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High Court of New Zealand Decisions |
Last Updated: 22 April 2014
IN THE HIGH COURT OF NEW ZEALAND HAMILTON REGISTRY
CIV-2014-419-28 [2014] NZHC 220
BETWEEN HEARTLAND SEVEN INVESTMENTS LIMITED
Applicant
AND WAHAROA INDUSTRIAL PARK LIMITED
First Defendant
ICEPAK NEW ZEALAND LIMITED Second Defendant
Hearing: 19 February 2014
Counsel: D P Shore and R D Dhanjee for the Applicant
K E Cornege and A J Iles for the Respondent
Judgment: 19 February 2014
ORAL JUDGMENT OF BROWN J
Solicitors: McCaw Lewis Limited, Hamilton
Tompkins Wake, Hamilton
HEARTLAND SEVEN INVESTMENTS LTD v WAHAROA INDUSTRIAL PARK LTD [2014] NZHC 220 [19
February 2014]
[1] This application for an interim injunction necessitates an urgent decision because the Annual General Meeting of Icepak is to be held on Saturday 22 February
2014. In those circumstances I will today make orders on the application and
I will deliver my written reasons for decision early
next week.
[2] I first record the undertaking by the defendant which is in the
notice of opposition that the defendant undertakes
not to sell, transfer
or mortgage its remaining 200,000 Icepak shares (or negotiate for such
matters) without the consent of
the participants named in the Letter of
Understanding pending resolution of the dispute as to the enforceability of the
Letter of
Understanding or the 15 May 2014 whichever the sooner
occurs.
[3] I make the following orders:
(a) I join Icepak as a defendant. I do that for the purpose of making
the order about registration of transfers;
(b) Pending the trial in this proceeding or 15 May 2014, whichever
first occurs, the Board of Icepak shall refrain from registering
the two
transfers of 100,000 shares from the defendant to GIL and from the defendant to
ISL;
(c) Pending the trial in this proceeding or the 15 May 2014, whichever
first occurs, neither the defendant nor any other person
shall exercise the
votes in connection with the 200,000 shares in Icepak which the defendant has
purported to sell to GIL and ISL;
(d) Pending the trial in this proceeding or 15 May 2014, whichever first occurs, in the event that the defendant has occasion or opportunity to exercise the votes in connection with the remaining 200,000 shares it holds in Icepak in relation to either of the type of transactions referred to in paragraph (b) of the Letter of Understanding, the defendant shall not exercise those votes in opposition to a unanimous voting position taken by the other five participants to the Letter of Understanding.
For the avoidance of doubt a vote on the election of directors is not within
the scope of the restraint in that previous sentence;
(e) Leave is reserved to the plaintiff, defendant or Icepak to apply
further in the event that a question arises as to whether
a transaction comes
within the type of transaction in paragraph (b) of the Letter of Understanding.
That is intended to address
the situation of the limited partnership;
and
(f) Leave is reserved to the plaintiff, the defendant or Icepak to
apply for further directions in the event that there is any
relevant significant
change in circumstances from that reflected in my reasons for
judgment.
[4] Costs will be reserved.
Brown J
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URL: http://www.nzlii.org/nz/cases/NZHC/2014/220.html