McCaughey entitled to full hearing over Anglo loans

Businessman contends he is not yet liable to repay loan for investment fund

Century Homes founder Gerard McCaughey is entitled to a full hearing of his claim he is not yet liable to repay a loan advanced to him by Anglo Irish Bank for an investment fund related to two New York hotels, the Supreme Court has ruled.

Mr McCaughey had advanced no arguable defence to the claim by Irish Bank Resolution Corporation (IBRC), formerly Anglo, he is liable for loans advanced in connection with the Woolgate Exchange Geared Property Fund, the three-judge court held. The court delivered its reserved judgment yesterday on Mr McCaughey's appeal against a High Court decision IBRC was entitled to summary judgment concerning the Woolgate and Peninsula Real Estate ILP Fund. The issue of what orders should be made was adjourned to later.

Defence

Mr McCaughey had claimed he had a defence on grounds including, at the time the loans were advanced, he had a collateral agreement with Anglo the loans would not have to be repaid until the relevant investment projects came to an end.

Giving the Supreme Court judgment, Mr Justice Frank Clarke agreed with the High Court the Woolgate fund had come to an end and there was no defence concerning that fund which, the judge noted, had performed "disastrously".

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He disagreed there was no arguable case whether the New York fund had come to an end and ruled Mr McCaughey was entitled to a plenary hearing on that ground. When Mr Justice Peter Kelly ruled otherwise, he did not have before him updated information concerning the New York investment that was put before the Supreme Court, Mr Justice Clarke noted.

Additional affidavit evidence put before the Supreme Court indicated a possibility of a return on the New York investment, he said. In those circumstances, it seemed Mr McCaughey had an arguable case Anglo was not yet entitled to call in the loan, he held.

The judge rejected further arguments by Mr McCaughey he had an arguable defence on grounds of alleged mis-selling of the relevant loans and investment projects underlying them. The High and Supreme Courts had previously rejected claims by Mr McCaughey allegeing misselling of the New York hotels fund, the judge noted.

At the Commercial Court in January 2013, Mr Justice Peter Kelly ruled Mr McCaughey was liable to IBRC for about €5.2 million of a €7.7 million sum sought against him over various loans and facilities, including the Woolgate and New York funds. Mr McCaughey had an arguable defence to the bank’s claim for the remaining sum of about €2.5 million and he was entitled to a plenary hearing concerning that amount, the judge found.

Summary judgment

After that ruling was given, lawyers for Mr McCaughey indicated he would appeal it. The sides also came to an agreement under which Mr McCaughey consented to summary judgment for about €2.5 million and over how remaining sums would be treated. The case related to five loan facilities advanced between 2006 and 2007 to Mr McCaughey, who now lives in Manhattan Beach,

California

, and whose Century Homes company was taken over by

Kingspan

.

Mary Carolan

Mary Carolan

Mary Carolan is the Legal Affairs Correspondent of the Irish Times