The directors of failed lender Lombard Finance & Investments should have picked up on and relayed the lender's precarious position to investors in the lead-up to its collapse, the Crown prosecutor says.
A company director's role "is not a delegable duty" and they needed to "determine for themselves what reflected the position of the company," Colin Carruthers told the High Court in Wellington today.
The Crown, which is concluding its case today, contends Lombard Finance directors Doug Graham, Bill Jefferies, Lawrence Bryant and Michael Reeves made untrue statements in a 2007 prospectus, investment statement and advertising material.
"The issue for the Crown is the requirement to make disclosure," Carruthers said. "It's not about the ways in which business was conducted."
The three main areas the directors failed in their duty were in communicating to investors the dwindling cash position of the company, an increasing squeeze on liquidity, and difficulties in enforcing loan repayments in line with forecasts, Carruthers said.