Moran challenge to IBRC receiver fails

A NUMBER of companies of hotelier Johnny Moran have failed in their bid to ask the High Court to decide whether their property…

A NUMBER of companies of hotelier Johnny Moran have failed in their bid to ask the High Court to decide whether their property and equality rights were breached when the former Anglo Irish Bank appointed a receiver over hotels and restaurants they operated.

The companies owned and managed the Holiday Inn in Pearse Street, Dublin, two restaurants in Dublin including Tante Zoe’s in Temple Bar, and the Blarney Inn in Kildare Street, Dublin, with its associated nightclub Club Nassau.

A receiver was appointed last year to Citywide Leisure Ltd, Blarney Inn Ltd, BCGM Ltd, and JRM Hotels Ltd after Anglo, now the Irish Bank Resolution Corporation (IBRC), called in loans which the companies could not pay.

Mr Moran is a director and shareholder of the companies.

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The companies, and a fifth linked company, Aspere Property Investments Ltd, brought a High Court challenge to the appointment of the receiver, claiming it was in breach of contract and their statement of claim was lodged in November last year.

IBRC fully defended the claim.

Subsequently, the companies asked the court to amend their statement of claim. Some of the amendments were not contested by the bank.

However, the companies were not permitted to amend the claim to allege their constitutional property rights had been breached because similar borrowers to them had had their loans with IBRC taken over by Nama, whereas theirs had not been taken over and remain on the books of IBRC.

Yesterday, Mr Justice Brian McGovern ruled that the companies could not make an amendment to their statement of claim on these matters.