Irish Independent

Disqualifi­ed director was in control of 3 companies, court is told

- Tim Healy

A FORMER accountant effectivel­y controlled the affairs of three companies which later went into liquidatio­n despite being disqualifi­ed and restricted from acting as a company director, the High Court has heard.

Liquidator Myles Kirby was granted interim orders preventing former accountant Alan Hynes, and his cousin Frank Hynes, from reducing their assets below €2.46m.

It arose out of Mr Kirby’s investigat­ions into the three companies, Hynes Jewellers Wexford (HJW), JW Fashions (JWF) and Tuskar Property Holdings (TPH) whose affairs the liquidator says have been commingled.

Mr Kirby believes he has uncovered a series of improper transactio­ns which amount to frauds on the companies and/or their creditors who are owed €2.4m, the bulk of it in unpaid taxes due from the firms to Revenue.

Mr Kirby believes Alan

Hynes has acted as a shadow and/or de facto director of the three companies during the term of a three-year disqualifi­cation and five-year restrictio­n from directorsh­ips imposed on him by the High Court in October 2013. Those penalties arose out of his involvemen­t in property company Tuskar Asset Management.

The freezing orders were granted on Monday by Ms Justice Niamh Hyland following a one side only represente­d applicatio­n from David Whelan BL, for Mr Kirby. The judge ordered publicatio­n be delayed until 10am on Tuesday to allow for service of the proceeding­s on the respondent­s.

An interim injunction was also granted preventing both Hynes men and a company called Tuskar Investment Group (TIG) from dissipatin­g, transferri­ng, encumberin­g or otherwise dealing with any assets or funds belonging to the three liquidated firms.

Mr Hynes’s family was involved in the jewellery trade in Wexford with the HJW firm. His cousins, brother and sister Frank and Fiona Hynes were, and remain, directors of HJW.

Mr Hynes and his wife Noreen were directors of TPH until 2013, just before Mr Hynes was disqualifi­ed, and they were replaced by Adrian O’Reilly, from Cambridge in England, and James Wallace, who resigned in 2019, leaving Mr O’Reilly as sole director. Mr O’Reilly is also a respondent in the liquidator’s action.

Mr Wallace was a director of JWF which the liquidator says is a shelf company which has not traded. Mr Wallace resigned last December and its current directors are Frank and Fiona Hynes.

Mr Kirby was appointed liquidator of the three companies in January and February last.

In an affidavit Mr Kirby says his investigat­ions have been hampered by a “striking lack of records and accounts and a lack of cooperatio­n” by the Hynes and O’Reilly respondent­s. He believes Mr O’Reilly is acting under the direction of Alan Hynes.

Fiona Hynes and James Wallace have cooperated and he was not seeking any orders against them at this stage.

Mr Kirby says the value of payments made by the TPH company between 2015 and 2020 was just over €1m in circumstan­ces where this company had no discernibl­e trade, turnover or declared tax during this time.

Most of those payments seem to have been made to the benefit of Alan and/or Frank Hynes, he said.

They included: €32,300 for hotels including luxury internatio­nal hotels, €13,400 for restaurant food and drinks, €7,000 to a cruise liner company, €7,600 on flights and just under €90,000 on other expenditur­e including home furnishing­s, club membership­s, clothing, holidays, electronic goods, and grooming.

He believes a contract of employment which Alan Hynes claimed to have with TPH, at a salary of €100,000 a year, is a sham and contrivanc­e designed to benefit Mr Hynes at the expense of creditors, the court heard.

TPH made payments of over €1m despite having no turnover

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Ireland