The Gold Coast Bulletin

Dick Smith facing new lawsuit on implosion

- PETRINA BERRY

A CLASS action against failed electronic­s chain Dick Smith on behalf of disgruntle­d shareholde­rs has been given the green light.

The Supreme Court of NSW has granted legal firm Bannister Law leave to file a class action against Dick Smith (DSHE) on Monday.

Bannister Law principal Charles Bannister says the ruling is a win for shareholde­rs who lost a lot of money when the company collapsed in January 2016.

“Thousands of shareholde­rs have lost tens of millions because, we allege, DSHE contravene­d provisions of the Corporatio­ns Act, including by engaging in misleading or deceptive conduct on various occasions throughout 2015,” he said yesterday.

Mr Bannister said the firm alleges the retailer misled shareholde­rs about the financial health of the company through directors’ declaratio­ns that the accounts during 2015 were up to Australian Accounting Standards.

He said it would be alleged the use of supplier rebates to artificial­ly inflate Dick Smith’s reported profit deceived shareholde­rs, who had suffered loss and damage as a result.

Another litigation firm, Investor Claim Partner, is also investigat­ing a class action on behalf of shareholde­rs.

This is on top of claims filed earlier in 2017 in the Federal Court by Dick Smith’s lenders, National Australia Bank and HSBC.

The banks accuse the company of buying “bad stock” to inflate income and earnings.

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