Category: Anthony Joyce & Co

Wanted man Karl Morris of Simple Overseas Properties

Have you seen Karl Morris?

40 clients of Dublin legal firm Anthony Joyce & Co are looking for Karl Morris to recover over €1m of funds, which they claim they paid him for deposits on properties in the Asilah Beach development in Morocco.

Morris has properties in  Ireland and Spain. He was last seen at his villa in Benalmadena near Malaga in Spain.

A private detective hired by investors cannot find him so Anthony Joyce is issuing a public appeal to find him.

If you have any details about the whereabouts of Karl Morris then please contact Anthony Joyce on + 353 (0) 1 4545 000.

Ends

Kensington Royale, Dubai Sports City – Middle East Development LLC

Along with solicitor Anthony Joyce,  I recently met investors from all over Ireland whom have bought property in the Kensington Royale development in the Dubai Sports City development, which is being marketed by MED (Middle Eastern Development LLC).

'Progress' shot from MED's website July 2010 (please click image to zoom)

The investors agreed to form an action group and appoint Anthony Joyce to act on their behalf and Republic to help them with the media and promotion to other investors on line. This is the sixth overseas property group Anthony Joyce are representing.

The action group is now successfully taking shape and we are receiving multiple daily requests from other investors in Kensington Royale who want to get involved. We have been contacted by over 30 investors from numerous countries around the world.

Anthony Joyce has now contacted MED and is seeking answers and exploring the groups options.

If any further investors would like to join the Group then please contact me on simon@republicpr.ie or telephone on +353 1 282 2504. For further details please see http://www.republicpr.ie.

Ends

A MURKY WORLD – the overseas property business

Never has there been a more apt to describe the overseas property industry, especially in Ireland and the UK. Overseas property was the drug of the Celtic Tiger. When the banks started to approve the release of equity to buy second home everyone jumped on the bandwagon to sell property to the Irish.

The problem was that the Government left in unregulated so anyone could sell property investments worth hundreds of thousands of euro. There were no rules, no qualifications, no professional body and no licenses needed. The guy selling you a two hundred thousand euro could’ve got out of prison for fraud the day before or sold nothing more than washing machines in his life.

Even if you were buying one euro share from a stockbroker he would need to regulated by the financial ombudsman and he could tell you that the share price was going to rise and in fact he even had to warn you that it may go down. This was not the case with overseas property. Agents in this sector would say the property would rise 100% in 5 years, that investors would make X amount of money, and that finance and guaranteed rents were available when there was no way of telling if they would when the development was finished and there was no way of enforcing this.

Many properties were mis-sold due to the lies people were told and it is the agents that have run off with their commissions to their apartments in Peurto Banus (they wouldn’t have dreamt of buying in Dubai or Bulgaria), hoping to wash their hands of responsibility and leave the investors to deal with developers. They agents won’t get away with this law can still take their assets, and their will be fraud cases.

I am currently working on six overseas property legal and litigation cases with the Dublin legal firm Anthony Joyce & Co. Recently The Sunday Business Post did a full page on several of these case in the article below. I have included a link so that it can be viewed on The Sunday Business Post’s website.

http://archives.tcm.ie/businesspost/2010/06/06/story49693.asp

A MURKY WORLD - the overseas property business

Sunday, June 06, 2010 - By Ian Kehoe Chief News Correspondent

In his native India, Probir Chatterjee is a little-known figure. Yet, over the coming days, more than 250 Irish people will file into the Carlton Hotel at Dublin Airport to hear the accountant speak.

The reason? Chatterjee’s firm, Smart Investments, is attempting to kick-start a number of stalled property developments in Dubai.

His audience will be made up of Irish investors who put down deposits for three schemes in Dubai’s Sports City complex – Bermuda Views, Eagle Heights and Profile Residence.

Chatterjee is likely to have an attentive audience as he outlines a plan to take over the delayed developments and complete them, giving certainty to the investors at last.

Through an Irish-based selling agent called Larionovo, hundreds of Irish people invested money in apartments and villas in the three developments.

Enticed by glossy brochures and talk of a guaranteed return, many put their life savings into the property projects. Others stepped up to buy multiple properties, paying out hundreds of thousands of euro upfront.

In late 2008, Larionovo collapsed into liquidation. The Dubai developments, which were being spearheaded by a local firm, stalled. Since then, the investors have struggled to get any information about the development or the whereabouts of their funds.

For all concerned, the Dubai investment dream has turned into a nightmare.

‘‘A few years ago, I asked Larionovo about the progress of the development,” said Tony Hynes, a Dublin businessman who invested in one of the schemes.

‘‘I was shown a picture of a six-storey building that was almost complete. A few months ago, I went out there myself.

All I could find was a hole in the ground. I don’t know what building they showed me, but it certainly was not mine.”

Hynes is the chairman of an action group set up last year to investigate the Dubai debacle and try to recover funds from the project. It has discovered a maze of companies, with intricate shareholdings and impenetrable operations.

‘‘Look, I accept there is a risk associated with any investment, but we were given lots of promises that turned out to be lies,” said Hynes. ‘‘We were told it was backed by the Dubai government.

Not true. We were told our money was in a safe account and was not being touched. Not true. It was actually being used to fund the development.”

Hynes has already given up hope of getting his money back from Dubai.

He said the best option was finding a partner like Chatterjee to finish the development.

‘‘I am not getting my money back, so I am trying to get the keys instead,” he said. ‘‘Next week’s meetings are crucial. Hopefully, in two years, it will all be over and I will be in possession of the apartments. Hopefully.”

If a deal with Smart Investments can be agreed, Hynes and his action group could yet salvage something. Others might not be so lucky.

During the years of economic boom, Irish people were among the biggest buyers of foreign property in the world.

The numbers vary, but industry estimates put the number of Irish-owned foreign properties at somewhere between 150,000 and 250,000.

They ranged from condominiums in Chicago to villas in Cape Verde, from Bulgarian flats to penthouses in Poland. Geography was no restriction – properties were purchased in places as diverse as Dubai, Morocco, Hungary, Turkey, India, France, Italy and Portugal.

But as the economic climate has changed, a series of overseas property ventures have come undone. Some developments, like those in Dubai, have failed to materialise. Others have plummeted in value, leaving thousands of investors nursing big losses.

A murky world – that’s how lawyer Tom McGrath described the overseas property business. During the boom years, he provided legal advice for people buying abroad.

Now the market has soured, he is spending much of his time helping clients pick up the pieces.

‘‘People bought into the market, they bought into the flash property shows, the fancy talks, the gushing newspaper articles,” said McGrath, a partner with McGrath O’Donnell & Associates in Dublin. ‘‘But at the bottom of it all, there was simply no regulation.

‘‘People were doing things they would never dream of doing if they were investing in Ireland. I know one person who bought an apartment in Bulgaria from the back of a fruit van.

People ran away with themselves,” he said.

In the case of Kuvera Ireland, around 250 Irish investors bought into the sales pitch. The company took over a hotel in Dublin 4 on September 15, 2007, to launch plans for two luxury developments in India called Mountain View and Orchard View.

Kieran Murphy, the man behind Kuvera Ireland, spent the day meeting potential customers and introducing them to Dr Ajit Jha, the boss of Kuvera India and his partner on the ground.

The show and the figures must have been impressive -Kuvera raised €8.9million for the apartment scheme in Rudrapur, a special economic zone in north India.

Kuvera Ireland brokered the deal and investors were told that contracts for the building work existed between the investors and a construction company called VG Buildtech.

Between them, Mountain View and Orchard View were to comprise 580 apartments. As of last week, the site consisted of a boundary wall with some small preparatory works. Nothing had been built.

‘‘Two weeks into the project, Kuvera knew there was a problem.” said John Plaice, who invested in the scheme and now chairs an action group set up to recover money from Kuvera. ‘‘The problem was very simple. Foreigners could not buy properties there, but they tried to work around it with leaseholds and so on. There were literally problems from day one.”

The fall-out from Kuvera ended up in the High Court in Dublin, where an order was obtained freezing Murphy’s assets.

A settlement was eventually reached between Murphy and the investors, under which he agreed to hand over assets.

Under the settlement, the investors were to take possession of properties at a golf resort in South Africa, five British properties and €143,00 0 from a South African bank account.

Murphy’s shares in Kuvera India and equity in VG Buildtech were also to be ceded.

Almost a year on, the transfers of the various assets are close to completion.

However, the Kuvera case shed startling light on how some property deals were structured.

Under the so-called ‘Kuvera reward programme’, investors were promised flights and holidays at five-star hotels if they convinced others to invest in the company’s Indian developments.

‘‘The deal was a good one if it had worked,” said Plaice. ‘‘But it did not work, and we are still getting to the bottom of what happened, and why it happened.

Money that should have been in an escrow account was used on sales and marketing.

The whole scheme was based on getting more people involved. The market slowed and no new investors were found. The whole thing became exposed. There was a huge element of trust in the investment.

We were badly let down.”

Anthony Joyce, a Dublin solicitor, represented the Kuvera action group and has since spent a lot of his time dealing with disgruntled investors in other property ventures.

‘‘If there is a fraud or a perceived wrongdoing, we can take a legal course of action,” according to Joyce. ‘‘But in lots of cases, I simply can’t help people.

The scheme is legitimate, but individuals can’t afford to make the payments. ‘‘But there is a difference.

At least you get the keys if you keep on paying. But there are a lot of cases where you pay your money and you might end up with nothing.”

Two weeks ago, Joyce was retained by Irish investors concerned about construction delays at the Kensington Royale development in Dubai Sports City.

The five-star, 18-storey development of 252 units is being developed by Middle East Development in the United Arab Emirates, and was originally due to be completed early last year.

Joyce is also acting for investors who put money into a proposed €100million resort in Cape Verde.

Flash Developments, which is headed by Dublin developer Ciaran Maguire, received deposits from more than 200 Irish and British investors for apartments and villas in the planned Palm View Resort.

Following a 16-month delay in the project getting full planning permission, a number of the investors put together an action group to try to recover their money.

Ten days ago, the investors were stunned when KPMG was appointed as liquidator over Flash.

Maguire said that the development was going ahead, stating that all the ‘‘contracts, development lands and credit lines’’ had been transferred to another company called the Ciaran Maguire Group.

Maguire said that Flash Developments was ‘‘simply a sales and marketing company’’, and its liquidation would not have any effect on the development.

KPMG has initiated a full investigation. ‘‘I have absolute sympathy with a lot of investors,” said Joyce.

‘‘They got caught up in genuine investments that went wrong. Many schemes were plausible on paper. They checked out. But they were undone by the market.”

Often, the court is the place of last resort.

In recent days, 39 investors launched proceedings against Simple Overseas Properties, an Irish property firm, in relation to deposits which were taken for properties in developments in Morocco and Spain. That case, and others like it, highlighted a major problem, according to experts – a stark lack of regulation.

‘‘Some of it is real Wild West stuff,” said Paul McCann, head of specialist advisory services with accountancy firm Grant Thornton.

‘‘There is an assumption that Irish overseas property firms are regulated. Even travel agents are bonded. But it is not the case.

‘‘I think it is now incumbent on the government to introduce regulation, or force companies to be bonded.

Alternatively, the various representative bodies need to start enforcing strict guidelines.

Deposits should not be allowed to be used by developers as cash flow.”

The government is understood to be looking at the system, in an effort to introduce some new checks and balances.

But for people like John Plaice, Tony Hynes and the thousands who have seen their investments evaporate, it could well be too late.

Ends

Calling investors in Kensington Royale in Dubai Sports City.

Dublin legal firm Anthony Joyce & Co have contacted by a group of investors in Kensington Royal, in Sports City, part of Dubailand in Dubai. The developers are MED (Middle Eastern Developments)  has recently written to the purchasers looking for money despite the fact that the developer has not complied with the contract. The group hope to gather more members in order to increase their bargaining power and obtain answers their numerous concerns. If you are a concerned investor in Kensington Royale, please contact Simon Palmer of Republic PR at simon@republicpr.ie for further details.

Ends

Getting a case admitted to Dublin’s Commercial Court can mean a much quicker legal process

Guest post by solicitor Anthony Joyce of Dublin legal firm Anthony Joyce & Co.

Question: I have heard that having a case admitted to the Commercial Court can be a much faster method of obtaining a resolution – is this true? And what are the conditions that must be met to have a case admitted?

Answer: Yes it is true, if you are currently involved in a commercial dispute, having your case admitted to the Commercial Court (also known as the High Court Commercial List) can allow you to resolve a dispute more quickly and effectively than through the normal High Court procedures. The Commercial Court is effectively a fast track of the High Court reserved for commercial cases.

Cases which are admitted to the Commercial Court start and finish in a short time frame, on average, within twenty one weeks of the transfer of proceedings.

An application to have a case admitted to the Commercial Court can be made at any time, but the rules of the Court provide for a stay to be put on proceedings for a period of 28 days to allow mediation, conciliation or arbitration to take place.

In order to gain entry to the Commercial Court the dispute must fall into one of the following categories:

1. Current financial disputes where the claim, or counterclaim, is not less than €1,000,000 can be admitted to the Commercial Court. However, there has been some speculation that the minimum entry level of may be increased to €2,500,000.
2. Any application or proceedings under the Arbitration Acts where the value of any claim or counterclaim is not less than €1,000,000.
3. Any legal dispute relating to a patents, a trade mark, copyright, industrial design or a case relating to ‘passing off’, for example where a competitor has tried to ‘pass off’ your product as their own.
4. Any appeal or application for a judicial review of a previous decision or determination that judge considers it suitable for admission to the Commercial Court.

There is also a catch all condition that can allow any case to heard where the Judge considers it appropriate for entry into the Commercial Court. But, whilst it does have a broad discretion to admit cases, it must be remembered that it is at the discretion of the High Court and even if your case falls into one of the above categories this does not automatically entitle you to entry.

Once your case has been admitted the it runs quickly because of the rules which provide for what is termed ‘detailed case management’, this ensures a strict timetable for any cases has to be met by all parties involved and they are fined if these deadlines are not met – this is why the Commercial Court moves so much faster than the High Court

The Commercial Court in Dublin has been a great success. It has garnered an international reputation as a Court that is simple to access and where disputes can be settled in a swift and cost effective manner compared to Courts abroad.

The success of the Commercial Court has promoted Ireland as a country where any commercial disputes arising can be resolved quickly and effectively. An efficient legal system and settling of disputes in this manner is vitally important in order to be able to attract international business. The Commercial Court is something that Ireland should be very proud off.

by Anthony Joyce, Principal, Anthony Joyce & Co, Dublin – www.anthonyjoyce.ie

Ends

DNA test proves Eritrean girl Martina Padwick is Irish

The Dublin solicitor Anthony Joyce (disclosure: he is a client) has been working on  an incredible case recently, the results of which are featured on the front page of today’s Sunday Times  (link and article below).  Martina Padwick is a six year old Eritrean girl whose Mother Martha has been trying to get her right to an Irish passport recognised by the Department of Foreign Affairs because her father is the late Martin Padwick who was a soldier serving with the Irish Amy in Eritrea.

DNA tests have now confirmed that Martina is Martin’s daughter and she can now rightly claim her Irish passport. This case has huge ramifications for the Irish Government and the Army – who knows how many other Irish children are elsewhere in the developing countries.

Anthony Joyce, Principal solicitor of Dublin based law firm Anthony Joyce & Co, who acted on behalf of Martina on a pro-bono basis and today issued this statement, says:

Today’s Sunday Times featured a front page story on Martina Padwick the Eritrean girl who is the daughter of the late Martin Padwick, a former Irish soldier with the Irish UN peace keeping force in Eritrea. After a long battle for an Irish passport and citizenship of the Republic of Ireland, and following protracted negotiations with the Departmemt of Foreign Affairs, we are pleased to announce the Department of Foreign Affairs have now accepted that Martina is the daughter of the late Martin Padwick entitling her to an Irish passport.

For all of her life Martina has been living in poverty in Eritrea and her mother Martha has suffered discrimination for being the mother of a foreign child. Their situation was so desperate that Martina was close to having to give her daughter to a local orphanage to ensure her wellbeing. Following the conclusive proof that she is now an Irish citizen she will be entitled to an Irish passport. Martina is now able to come to Ireland where she can be educated, have proper healthcare and other benefits of being an Irish Citizen.

Anthony will be commenting on these issues in more detail shortly.

Here is a link to the story and it is also pasted in below.

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/ireland/article6991201.ece

DNA TEST PROVES ERITREAN GIRL IS IRISH

A six-year-old African girl is to be given an Irish passport following DNA tests that prove she is the daughter of an Irish soldier who died before she was born.

The Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) had refused to accept that Martina Padwick was the daughter of Martin Padwick, a soldier from Cork who died in December 2002 shortly after returning from a United Nations (UN) peacekeeping mission in Asmara, the Eritrean capital.

The Irish government may now be required to offer her protection and make provision for her education, as all Irish children are legally entitled to free primary schooling.

The existence of the child, born in June 2003, has been known to the DFA since 2004, but officials refused to issue a passport on the basis that Martha Woldu Hagos, her mother, needed to “establish by formal means” the father’s identity. She met Padwick while working in the kitchen at the UN compound in Asmara.

The DFA agreed to carry out a DNA test last October after The Sunday Times highlighted the case.

Hagos said: “The DFA wrote to me last week to say the DNA test had proved that Martin was Martina’s father. I don’t know what to say, I am so happy. Actually I am the happiest woman in the whole of Eritrea right now.”

Anthony Joyce, a Dublin-based solicitor who represents Hagos and her daughter, claimed they had suffered while waiting for the government to recognise Martina as an Irish citizen. “Martha suffered discrimination in her community as a result of having a white child. She was living in poverty, and at one stage she considered putting Martina into an orphanage where she could be guaranteed food and shelter,” said Joyce.

“Martina’s case should send a warning to the DFA. In certain circumstances the government is obliged to have ‘due regard for the natural and imprescriptible rights of the child’ under the constitution. This case highlights the need for the state to prioritise applications for Irish passports from minors living abroad.”

Brian O’Shea, the Labour party spokesman on military affairs who raised Martina’s plight in the Dail, criticised the DFA’s handling of the case. “No Irish citizen should ever be treated in such a manner,” he said.

“This child was forced to live in what can be best described as adverse conditions in Eritrea for years, although she was an Irish citizen. The state had a responsibility to Martina, but didn’t fulfil its obligations to this girl. Any proposal by this child and her mother to come to Ireland should be treated as sympathetically as possible.”

Billy Timmins, the Fine Gael spokesman on foreign affairs, called on Micheál Martin, the foreign affairs minister, to introduce new procedures to ensure similar cases were dealt with more compassion.

John Weakliam, country director for Vita in Eritrea, an Irish charity that helped Hagos, believes there may be other children living in Asmara who were fathered by Irish peacekeepers. “God knows how many soldiers fathered children who still await their birth rights,” he said.

“There is a popular perception in Ireland that African women are queuing up to conceive and become a burden on our state. On the contrary, these mothers and their children suffer discrimination at home.”

Neil Nolan, a spokesman for the defence forces, said the military was aware of the case, but was unable to intervene. The DFA refused to comment.

Ends

Dubai: Empty Eastern Promises

I’ve been doing a lot of legal PR in the past year both in support of the Dublin solicitors Anthony Joyce & Co and also representing two separate groups of investors have legal actions to recover funds that they paid for overseas property.

The most high profile of these relates to the Dubai Acton Group who bought property through Irish company Larionovo and their parent Profile Group. The estimate that they have €20m tied up in the projects in Dubai, including the Sports City development and also the Island of Ireland in The World project.

The Group are just ordinary people who got duped into buy investments in a sector that was left unregulated by the Irish government, so these people were lied to and taken advantage of. As they are not experienced with the media and understandable quite daunted by the high profile they have been recieving, I have been acting as spokesperson for them in the newspapers and on the radio. I have also had them one RTE’s evening news programmes.

Below is story that appeared the UK paper The Independent, in which I feature today. Here is the link and the full article has also been pasted in below. Thanks must go to freelance journalist Laura Latham for her help in putting this extensive article together. http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/house-and-home/property/dubai-empty-eastern-promises-1841754.html

The Independent (UK)

DUBAI: EMPTY EASTERN PROMISES

It was meant to be the hottest investment on the planet, but the Dubai downturn has left buyers believing the boom was merely a mirage, as off-plan properties stand unfinished and investors count the cost. Laura Latham reports

Wednesday, 16 December 2009

There is a definite hint of schadenfreude about Dubai’s financial turmoil. All those investors buying into a glittering desert city, that crumbled to dust – more fool them many will think. Where else in the world would you see plans for an air-conditioned beach or a glut of six and seven star hotels? However, the situation is no joke for investors who aimed to make a small fortune selling off-plan properties or those who simply wanted to live or retire in the sun. Property prices have fallen 50 per cent from their peak, leaving the developments they bought into left unfinished, and the companies they trusted their life savings with nowhere to be seen.

Last month’s announcement by Dubai’s main property and investment company, Dubai World, that it couldn’t make payments on $25bn (£15bn ) of debt sent financial markets reeling across the globe. And while this week’s bail out by Abu Dhabi’s government to the tune of $10bn was welcomed, the situation is still uncertain. The downturn was a culmination of a problem that has been brewing for some time. Over the past year, the Dubai property bubble has burst, plunging thousands of investors into financial ruin.

“I did my homework and made a rational decision to invest in Dubai for the long term. I wasn’t a speculator,” says Rob Thomas from London. “The government regulatory system looked watertight, but now that everything has gone wrong no one’s interested.”

In 2007, Thomas paid a £30,000 deposit on a apartment in Bermuda Views, a luxury development in Dubai Sports City. The project was due for completion by early 2009 but, two years on, work has barely begun. “I discovered that the project had been stopped and the sales office closed,” says Thomas. “I have a contract stating I’m owed a refund if the builders default but, despite chasing it through Dubai’s real-estate regulator, I’ve got nowhere.”

Like many investors, Thomas trusted claims that development was regulated by the Dubai government. He believes this gave credibility to the boom and made buyers feel secure enough to invest. “I can’t bear the thought of losing my money. All I can do is chase repayment, or hope the developer finds a way of completing the project.”

Thomas wants to join one of several action groups that have been formed by investors to fight their cases in court. They hope that pressure of numbers may force Dubai’s government to admit who is to blame for the mass abandonment of building projects and where the money has gone.

In addition, there’s the issue of escrow accounts, which were supposed to have protected buyers’ funds until properties were completed. In many cases, the money seems to have vanished along with the developers, and buyers are being stonewalled when applying to the authorities for details.

“Developers are refusing to return the money,” says Jeff Kershaw, a retired lawyer who has taken up the case for investors who bought into properties being built by one Dubai property company. “One could say some developers are guilty of fraud. People have lost on average £60,000, and, in some cases the development hasn’t been started, despite being scheduled for completion this year.”

The lack of transparency has been used by some companies to their benefit, according to Simon Palmer, spokesperson for the Dublin-based Dubai Action Group, set up by Irish investors. The group is looking to recover funds paid to sales agents, which also bought into the The World, who they claim mis-sold properties before going into liquidation.

“Several developments have not been completed, and some investors have lost as much as €600,000 [£543,000]” says Palmer. “The agents say we need to take the case up with the developers, but we believe the agents are also responsible, and some agents were shareholders in development companies. The problem is that construction was sub-contracted to different firms, so it’s difficult to get answers.”

Palmer points out that investors were often advised to put money into Dubai by financial advisers and banks, and that these companies are now also suffering huge losses. “If even the banks got sucked in, what chance did ordinary investors have?”

The strength of the group’s claim means that the Irish government is backing it and is hoping to secure a change in the law that prevents a class action being brought in the Dubai courts. However, Palmer is one of a number of people and investors who claim that Dubai’s government the Dubai government’s backing of development means there could be a conflict of interest.

“I think the Dubai government got in over its head,” says Tony Hines, Dublin a businessman who lost over £175,000 on un-built apartments he was planning to use as a home and business premises. “They made up the rules as they went along and it got out of control. This is a disaster.”

His sentiments are echoed by Alan O’Neill and his wife Karen, who used their savings to invest in four properties. They lost over £350,000, with three properties unfinished and one delivered two years ago but without title deeds, which means the couple can’t legally take possession. O’Neill says he has lost everything; the worry keeps him awake at night.

“I thought it was a fantastic opportunity and told it was all backed by the government, that the escrow system meant my money was safe,” he says. “Now no one can say where my money has gone. I’m pinning my hopes on joint legal action, the Dubai government needs to stand up and be accountable.”

Ends

Kuvera Action Group meeting tonight City West

This is a reminder to all the members of the Kuvera Action Group that there is a full meeting of the Group tonight, 15th December at the City West Hotel, Saggart, Dublin. The various strands of the case are at an important point and, therefore, as many people as possible are requested to attend tonight’s meeting, which will start at 7.30pm.

This will include a full feedback following the trip to India last week, which was very successful as a lot of information came to light that needs to be given to the Group.

The Group will also have some new Court action that they need to be aware of.

Full minutes will be submitted for anyone who can’t make the meeting.  Please let me know if anyone has any questions on 0851 341 761.

Ends

Kuvera Action Group – full meeting this week

This is an announcement for members of the Kuvera Action Group: there is a full meeting of the Group this week at the City West Hotel, Saggart Dublin, 7.30pmon Thursday 10th December.

Two members of the Committee were in India last week so you will receive a full update on the trip as well as progress on other elements of the case from dublin solictor Anthony Joyce.

Kuvera Action Group

The Group was formed by Irish residents who purchased properties in an residential investment in the Indian town of Rudrapur, through Irish overseas property company Kuvera.

Ends

Simple Overseas Properties Asilah Beach Morocco

Dublin legal company Anthony Joyce & Co has been appointed by buyers who bought property in the Asila Beach Morocco in the Asilah Marina Golf resort through Irish overseas property company Simple Overseas Properties.

Dublin solicitor Anthony Joyce is asking anyone who is concerned about their purchases to contact him on 01 4545 000 or go to http://www.anthonyjoyce.ie

Ends

WordPress Themes | © Republic PR freelance public relations consultancy Dublin 2012 |