By norlinglaw

Mainzeal was a large construction company in New Zealand. It was a large domino that caused many small dominos to fall in slow succession.

Mainzeal was traded recklessly by its directors. Ultimately, the creditors were owed $110m and are unlikely to receive any distribution of any significance.

The liquidators pursed the directors at the High Court and were successful.

In part.

Ultimately, the recovery is too low to have any real impact on the creditors who have suffered a loss.

Here, Damien Grant of Waterstone Insolvency and Brent Norling of Norling Law discuss the facts, the legal case and the outcome for creditors. The full analysis is conducted here:


You may also like

How to Recover Legal Costs
So how do you recover your legal costs from an opponent? Because lets be fair, no one wants to pay lawyers and when they do, they want to recover as much as possible. In this video we discuss the best strategies to position ...
How Can a Liquidator Recovery Payment of Your Invoice and What Should You Do?
We often get asked under what circumstances can a liquidator recover legitimate payments of a creditors invoice. That is, when a creditor provides goods or services and then gets paid, then the liquidator seeks to claw back the ...
Why Creditors Need A Litigious Liquidator
Liquidating your debtors doesn’t have to result in no recovery. It doesn’t have to be the end. There is a way to get paid. Here we discuss how to get paid out of a liquidation and what you should look for when choosing a ...
Page 15 of 18