

26.122

31 March 2026

Bank Fees: Commerce Commission v. Co-operative Bank

  

Co-operative Bank’s $2.48 million penalty for charging excessive bank fees amounts to seven per cent of net profits during the period 2019-21 when inadequate bank costings saw customers wrongly charged fees in excess of bank actual costs.

Some 28,200 customers were affected, with per-customer over-charges ranging from $45 to $70 on fees charged in excess of bank actual costs for loan establishment fees and also for fees on loan variations and mortgage discharges.

The High Court was told the Bank breached consumer credit requirements in the Credit Contracts and Consumer Finance Act, setting ‘unreasonable’ bank fees; in some cases undertaking no modelling as to bank costs before setting fees, in other cases setting fees in excess of known costs.

The Bank self-reported its errors to the Commerce Commission.

A negotiated penalty of $2.48 million was approved by the High Court.

The court was told the Bank has also directly compensated affected customers.

Consumer credit ‘responsible lender’ rules applying since 2019, designed to control predatory lending by so-called mobile traders, also apply to fees charged by retail banks.

Commerce Commission v. Co-operative Bank Ltd – High Court (31.03.26)

26.120

Estate: Sutherland v. Milne

  

Ownership of a holiday home at Omaha north of Auckland was centre of a family dispute following death of patriarch Laurie Evans; did his widow Doreen have a life interest only in the property?

Children Susan and Owen were pitted against their brother-in-law David Milne.

The High Court was told David Milne was widowed prior to death of his father-in-law Laurie Evans, but Laurie did provide in his will for both David and David’s children; they were collectively entitled to three-thirteens of his residual estate.

There was no immediate payout on Laurie’s 1999 death.

Terms of Laurie’s will gave to his widow Doreen ‘the free use, income, occupation and enjoyment’ of estate assets, with the ‘then balance’ on her death to be divided between his descendants.

Doreen died more than twenty years after husband Laurie.

Estate money was used in the year after Laurie’s death to buy an Omaha Beach property at a then cost of some $410,000.  Title was registered in Doreen’s name.

On her death, David Milne said the Omaha property remained an asset in Laurie’s estate; claiming his family was entitled to a three-thirteens share of the value.

Justice Johnstone ruled Doreen’s right to ‘use’ estate assets meant any assets transferred into her name became her own property; they were not held on trust by her for final beneficiaries named in her late husband’s will.

Estate distribution of the ‘then balance’ of Laurie’s estate on Doreen’s death in 2022 did not include the Omaha property; it was no longer part of his estate.

The court was told siblings Susan and Owen inherit Omaha.

David and his children did receive a cash payout in the final wash-up of Laurie’s estate, but no share in the value of Omaha.

Value of their cash payout was not disclosed in the court judgment.

Sutherland v. Milne – High Court (31.03.26)

26.119

Incorporated Society: Theosophical Society of NZ v. Hamilton Lodge

  

Hamilton Lodge of the New Zealand Theosophical Society has been ordered to surrender all assets to its Auckland-based parent after failed legal argument that new rules governing incorporated societies gave separately-incorporated local branches full autonomy.  

Hamilton Lodge was given five weeks to hand over all funds in its bank accounts and transfer ownership of its central city site on Anglesea Street.

The High Court was told of a 2024 decision by Theosophical Society NZ stripping its Hamilton Lodge of its charter and use of the Society name, stating Hamilton members had brought the Society into disrepute; through ‘many breaches of the Society’s rules concerning its values and standards of conduct,’ it claims. 

Relationships between Hamilton and Auckland had been strained since 2018.

Operating from India, the theophilosophical movement encourages study of comparative religions and philosophy, with a strong emphasis on spirituality.

A New Zealand branch received its charter in 1896; its Hamilton Lodge in 1908.

Both the New Zealand branch and its Hamilton lodge are established as separate incorporated societies.  Continuing legal existence for both was ensured by re-registration under the Incorporated Societies Act 2022, which now governs their ongoing legal dispute.

Hamilton Lodge claimed it is being ‘robbed’ by New Zealand branch’s claim to its assets.

Hamilton Lodge is structured as an incorporated society; a legal person in its own right.  New Zealand branch, as a separate incorporated society, has no right to Hamilton’s assets, Hamilton Lodge claimed.

A 2013 Law Commission report reviewing incorporated societies identified legal links between national organisations and their local regions is best dealt with by either or both of contractual links or constitutional wording.

In this case, the link is constitutional wording, Associate Judge Sussock ruled.

Wording in Hamilton Lodge’s constitution as at the 2024 date when its charter was cancelled stated that all Lodge assets were to be handed over to New Zealand branch should its charter be cancelled.

It was irrelevant that Hamilton Lodge later filed an updated constitution stating that on dissolution of the Lodge all assets are to go to ‘a like-minded charity in the Waikato region.’

Cancellation of Hamilton Lodge’s charter and subsequent demand it hand over its assets did not amount to dissolution of the Hamilton Lodge as an incorporated society, Judge Sussock ruled.

Hamilton Lodge as an incorporated society remains in existence, albeit now with no assets and forbidden from using the Society’s name.

The most recent financial statements filed by the Hamilton Lodge of the Theosophical Society are dated November 2007, with its major asset being land and buildings then valued at $330,000.

The court was told New Zealand branch’s constitution states assets received from any lodge is to be ‘ring-fenced,’ held for any future theosophical centre or centres in that geographic area.

Theosophical Society of New Zealand Inc v. Hamilton Lodge of the Theosophical Society Inc – High Court (31.03.26)

26.121

30 March 2026

Deadlock: AJ Ritchie No.2 Trust v. Semenoff

  

Removed as general manager of Kings Quarry at Wainui in Auckland following allegations of misconduct and incompetence, Alexander Semenoff blocked appointment of chartered accountant Clinton Rains as a new director leaving the company with no quorum for its board of directors.  A court order was needed to approve temporary appointment of Mr Rains as director, enabling the company to function.

Kings Quarry Ltd is a joint venture company controlled by interests associated with the Semenoff family and Andrew Ritchie’s AJR Group.

Their 2022 shareholders’ agreement entitles each to appoint two directors, with each having a right of veto over the other’s appointments.  The agreement installed Alexander Semenoff as general manager, responsible for quarry operations.  He is also a director.

The High Court was told Mr Semenoff was fired as general manager in July 2025 by Mr Ritchie following allegations that Mr Semenoff had dishonestly claimed work expenses in relation to overseas travel to Brazil and China and further allegations that Mr Semenoff’s behaviour towards staff and Auckland Council had hampered quarry operations.

Mr Semenoff was trespassed from the quarry site.

He subsequently disputed Mr Ritchie’s previous nomination of Mr Rains as a Kings Quarry director.  Mr Rains works for Capital Management Ltd, a company associated with Mr Ritchie.

This veto, coupled with Mr Ritchie’s earlier resignation as a director, meant there was no functioning board in existence for Kings Quarry.   

An urgent High Court hearing saw Mr Rains appointed temporarily as director; necessary to ensure company operations can continue, Justice Wilkinson-Smith said.

If appointment of a new director using rules in their shareholder agreement does not progress, a Companies Act application for a new appointment can proceed, she ruled.

The court was told Alexander Semenoff’s father, also a Kings Quarry director, together with Mr Rains have initiated an independent investigation into allegations of Alexander Semenoff’s misconduct.

AJ Ritchie No.2 Trust v. Semenoff – High Court (30.03.26)

26.118

Fraud: Thorby v. R

  

Dismissing claims by Alister Thorby that much of the $1.8 million he fraudulently diverted from covid-19 health funding was properly spent mobilising pandemic-related Maori community support, the High Court confirmed on appeal his two years eight months imprisonment for fraud.

The court was told Alister Tony James Thorby improperly used covid-19 funding provided by Capital and Coast District Health and Hutt Valley Health boards to: buy a house in Foxton ($386,800); purchase multiple vehicles including a 2022 F-Pace Jaguar ($118,000) and 2022 Fiat motorhome ($215,300); spend at Sky City casino ($146,500); pay for domestic hotels and travel ($43,200); fund overseas travel for himself and two companions ($92,200); plus withdraw cash from ATMs ($30,700).    

He was employed by the two boards on a short-term contract through 2021-22 to arrange staffing and logistics for covid-19 quarantine, paid a salary of $110,000.

Later charged with fraud, it was alleged the boards’ money was misappropriated through payments made to three separate entities set up by Thorby; entities which did not provide the services supposedly paid for.

On appeal, Thorby provided evidence which he said supported his claim that most of the payments were valid covid-19 expenditures; spent on personal equipment and vehicles, funding Maori Warden assistance during the pandemic.

He said the Foxton house was purchased as a covid-19 administration base, the mobile home a roving base.

Justice La Hood said that while Maori Wardens acknowledged ‘use’ of these assets during the pandemic, there was no ongoing ownership after quarantine restrictions ended.

The Foxton house remained in Thorby’s name; now rented out as a private rental.

He retained ownership of the Jaguar and motorhome.

Justice La Hood ruled there were no grounds to support a reduced sentence on appeal.

Full reparation has been ordered.

The trial judge described as aggravating factors the fact Thorby moved quickly on appointment to devise a plan, setting up supposed third-party entities to invoice for services which were not in fact provided and then swiftly created false invoices to collect the funds.  

A Criminal Proceeds (Recovery) Act restraining order has been imposed on his assets.

Thorby v. R – High Court (30.03.26)

26.117

26 March 2026

Negligence: Hawkins v. Dellabarca

  

Phillip Dellabarca’s family was yet to shift into their newly constructed Wellington home when sparks and debris from their neighbour’s work deconstructing a boundary wall damaged the exterior on one side.  It took two court cases to determine whether the damage was merely cosmetic, or required full replacement.

This was no ordinary house.

The exterior consists of Siberian larch weatherboards charred in the Shou Sugi Ban style; work undertaken by Mr Dellabarca himself.

Charring has the effect of hardening the exterior surface, giving timber a longer life.  Within Japanese culture, subsequent weathering encompasses ‘a love and appreciation for the impermanence and imperfections of nature.’

The High Court was told there was no such love and appreciation between the Dellabarcas and their neighbour on Marine Drive in Eastbourne from mid-November 2018 after their neighbour had the sixteen year old son of a local building contractor demolish a concrete wall sited on the neighbour’s side of the boundary line.

Use of an angle grinder to cut through reinforcing rods caused a cascade of sparks and small chunks of concrete to hit the Dellabarcas house.

Bits of debris were imbedded in exterior weatherboards, causing chipping and spotting.

The windows had to be replaced.

A District Court trial ruled neighbours Edward and Susan Hawkins liable in negligence.

Building construction company Black Sheep Construction Ltd, owned by Graeme Hocking, accepted responsibility for the damage caused by Mr Hocking’s son.

All sides appealed to the High Court, arguing over the extent of damage and the amount of compensation.

Neighbours said damage to the one wall was cosmetic only, readily fixed by occasionally oiling the timber.

In the High Court, Justice Isac ruled full replacement is required.

There was expert evidence that Shou Sugi Ban charring is not just aesthetic; it also creates a solid membrane.  Chipping compromised this membrane.  Water damage and fungi infestation could follow.

Aluminium window framing was similarly compromised.

Justice Isac awarded damages of $154,900 as cost of replacement.

The Dellabarcas claimed $245,000.

Hawkins v. Dellabarca – High Court (26.03.26)

26.116

25 March 2026

Fiduciary Duty: Matakana Luxury Ltd v. Matakana Sheds Ltd

  

Richard and Sally Kerse claim property developer Laurence Pope improperly gained control of their Auckland accommodation complex, alleging he used confidential and commercially sensitive information to cheat them, buying them out at an undervalue.

Mr Pope strongly denies any wrongdoing.

The High Court upheld a caveat lodged by the Kerses over their former property, now Mr Pope’s Matakana Luxury Villas land in Matakana, north of Auckland, pending a full court hearing.

Circumstances in which Mr Pope’s company became owner of the Kerses’ business as part of a mortgagee sale, at a time when he had offered to save the Kerses’ land and business, require scrutiny Associate Judge Cogswell ruled.

Evidence was given of the Kerses’ proposed Airbnb project in Matakana running into financial difficulty through 2022.  Construction cost overruns plus reduced patronage during the covid-19 pandemic saw their company Matakana Sheds Ltd facing a potential mortgagee sale.

They say Mr Pope appeared on their doorstep as an expert in turning around struggling businesses, offering to help.  They had no previous dealings with him.

Mr Pope was given full access to Matakana Sheds financial information; to assist in negotiations with lenders, the Kerses say.

Judge Cogswell was moved to say that it is difficult to understand the motivation of Mr Pope to assist two strangers in the way that he did.

It is conceivable to characterise his actions as designed to achieve a favourable outcome for himself, at the Kerses’ expense, Judge Cogswell said.

During this time, an independent third party made a conditional offer to buy the Kerses’ business for $4.1 million.  Mr Pope advised against acceptance, recommending a $4.395 million counter-offer.  No deal was done.

The Kerses considered, then declined, Mr Pope’s subsequent conditional offer to buy at $3.6 million, which included a promise that the Kerses could remain on-site as tenants.

They claim Mr Pope then bought their business cheaply, part of a deal cooked up behind their backs as part of a supposed mortgagee sale with mortgages released over the land while the Kerses were still on the hook for the balance of money owed secured creditors.

In particular, they claim it was only through his work as their adviser that Mr Pope became aware that the first mortgagee would release its mortgage on part-payment of $3.6 million.

This information was not passed on to them, they claim.

The Kerses allege Mr Pope has prior dealings with this particular mortgagee.  The mortgagee was not named in the court judgment.

Three months after Matakana Luxury Villas purchase, the Kerses’ tenancy was cancelled.

In the High Court, the Kerses claim Mr Pope improperly used confidential information gained whilst an advisor to Matakana Sheds, in breach of a fiduciary duty owed their business.

They allege collusion between Mr Pope and the mortgagee.

They claim a constructive trust exists over the land sold, to secure damages claimed.

Associate Judge Cogswell ruled a caveat lodged over the land remain until a full court hearing hears the allegations and counter-allegations.

Separately, one of Matakana Shed’s secured creditors also alleges wrongdoing by Mr Pope.

North Homes Ltd, owned by Auckland’s Philip Taylor, held a lower-ranked mortgage over Matakana Shed’s land, securing the balance due on Airbnb villa construction costs.

North Homes claims Mr Pope offered to ensure full payment of the $31,000 it was owed provided North Homes surrendered its security.

It has asked the High Court to reinstate its standing as a secured creditor with rights against the land now owned by Mr Pope’s Matakana Luxury.

North Homes alleges Mr Pope was ‘manipulative,’ making misrepresentations about solvency of the Kerses’ business.

Matakana Luxury Ltd v. Matakana Sheds Ltd – High Court (25.03.26)

26.114

Founder Shareholding: Glass v. Protag Ltd

  

Tension between founder and investors, common to many start-up companies, has surfaced with Tyrel Glass, joint founder of ProTag Ltd, challenging his removal as director following allegations he breached his employment agreement as chief scientific officer.

Protag provides herd management systems using internet-enabled ear tags allowing farmers to monitor health of individual cows.

Mr Glass jointly founded ProTag in 2020 with fellow entrepreneur Baden Parr.

Since then, outside investors have demanded greater management control and increased representation at board level as a condition of further funding.

The High Court was told of a January 2026 board decision to fire Mr Glass.

This followed Mr Glass’ personal grievance claim filed with Employment Relations Authority two months earlier.

In the High Court, Mr Glass challenged ProTag’s response; removing him as director and cancelling a proposed allotment of shares.

Evidence was given of a shareholders agreement signed by founder shareholders stating consequences of becoming a ‘bad leaver:’ deemed resignation as a director and cancellation of rights to founders shares yet to vest.

Mr Glass said that he is still nominally a director while Employment Authority litigation is underway and similarly that any cancellation of his shareholder rights is still on hold.

Evidence was given that he claims to still own 24 per cent of ProTag.

He asked the High Court for a ruling entitling him to remain as director and to share in the next round of ProTag shares to vest.

Justice Johnstone declined to intervene.

The shareholder agreement has a clear purpose, regulating how ProTag will be owned, controlled and managed, he said.

This agreement gives the board power to eject a founder whom, in its view, is no longer providing ProTag with the support it needs, he said.

If it is later decided that Mr Glass should not have been dismissed, damages can be awarded for the value of shares lost, Justice Johnstone ruled.

Glass v. Protag Ltd – High Court (25.03.26)

26.115

24 March 2026

Estate: re Estate Melville Haynes

  

Michael Haynes was removed as co-administrator of his late father’s estate and given four weeks to vacate the Tauranga family home after continual stalling on promises to buy the property after his father’s 2023 death.

His sister Lisa Gatland, also an estate executor, wants the estate finalised with net proceeds divided equally between the two siblings as specified in their father’s will.

The High Court was told Mr Haynes was living with their father at the family Papamoa home on Gardens Drive on his death.

Despite Mr Haynes then offering to buy out his sister’s share in the property and his later promises to pay market rent until such time as a buy-out was agreed, nothing happened.

He failed to turn up at two appointments scheduled with estate solicitors to finalise details of his proposed purchase.

Gardens Drive has a market value of between $800,000 and $900,000.

Ms Gatland told the court her brother is not maintaining the property.  He has not paid rates or insurance.

Three years on from their father’s death, Justice Andrew approved an Administration Act application removing Ms Gatland’s brother as co-administrator.

This enables her to list the property for sale; his approval no longer required.

Mr Haynes has consistently delayed taking necessary steps to ensure the efficient and fair administration of the estate, Justice Andrew said.

Mr Haynes did not appear in court to challenge the application.

Ms Gatland’s legal costs can be deducted from Mr Haynes share of the estate on final distribution, Justice Andrew ruled.

re Estate Melville Haynes – High Court (24.03.26)

26.113

20 March 2026

Maori Land: re application by Kupa

  

The perceived ‘status discount’ applying to valuation of Maori freehold land justified Mare Kupa’s request that part of his rural subdivision be re-classified as general land; widening the pool of potential buyers, enabling sales to potentially recover at least $700,000 reducing farm debt and avoiding a potential forced sale.

The Maori Land Court was told Mr Kupa faced pressing financial need to raise cash, clearing debt over his farm, inland from Hastings.

In 2021, the court approved subdivision of eight residential sections, carved off from his farm on land held in customary Maori ownership.

It required these sections remain Maori freehold land.

Four years later, Mr Kupa was back before the Maori Land Court.

There had been some interest, but no firm offers to buy.  Buyer feedback was that there was no interest in purchasing residential land designated as Maori freehold land.

Banks would not lend.  Taking security over Maori freehold land leaves lenders with a limited pool of prospective purchasers on any forced sale; sales are limited to blood relatives of current owners.

This restriction is designed to prevent further losses of land held in Maori customary ownership.

Judge Stone approved Mr Kupa’s Te Ture Whenua Maori Act application to change status of half the eight residential sections to that of general land; increasing the sections’ value and widening the pool of potential buyers.

Primary reason is to enable reduction of farm debt, Judge Stone said.

This is one-off, Judge Stone warned.  The court is not likely to entertain any further status changes for Mr Kupa’s Maori freehold sections for debt repayment, he said.

Terms of the court order did not impose any condition that sale proceeds in fact be used to pay down farm debt.

re application by Kupa jnr – Maori Land Court (20.03.26)

26.110

Restraint of Trade: Premavida Ltd v. Walker

  

Acknowledging in the High Court that he was not complying with a restraint of trade agreed on a $950,000 sale of his half share in Hamilton optometrist Rose Optometry, Peter Walker upped the ante by challenging Rose Optometry to sue for damages.

Justice Powell agreed Rose Optometry’s best remedy is damages for any proved financial loss, declining an interim injunction requested by Rose to stop Mr Walker working for a competitor.

The court was told Mr Walker sold his stake in Rose Optometry in 2024.

As is common, terms of sale contained a restraint of trade clause.

Mr Walker promised not to immediately set up a new business within an eight kilometre radius of Rose Optometry’s Lake Road premises in Frankton, poach clients, or work for a competitor.  Four other local firms in Hamilton were named as off-limits.

He later admitted to working one day a week for a named competitor: Total Vision.

Rose Optometry asked for a High Court injunction to stop Mr Walker’s current employment with Total Vision; prohibited before October 2026 by the agreed restraint.

Mr Walker filed in court a written undertaking promising not to poach clients from Rose Optometry prior to October 2026 while declaring he would continue working for Rose’s competitor one day a week.

There was evidence that about 160 clients had transferred from Rose Optometry to Total Vision since Mr Walker started, of which nearly fifty per cent had been seen by Mr Walker.

He told the High Court he had destroyed, or returned to Rose Optometry, all confidential information relevant to these clients.

Given Mr Walker’s promise to the court that he would not further access information regarding Rose Optometry clients until after October 2026, Justice Powell ruled there was no need for the court to intervene.

If Rose Optometry has suffered any financial loss following Mr Walker’s employment by a competitor during the restraint period, it can sue him for damages.

Justice Powell indicated any financial damage was likely to be minimal.

Premavida Ltd v. Walker – High Court (20.03.26)

26.112

Debt Capital: Lam v. Phenix Y Ltd

  

There had been no formal agreement, but business records supported Amy Lam’s claim that payment of $320,000 to her daughter-in-law’s business was not an equity contribution, it was a loan repayable on demand after Amy’s son and daughter-in-law separated.

The High Court was told daughter-in-law Shunyan Ye, also known as Sharon Yip, signed up in August 2022 to buy a superette and Lotto outlet in Albany on Auckland’s North Shore.

Ms Lam and Ms Ye both put in cash; Ms Lam’s contribution of $320,000 sourced from a one year loan she took out from a private money-lender, at a high interest rate.

Ms Ye set up a company to run the superette, Phenix Y Ltd, with each of them listed as a fifty per cent shareholder.

Associate Judge Cogswell ruled there was no evidence that either had provided any equity capital; documentary evidence and financial statements indicated all working capital came from shareholder loans to the company.

If it were equity capital, Ms Lam’s $320,000 would be locked into the company with no right to repayment on demand.

Ms Ye had online access to Ms Lam’s bank account.  Narrations made by Ms Ye in her mother-in-law’s bank account described periodic payments by their company to Ms Lam as ‘shareholder loan repay.’

This supported Ms Lam’s claim that her $320,000 funding was a loan to their company.

WeChat discussions between the two at a time when Ms Lam’s initial one year borowing had to be rolled over provided further evidence that her $320,000 paid to their company was a loan.

Judge Cogswell held Phenix Y Ltd liable to now repay the $320,000 received, less sundry periodic repayments made to date.

If payments to Phenix Y by each shareholder were an equity investment, the norm for a small closely-held company would be to record this fact in a written shareholders agreement setting out shareholder rights.

Lam v. Phenix Y Ltd – High Court (20.03.26)

26.111

19 March 2026

Costs: Taber v. Hira Homestead Ltd

  

Obstructive challenges to relationship property lawsuits have a cost; orders to pay a greater contribution towards court-ordered legal fees, with judicial temperament labelling this extra cost as an ‘uplift,’ rather than a penalty.

The High Court ordered Nathan Palmer pay a fifty per cent uplift on usual costs orders after challenging Nicole Taber’s application for interim liquidation of their business, Hira Homestead Homes Ltd.

An interim liquidator was appointed in February 2026, taking control of company assets, after Mr Nathan made it clear he had little interest in sorting out what should happen to their animal boarding business.

Ms Taber and Mr Nathan were in a personal relationship when setting up Homestead Homes as a joint venture company in August 2025.  Their personal relationship ended four months later.

Mr Nathan alleges she walked out on the business, abandoning the assets.

She alleges Mr Nathan has unilaterally taken control; removing her without authority as director and shareholder from the Companies Office record and having her signing authority over the company bank account removed.

There are allegations Mr Nathan has siphoned money from the company bank account into another account he controls.

Challenged about changes made to Companies Office records, Mr Nathan claims Ms Taber did sign the necessary documents, but these have been lost; supposedly taken by Ms Taber, he claims.

In February 2026, Justice Osborne ruled these events made it ‘inevitable’ that an interim liquidator be appointed to take temporary control of the disputed assets.

There was no merit in Mr Nathan’s attempted opposition, he said.

He subsequently ordered Mr Nathan pay Ms Taber a fifty per cent uplift on the standard rate for legal costs awarded successful litigants.

Taber v. Hira Homestead Ltd – High Court (19.03.26)

26.109

Loan: Wang v. Xin

  

He was tricked and then lied to; Mojun Wang stands as an unsecured creditor in Xin Xu’s bankruptcy for a two million dollar debt after Xu misappropriated funds held for investment.

The High Court was told Mr Wang placed two million dollars with Mr Xu for a business to be set up in New Zealand exporting infant food and baby formula to China.

In late 2013, Mr Wang learnt this money had been improperly diverted by Mr Xu.  Instead of setting up a new company as proposed, Mr Xu spent the money on a ten per cent stake in an existing infant food business: Doxcon Pharmaceuticals Ltd.

When challenged, Mr Xu produced an asset register detailing Doxcon as a company of substance with fixed assets valued at $19.7 million.  This asset register was forged; at best, Doxcon held assets valued at $2.2 million.

Doxcon went into liquidation insolvent in 2015.  The two million dollar investment was lost.     

Evidence was given of a subsequent meeting between Mr Wang and Mr Xu in which Mr Xu blamed Doxcon management for the forgery, promising to recover Mr Wang’s two million dollars.

Mr Wang told the High Court Mr Xu promised to personally make good the loss if steps taken against Doxcon management were unsuccessful.

After receiving nothing, Mr Wang sued.

Mr Xu filed for bankruptcy.

As is the norm, Insolvency Service required sufficient proof that Mr Wang is owed two million dollars before accepting his claim in Mr Xu’s bankruptcy.

Mr Xu did not defend Mr Wang’s High Court application where Justice Anderson ruled Mr Wang is a creditor in Mr Xu’s bankruptcy, owed two million dollars.

Wang v. Xin Xu (a bankrupt) – High Court (19.03.26)

26.108

 

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

Maori Land Housing: Tupe v. Tua

  

Central to the Maori Land Court case was a dilapidated house, recently demolished.  Deeper undercurrents were about customary rights to ownership of land at Matangirua in Northland, near Whangaroa Harbour.

Judge Isaac ruled current owners were entitled to demolish the house.  He declined an application that the house be rebuilt, as demanded by a descendant of Nau Tupe who built the house three generations ago.

One of the current recorded joint owners, Tupe’s grandson Thomas Tua, told the court the now demolished house was unliveable and a risk to children playing in and around it.  No one had lived on site for years.

The house was demolished in March 2025, with foundations erased.

One month later, Tupe’s great-grandson Tamiti Wiremu Tupe asked the Maori Land Court to order reinstatement of the foundations and flooring together with reconnection of electric cabling to the site.  He alleges demolition was a pre-emptive strike by Thomas Tupe to thwart proposed repairs.

Tamati Tupe told the court he is an engineer, with construction experience.  Removal of foundations means resource consent is now needed for any rebuild.

There was evidence of Tamati occasionally living on site, prior to demolition.

The court was told Tamati Tupe and Thomas Tua are nephews.  Tamati Tupe told the Maori Land Court there had been an error in not recording his customary rights of inheritance, and with it, joint ownership of the disputed property.

Judge Isaac said it is too late to correct the record of ownership.      

Rights of the current recorded owners stem from a 1990 Maori Land Court ownership ruling.

Such orders are conclusive as to ownership, provided there is no challenge within ten years, Judge Isaac said.

Tupe v. Tua – Maori Land Court (17.03.26)

26.107