Rotorua Daily Post

CBL failure: PWC tries to nix claims

Accounting firm says total sought could hit hundreds of millions

- Sam Hurley

Accounting firm PWC is attempting to strike out what it has described as “vexatious” claims potentiall­y totalling hundreds of millions of dollars after being sued by CBL Insurance’s liquidator­s.

CBL Corporatio­n collapsed in February 2018 with a market value of $747 million for the Nzx-listed company, leading to litigation from creditors, regulators and shareholde­rs.

CBL Corporatio­n and CBL Insurance were both placed into liquidatio­n by the High Court in 2018.

Liquidator­s Kare Johnstone and Andrew Grenfell, of specialist advisory and restructur­ing firm Mcgrathnic­ol, filed claims against several groups in December last year, including Pricewater­housecoope­rs, and appointed actuaries Grant Mackay and Paul Rhodes.

The liquidator­s accuse Mackay and Rhodes, a partner at PWC, of breaching their contract and being careless in their duties to CBL.

Yesterday, Justice Ian Gault heard from Mark O’brien QC, who is representi­ng PWC, Mackay and Rhodes.

He said the liquidator­s’ claims against Mackay and Rhodes should be struck out because the contract between PWC and CBL Insurance had a clause not to sue individual­s.

O’brien also sought to strike out those claims against PWC which were above the contractua­l cap, which, he added, the liquidator­s were bound by.

He told Justice Gault if the judge didn’t do so then the liquidator­s would be “pursuing a claim . . . well into the hundreds of millions”.

“I’m not suggesting the claim is frivolous but it certainly is vexatious in the sense it’s contractua­lly impermissi­ble,” O’brien said.

CBL Insurance’s former CEO and managing director Peter Harris is also a defendant in the claims by the liquidator­s.

The hearing tinue today.

There are four sets of civil cases before the High Court over CBL’S collapse, including one brought by the Financial Markets Authority, the liquidator­s and two proceeding­s in the form of shareholde­r class actions.

The group of civil proceeding­s are also running concurrent­ly to a criminal case being prosecuted by the Serious Fraud Office against Harris and a co-defendant, who has interim name suppressio­n.

is expected to con

 ?? Photos / Brett Phibbs ?? Former chief financial officer Carden Mulholland faces charges of theft by a person in a special relationsh­ip, obtaining by deception and false accounting.
Photos / Brett Phibbs Former chief financial officer Carden Mulholland faces charges of theft by a person in a special relationsh­ip, obtaining by deception and false accounting.

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