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Court of Appeal leaves Hotchin assets frozen


The Court of Appeal has rejected an attempt by former Hanover Finance boss Mark Hotchin to replace the court-ordered freeze on his personal assets with less onerous “formal undertakings”.

Fri, 20 Apr 2012

BUSINESSDESK: The Court of Appeal has rejected an attempt by former Hanover Finance boss Mark Hotchin to replace the court-ordered freeze on his personal assets with less onerous “formal undertakings”.

Financial Markets Authority head Sean Hughes welcomed the decision upholding a High Court rejection last September of Mr Hotchin’s bid to have preservation orders on his assets revoked.

“These orders are important for enabling the FMA to preserve assets for aggrieved investors pending the outcome of the civil proceedings filed by FMA last month,” Mr Hughes said.

High Court judge Helen Winkelman ruled against replacing the preservation orders, saying undertakings “provide a less satisfactory protection for aggrieved persons” without alleviating the difficulty Mr Hotchin said he was having making an income to support his family.

Those assets include a mansion in Auckland’s Paritai Drive, which the Appeal Court heard last month would be completed for a total cost of $43 million.

Counsel for Mr Hotchin noted the Australian courts were willing to accept undertakings even in criminal cases, and that Mr Hotchin had fully co-operated with the legal process to date.

It also emerged in the appeal hearing that Hotchin is willing to allow the FMA a claim on future income and assets, if he could keep a specified portion that would allow him to “provide for his family”.
 

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Court of Appeal leaves Hotchin assets frozen
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