Corporate News
By BRIAN WASUNA
In Summary
National Bank of Kenya
has been given the greenlight to auction the Sh1.2 billion Milele Beach
Hotel in Mombasa to recover a Sh727 million loan balance from the
Presbyterian Church that owns the luxury resort.
High Court Judge Anne Omollo has dismissed an application by
a firm owned by the men’s fellowship within the church — Presbeta
Investment Limited — intended to stop the auction.
Presbeta is owned by the Presbyterian Men Fellowship Association and is a vehicle for investing in real estate projects.
Presbeta had agreed to buy the hotel from its parent, the Presbyterian Foundation, for Sh1.2 billion in December last year.
Presbeta had agreed to buy the hotel from its parent, the Presbyterian Foundation, for Sh1.2 billion in December last year.
The deal was to see Presbeta take over the loan
owed by the Presbyterian Foundation to National Bank. Presbeta was to
pay a Sh150 million deposit and then take over the loan and occupy
Milele Beach Hotel.
NBK put the hotel up for sale when Presbeta failed
to pay the deposit. Presbeta now says a dispute between it, the
Presbyterian Foundation and National Bank
is set to be determined by an arbitrator hence allowing the auction to
proceed would interfere with its planned purchase of the hotel.
The bank says it was not a party to the sale
agreement between Presbeta and the Presbyterian Foundation hence it will
not take part in the arbitration proceedings.
Recover outstanding loan balance
This, the lender says, makes it unfair to stop the auction as it has to recover the outstanding loan balance of Sh727 million.
Justice Omollo ruled that it is not yet clear
whether NBK will be a party to arbitration proceedings between
Presbyterian Foundation and Presbeta Investment hence there are no
grounds to stop the lender from recovering its dues.
“At this stage it is not appropriate for this court
to make a finding whether National Bank will be a party to the intended
arbitration proceedings or not.
In my view, that is an issue that the arbitrator
will have to determine once the arbitration proceedings are commenced as
per the purchase agreement.” “I am not convinced that the plaintiffs
have established special circumstances that favour the Presbyterian
Foundation to warrant the granting of the orders sought. In the result, I
find no merit in the application and proceed to dismiss it with (legal)
costs to National Bank,” Justice Omollo ruled.
Presbeta had sued NBK and the Presbyterian Foundation in a bid to block the planned auction.
Presbeta had sued NBK and the Presbyterian Foundation in a bid to block the planned auction.
The Presbyterian Foundation borrowed Sh811 million
from NBK in 2007 to finance the acquisition of Milele Beach but has
since repaid only Sh84 million.
The church and NBK have been tussling over auctioning the hotel since 2014.
The Presbyterian Foundation, in its response, said
Presbeta owes it Sh120 million in penalties for failing to complete the
acquisition of the resort. The penalty was provided for in the sale
agreement between Presbeta and the Presbyterian Foundation.
“Presbeta has fundamentally breached the purchase
agreement as no consideration has been paid. Further, Presbeta has no
authority to bring this suit as the failure to pay the Sh150 million
deposit effectively rescinded the contract,” the church added.
Presbeta has faulted its parent church for not revealing
that there were caveats on the land housing the beach hotel, which means
it can’t be charged as security for funding.
bwasuna@ke.nationmedia.com
bwasuna@ke.nationmedia.com
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