Michael Kidd, a former partner of high-flying businessman Alex van Heeren in ventures including the Huka Lodge, is seeking a $US25 million interim payment in a long-running dispute over the division of assets when their 16-year business partnership ended in 1991.
In an interlocutory hearing in the High Court at Auckland, South Africa-based Kidd is seeking both the interim payment and a summary account which, if granted, would prevent the case having to go on to a full High Court trial.
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• The fight over Huka Lodge
When the partnership ended, Kidd signed an agreement which saw him receive just US$3 million as his share of the assets which are now conservatively valued at US$47.5 million, the court heard. The assets include the upmarket Huka Lodge near Taupo, on which Kidd has put a caveat to prevent a sale, Dolphin Island in Fiji, shares in various companies, offshore bank accounts, and gold bars.
Kidd's lawyer Stephen Mills told the court there was at least an US$18 million shortfall in what his client should have received when the partnership ended. But there is still some uncertainty over the full extent of the assets built up under the partnership because of the complexity of the arrangements for handling the money.