O’Donnells to make last-ditch appeal against vacation order

Hearing against High Court decision will be on Friday morning before Court of Appeal

The Hight Court has ordered solicitor Brian O’Donnell and his wife Mary Patricia to vacate Gorse Hill in Killiney by 5pm on Friday, March 13th.

Solicitor Brian O’Donnell will make a last-ditch effort on Friday morning to seek more time to appeal a High Court order requiring him and his wife to vacate their Gorse Hill home.

At a hearing before the Court of Appeal on Thursday evening, the three-judge court heard an application by Mr O’Donnell for more time to prepare paperwork relating to a trespass order made against him by the courts.

Earlier today, the High Court ordered that the solicitor and his wife vacate the house on Vico Road by 5pm on Friday.

This evening, Mr Justice Sean Ryan told Mr O’Donnell, who was representing himself, that the Court of Appeal would agree to a short hearing at 10am on Friday morning.

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Mr O’Donnell replied: “In the meantime, do we continue to pack up?”

Mr Justice Ryan responded that fairness dictated that both sides – Mr O’Donnell and the receiver, along with Bank of Ireland – should be present for any hearing.

Mr O’Donnell undertook to contact the bank to alert them to the hearing.

Earlier on Thursday, High Court judge Mr Justice Brian McGovern had ordered solicitor Brian O’Donnell and his wife Mary Patricia to vacate Gorse Hill in Killiney by 5pm on Friday, March 13th.

The order was made during a hearing at which Mr Justice McGovern granted a trespass order against the O’Donnells.

“You and you wife have to be out of the property by 5 o’clock tomorrow [Friday]”, the judge told Mr O’ Donnell.

During the High Court hearing Mr Justice McGovern refused Mr O’Donnell’s application for a six-month stay on an order preventing him interfering with receiver’s right to take over the house.

If Mr O’Donnell failed to do so, it will be a matter for Bank of Ireland and the receiver, he said.

The judge said the O’Donnells lived in England and had travelled to Ireland to occupy Gorse Hill in Killiney, Dublin. He was only giving them until tomorrow to remove their belongings.

Mr O’ Donnell, who said he would be appealing the decision in relation to trespass, said a stay until tomorrow “is not very reasonable”.

The judge gave Bank of Ireland an order preventing the couple from interfering with receiver Tom Kavanagh who had previously been granted possession of Gorse Hill, Vico Road, Killiney, Dublin.

The receiver wishes to sell the house, valued at around €7 million, to meet part of a €71.5 million debt owed by the O’Donnells for various unpaid property loans.

Mr Justice McGovern said while the bank and receiver had met the test for an injunction preventing interference, he was not making any determination in relation to the O’Donnells’ latest challenge to a settlement agreement and documents relating to the mortgage and charges on the house.

His order was simply maintaining the status quo, which was that the receiver had a right to possession pending the full hearing of the O’Donnells’ challenge.

“The defendants are prima facie trespassing at Gorse Hill,” he said.

He was also satisfied the couple’s actions were done in an attempt to frustrate the receiver’s lawful efforts to take possession.

The trespass proceedings arose after Mr Justice McGovern rejected an application by the O’Donnell adult children, three of whom had been living in Gorse Hill until recently, for an injunction preventing the receiver from taking over the house.

That hearing was told while the children, Blake, Blaise, Bruce and Alexandra, had left the property on foot of a court order, the father and mother, Brian and Mary Patricia, had moved in claiming they had a right of residence granted to them by the children.

Bank of Ireland sought the trespass order against the parents claiming what they did was a “tactical manoeuvre” to frustrate efforts to take possession of the house.

Cian Ferriter SC, for the bank, said Mr O’ Donnell and his wife flew in over a weekend from what has been their permanent home for the last three years in Surrey, England, to take up occupation of Gorse Hill.

That house was owned by a company called Vico Ltd over which the O’ Donnell couple’s debts were partly secured and receiver Tom Kavanagh was entitled to possession, counsel said.

Mr Kavanagh was entitled to an injunction preventing trespass by the O’Donnells or others and to orders that they deliver up keys and alarm codes for the property, he said.

Mr Kavanagh had been due to take possession, on foot of a Supreme Court order, of the house on March 2nd but the court was told Mr O’Donnell had barricaded himself inside and had received support from an anti-repossession group calling itself the “New Land League”

Mr O’ Donnell claimed the bank was trying to “railroad” him and his wife in what had been a pattern of behaviour by the bank for some time.

He sought an adjournment for further time to prepare his case and to deal with applications by him, including to cross-examine the receiver, but this was refused.

Among his arguments, Mr O’ Donnell said the bank has known about the right of residency enjoyed by him and his wife at Gorse Hill for the last 15 years and particularly in the last three years since this litigation began.

The court heard the bank disputed that right of residency claim.

Mr O’ Donnell also claimed there were defects in the documents issued by the bank were invalid as they were not properly sealed and witnessed, that Bank of Ireland Private Banking which was involved in bringing the case was not a licensed bank and that Vico Ltd, the company which owned the house on behalf of their children, had not previously been involved in the proceedings.

He also claimed the bank had never told them how much of their assets had been realised to meet the debt and that it (Bank of Ireland) was the only financial institution which had “persecuted” them.

The bank said the O’ Donnell case had been fully dealt with in the High Court and Supreme Court and the new case was completely unstateable.

Mr Justice McGovern, after hearing argument from both sides, reserved his decision.

On Thursday, he rejected the O’ Donnell claims that the receiver should not be given possession. He said it was not the O’Donnell’s residence as they lived in Kent and that anyone who remains on the property is interfering with the receiver’s right to possession.

The judge was also critical of the O’Donnells bringing in third parties who made incorrect public statements at a time when court proceedings were ongoing. He did not accept Mr O’Donnell’s claim he had no control over the New Land League and had in fact “invited them in”.

This showed no regard for the rule of law, he said.

Following the ruling, Mr O’Donnell said would be appealing the decision. He asked for a stay on the order that they deliver up possession.

He also said there were now other appeals in train in relation to a refusal of the judge to disqualify himself from hearing the case and other matters.

Mr Ferriter, for the bank, opposed a stay saying it was “yet another tactical appeal to bog down the bank with vexatious litigation”.

On the basis of Thursday’s decision, there was no prospect of the Court of Appeal overturning it, he said.

Mr Justice McGovern said Mr O’Donnell, as a solicitor, should be fully aware of the import of his decision.

He was entitled to appeal but he was only granting a short stay on his order in light of his findings.

Carl O'Brien

Carl O'Brien

Carl O'Brien is Education Editor of The Irish Times. He was previously chief reporter and social affairs correspondent