Reid bankrupt for a second time
BY MARTIN VAN BEYNEN
Relevant offers
A prominent Christchurch businessman who was bankrupted after the sharemarket crash of the late 1980s is bankrupt again.
Donald John Stewart Reid, in his early 70s, was declared bankrupt in the High Court in Christchurch yesterday, on a petition by the NZ Guardian Trust over a debt of more than $5 million.
He was previously bankrupted in 1990 with $40m of debts against his name.
Reid has recently been associated with the five-star Huntley House accommodation complex in Yaldhurst Rd which was owned by Reid's company Huntley House Management Ltd.
ASB bank appointed receivers to the company in November 2008 after the company defaulted on a $5m loan.
The complex was sold last year to Matangi Properties Ltd which is directed by Terence Pratley and Amanda Hudson, of Hamilton.
Another of Reid's companies, Bob's Cove, was placed in receivership in June last year with more than $15m of debt, mainly to Strategic Nominees Ltd and NZ Guardian Trust Ltd.
A previous director of the company was Robert Daniel McEwan who was bankrupted in February last year.
The company, which was developing a 94-lot subdivision on the shores of Lake Wakatipu, near Queenstown, has 33 investors. Reid held the majority shareholding.
Reid has an extensive background in property development both in Canterbury and Central Otago.
His old money connections stem from his grandfather, who was the major shareholder in successful Otago stock and station firm Reid Farmers.
Reid's first property developments were around Queenstown in the mid-60s and mostly successful but his career has been a chequered one.
He was a director during the early 70s of high-profile Christchurch property investment company Pacific Syndicates but resigned shortly before its highly public collapse in 1977.
Another of his property development companies, Reid Developments Ltd, was wound up in 1980 owing $1.1m.
His previous bankruptcy was caused mainly by the failure in 1989 of two grandiose development projects he promoted and directed.
A resort project complete with an international hotel and 18-hole golf course on part of the former Walter Peak Station on Lake Wakatipu was the first of the two to collapse, owing $27m to the Bank of New Zealand and nearly $700,000 to unsecured creditors.
That collapse was followed soon afterwards by another at Castle Hill where a further village resort, for which Reid had proposed an airstrip, an international-class 18-hole golf course, and a monorail, ran aground owing about $8m.
In 1991 a project involving condominiums at Te Mahia in Kenepuru Sound, Marlborough, ended in liquidation owing $500,000.
Over the last decade Reid has been involved in property developments in the Gibbston Valley, near Queenstown and in Hanmer.
Reid could not be contacted yesterday.
- © Fairfax NZ News
Sponsored links
NZ sharemarket: Mixed earnings season expected
Adaptability key to retailers' success
Best farmland 'already sold off'
Higher house price concern as buyer confidence slips
Hundreds of Hanover investors may be in line for tax write-offs
Give waste the sack is The Formary's mantra
Move 'yet to be made' on digital radio network plan
Crafar Farms: Judge ponders 'significant benefit'
Making your education investment pay
Salary stress increases in New Zealand
Kiwis land big Aussie contract
Roll on 2050 - New Zealand economy to rise
Hundreds of unfit teachers in class
Kiwi jailed in Australia wins appeal
Search scaled down for Huntly boy
Volunteers fight fires in a truck that won't stop
NZ sharemarket: Mixed earnings season expected
Herbert baffled as yellow cards fly for Phoenix
Last-gasp goals cost Kiwis huge upset in US
Piri Weepu stakes his claim for No 10
Kiwis land big Aussie contract
Ryan Nelsen debuts in Tottenham win
England fight back to edge Italy in Six Nations
Do you think a milk price war will erupt?
Related story: Another shot fired in milk price battle



