Cork bars fail to get court orders stopping loans sale

Outlets include Bodega, Sin É, The Oval, Crane Lane, The Mutton Lane and Arthur Maynes

A businessman and two firms who own or control several  bars in Cork  have been refused injunctions preventing the special liquidators of IBRC selling their performing loans to Nama or other entities. Photograph: Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images
A businessman and two firms who own or control several bars in Cork have been refused injunctions preventing the special liquidators of IBRC selling their performing loans to Nama or other entities. Photograph: Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images

A businessman and two companies who own or control several well-known bars in Cork city employing 255 people have been refused injunctions preventing the special liquidators of IBRC selling their performing loans to Nama or other entities.

The orders were sought pending a full hearing of the companies' claim for damages over alleged overcharging on loans and misselling of derivative agreements to them by the former Anglo Irish Bank, IBRC's predecessor in title.

Dagenham Yank Ltd and No One In Particular Ltd, of which Brendan McCabe is a director, operate Bodega at Peters Market, Cornmarket Street; Sin É, Coburg Street; The Oval, South Main Street; Crane Lane, Phoenix Street; The Mutton Lane at Mutton Lane, and Arthur Maynes, Pembroke Street. The bars have a turnover of about €12 million annually.

Prior to the hearing of the plaintiffs' main action against IBRC, Mr Justice Paul Gilligan was asked for orders restraining the loans sale.

READ SOME MORE

The companies’ indebtedness is some €18.2 million, they had obtained a €8.1 million valuation for the loans and offered to buy them for €8.75 million, but the IBRC liquidators refused that offer, saying it represented a discount of some 40 per cent on par value.

In the main action, the plaintiffs want damages over alleged significant overcharging by Anglo on loans and misselling of derivative agreements dating from 2006 under which the estimated indebtedness of the companies was some €18.2 million. Mr McCabe also provided personal guarantees relating to financial arrangement between the companies and IBRC.

The plaintiffs’ loans are all performing short-term loans which over the years were consistently “rolled over” by Anglo.

The special liquidators are currently considering bids for the loans which were bundled into the “Stone” portfolio of some €1.3 billion loans offered for sale by IBRC, as part of the bank’s winding-up, to selected bidders who must show they can provide committed funding of €1.3 billion.

If the bid for the Stone portfolio does not meet the valuation of the liquidators, the loans will be taken over by Nama, which will then decide whether loans should be sold individually or collectively.

Part of the companies’ complaint was that, under the Nama Act, the agency can ignore any equitable set-off which may arise in favour of any borrower but, at the outset of the case, it was stated Nama was not relying on that provision.

It was also conceded on behalf of the liquidators that some borrowers would have their loans individually dealt with by the liquidators.

While refusing the injunctions, Mr Justice Gilligan said the companies had raised a serious issue to be tried concerning their right to be heard regarding the proposed loans sale and to be given reasons for any decision by a public law entity which may have adverse consequences for them.

For the purposes of the injunction application, the court would accept the liquidators’ November 2013 decision to sell these loans as part of the Stone portfolio, was a decision made within the realm of public law that may arguably be subject to a requirement that adequate reasons for that be provided to those most affected by it.

However, given his view that damages would be an adequate remedy if the companies won their main action, they were not entitled to orders preventing the loans sale, the judge ruled. If they won, the factual reality was any damages obtained would be unlikely to exceed their level of debts to IBRC, he observed.

The balance of convenience was also against granting the injunctions due to the plaintiffs’ delay in bringing their case and the fact their loans continue to be considered as performing loans which they may buy out by paying off the remaining indebtedness, should they wish.

The court must also have regard to the public interest when injunctions are sought against the special liquidators, he said. In that context, he had regard to the purposes of the IBRC Act regarding the orderly winding up of IBRC and the need to “preserve and restore” confidence among the wider public in the banking sector.

Mary Carolan

Mary Carolan

Mary Carolan is the Legal Affairs Correspondent of the Irish Times