In this case, the plaintiffs were liquidators of Condrens Parking Limited (CPL), which was a company engaged in the supply of parking services in Wellington and Auckland. Four of the defendants were at various times the directors of CPL. The fifth defendant was a company (Parking New Zealand Limited) of which Mr O'Sullivan (one of the directors) was at all material times the sole director and shareholder. CPL went into receivership and subsequent liquidation at the request of its largest creditor and CPL’s liquidators claimed that the directors have breached their duties on the basic legal proposition that where a company is, or is near to being, insolvent, the duties that the directors owe to that company require them to consider the interests of the company’s creditors. Two aspects of the case have been brought to the Court by the plaintiffs.
In this case, the plaintiffs were liquidators of Condrens Parking Limited (CPL), which was a company engaged in the supply of parking services in Wellington and Auckland. Four of the defendants were at various times the directors of CPL. The fifth defendant was a company (Parking New Zealand Limited) of which Mr O'Sullivan (one of the directors) was at all material times the sole director and shareholder. CPL went into receivership and subsequent liquidation at the request of its largest creditor and CPL’s liquidators claimed that the directors have breached their duties on the basic legal proposition that where a company is, or is near to being, insolvent, the duties that the directors owe to that company require them to consider the interests of the company’s creditors. Two aspects of the case have been brought to the Court by the plaintiffs.