
Businessman Colm Wu warned failure to comply with court orders can have ‘serious repercussions'
Businessman Colm Wu has been warned by a judge that failure to comply with court orders can have 'very serious repercussions' including the potential for imprisonment or fines.
Mr Wu was present on Wednesday when his case came before Mr Justice Mark Sanfey in the Commercial Court. The businessman's hospitality and property group is in difficulty and Revenue has appointed receivers to some of his assets.
Mr Wu was seeking to have a freezing order restricting him from reducing his assets below a certain value varied to allow for the sale of property at the Village Centre and the River Centre in Ashtown, Dublin 15.
However, the hearing could not go ahead as Mr Wu had not replied to a list of detailed questions in relation to the proposed sales. Costs in the issue were awarded against him.
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John Carroll, of Crowley Millar solicitors, said he had asked Mr Wu to be in court so as to impress on him the importance of complying with the court's directions and court orders.
He said there had been difficulties with the legal team's funding but they had received money from Mr Wu on Tuesday, remained 'on record' for the businessman, and would now be able to work on producing information sought by the plaintiffs.
A key accountant's report on the affairs of Mr Wu's companies was still 'on track' to be produced for the court by June 13th, he said.
Mr Carroll said his side was trying to get information from the relevant department about €3 million Mr Wu was saying his companies were owed for housing people from Ukraine, but had not succeeded to date.
Mr Justice Sanfey said noncompliance involves potential contempt of court and could have 'very serious repercussions' including imprisonment or fines.
He asked Mr Carroll to impress on Mr Wu that he must comply with court orders or else come into court and explain why he was failing to do so. Noncompliance 'will not be tolerated and will eventually come to a head', he said.
Insolvency practitioners Myles Kirby and Padraic O'Malley, liquidators of three Wu-controlled companies, claim Mr Wu engaged in fraudulent and/or reckless trading and transferred assets of the companies to related companies and in some cases to himself. Mr Wu is opposing the claims.
In court on Wednesday, David Whelan SC, instructed by William Fry solicitors, for the liquidators, said they did not believe Mr Wu had a defence and that if the matter went to trial they would be seeking their costs.
In their letter seeking information about the proposed sale of assets at Ashtown, William Fry noted that Mr Wu in February had said he hoped there would be a surplus arising from the proposed sales. However, in a recent affidavit, he had said no surplus was anticipated.
The full hearing is due to go ahead on October 7th. The liquidators have been appointed to Castor Ventures Ltd, Clifton Court Hotel Ltd, and NCR Property Ltd.
The three companies, along with 10 others named in the liquidators' proceedings, are all controlled by Guoqing Wu, otherwise known as Colm Wu, Guo Qing Wu, Colm Guoqing Wu and Wu Guoqing.
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Cork, propelled into that recent round-robin tie on a tide of anticipation, departed less than two hours later nursing the kind of traumas that must have invaded their night time imaginings ever since. With Hayes rampant, Limerick were again a force of invincible self-belief, a reborn team delivering perhaps the magnum opus of John Kiely's star-spangled reign. In full flight and fizzing like a well-fletched arrow across a rectangle of grass, their number six offered a jolting reminder of why he rates among sport's most arresting and magnificent vistas. Watching again the footage of his wonder goal against Tipp in the 2021 Munster final, different elements of his jinking, jaw-dropping solo gallop — a run at once thunderous and balletic — evoke Lamine Yamal, Rudolph Nureyev, Roger Federer, the Road Runner confounding Wile E Coyote, a Lamborghini Aventador and an 18-wheel juggernaut. Tipp's defence appear as helpless as traffic cops trying to stop a runaway buffalo from breaking a red light. The fever of excitement surrounding Hayes that afternoon, his capacity to deliver such irresistible moments, was a key component in Limerick's four-in-a-row champions announcing their separation from the rest of the field. His success in combining demonic intensity with flourishes of artistic beauty in the most recent meeting with Cork — the player exhibiting what one Joe DiMaggio biographer describes as a 'glint of godhood' — strengthens the arguments of those who are happy to declare the 26-year-old the greatest hurler in the country. He is unquestionably the most divisive. If Hayes has one or two rivals for the title of Ireland's most influential hurler — led by his Limerick teammate, the lyrical master conductor Cian Lynch — he is unrivalled as the most contentious. Ahead of tonight's rematch, there will be discussion of a sporting life bejewelled by achievement, a freakish talent who combines an engraver's touch with the kind of physical dimensions that might eclipse the sun. As he swatted the Rebels aside 20 days ago, a rampaging Hayes had Dónal Óg Cusack flicking through the history books in search of a meaningful reference point. 'This Limerick we ever seen a better team than them? What a machine they looked, so well engineered, resilient, strong, every part is working and up for the fight everywhere.' Anthony Daly was just as effusive: 'Hayes is like a gazelle. It's not just his breaking out, it's the tackling, it's the handling at the last second, it's the whole package he gives you there at six.' 'Hayes is the leader of this Limerick team,' was the unequivocal verdict of Ger Loughnane's one-time sideline Sancho Panza, Tony Considine. Many, horrified by the court case that put Hayes on the front pages, look at his story from a different angle, declining to see beyond the self-inflicted wounds of his past. His suspended sentence on two charges of violent disorder inside and outside the Icon nightclub in 2019 — charges he denied at the 2023 trial — sits like an ugly, distinguishing visible-to-the-world birthmark. The evidence heard in court was authentically shocking. Many took issue with John Kiely's courthouse character reference, particularly the suggestion that Hayes 'accepts his part in that very disappointing night' and was 'very sorry'. How could that be, how could he have accepted his part and be sorry, went the counter argument, when he had pleaded not guilty? The feelings of his harshest critics are perhaps evoked in a memorable line from the political writer and former Clinton adviser, Sidney Blumenthal, in discussing Donald Trump's serial refusal to embrace the negative consequences of his actions. 'Trump's psychological equilibrium requires the constant rejection of his responsibility for the abrasive reality he churns up,' wrote Blumenthal. Whether or not Hayes is entangled by his conscience or is armoured against self-examination only he can truly say. What is certain is that he will race onto a Shannonside meadow this evening and the arena will rise to a fever pitch. Some to acclaim a phenomenal player, one they believe has advanced into the territory of competitive excellence accessible only to the all time greats. Others to toss their disgust like a Molotov cocktail onto the wildfire triggered every time Kyle Hayes steps onto one of summer's great stages.