EXCLUSIVE by COURT REPORTING STAFF
A judge hearing a bankruptcy petition against self-styled controversial businessman Martin Frost and his wife has given the couple until October 11th to produce evidence they can pay off a £4 million debt, said to be owed to a farm mortgage company, "within a reasonable time".
The two-day 'remote' hearing at Leeds Business and Property Court last week heard detailed submissions from legal counsel representing the Frosts and the petitioners, United Kingdom Agricultural Lending Ltd. (UKALL)
A 'last minute' cross claim from Mr and Mrs Frost seeking £13.3 million from the petitioners and from Emma Porter, administrator of one of Mr Frost's insolvent companies for damage and loss has not been accepted by Scotland's Court of Session, the hearing was told.
Judge Joanna Geddes had before her a thick bundle of documents linked to the case including four separate witness statements from Mr Frost. At the conclusion of proceedings the judge said she would hand down her judgment on October 18th.
Barrister Jonathan Rodger, for UKALL, told the hearing: "There are patterns of evasion in Mr Frost’s behaviour, and the late submission of this cross claim is part of that. Another spanner has been thrown into the works”.
Guy Olliff-Cooper, counsel for the respondents (the Frosts), made a number of submissions in an attempt to have the bankruptcy petition rejected.
On day one Mr Olliff-Cooper claimed the creditor had not made enough of an effort to serve the statutory demand for payment on the Frosts. Several letters addressed to 25 Palace Street, Berwick [registered address for a number of Mr Frost's companies], were returned unopened by company secretary Eirlys Lloyd as the Frosts did not receive mail there and were not resident at that address.
Then, said the lawyer, when the process server visited the couple's home in a Scarborough apartment block with demand documents these were posted through the communal letter box at the front of the building rather than via a side door leading to Mr Frost’s flat. They ended up 'in the bin'.
But in countering that argument, Mr Rodger said it was obvious why the server had gone to the service address of the debtor (25 Palace Street) and to the residential address at Belvedere, Scarborough. The purpose of these visits was to render personal service but that had not proved practicable as the Frosts were not there.
He added: "After the door (in Berwick) was closed in the server's face the letter was posted through the letter box. The demand remained at Palace Street for some considerable time before Ms Lloyd posted it back to the server. This was a schoolboy attempt to evade service".In a further submission Mr Olliffe-Cooper claimed this was a rare case in which the recovery of a debt was not the principal part of UKALL’s purpose. Bankruptcy would not be in the best interest of the creditors, he claimed. UKALL did not want to get back its money solely by pursuing the guarantors of the loan. If that had been the case UKALL would have pursued all of the guarantors of which there were six in total.
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