It’s Business as “Normal” at the Grand ….

Depends of course on what you call normal! And one can only feel sorry for those public officials, the Insolvency Practitioners, charged with making sense of the complex web of businesses trading rent-free at the Grand. They have to wade through a series of liquidations dating back to the early 1990s, Michael Stainer’s Individual Voluntary Arrangement (IVA) of 1995, his current personal bankruptcy, the current ongoing liquidations and now Council bailiffs have turned up at the Grand’s doors! Lets just hope the bailiffs have not allowed him to pay in instalments, as they have no fiduciary powers to allow that. Only the Council can authorise that.

Various reliable sources have confirmed that unpaid business rates led to this unexpected visit last Friday – 25th January  2019 – which itself could only come about following the formal issue of a liability notice at a local magistrates court.

There is another worrying element about this. According to the January 2019 Business Rates Information register, available here the entity responsible for paying these business rates is The Grand Folkestone Partnership Ltd according to Folkestone & Hythe District Council Website.

This company went into liquidation on September 17th 2018:

During the process of this liquidation, Mr Stainer admitted that there was some £10,000 owing in unpaid Council tax (We blogged about Stainer’s unpaid Council Tax back in April 2016, so nearly three years ago.) So how come the Council didn’t immediately revert to the company that owned the Grand, namely Hallam Estates Ltd?

The Business Rates register throws up another worrying anomaly — seven suites which were being used as holiday lets. These were in fact, privately owned by one or other of the Stainers — we say were, because they now belong to the Trustee in Bankruptcy, Adrian Dante of MacIntyre Hudson, more commonly known as the Insolvency Practitioner. Here too, the entity responsible for paying is/was the Grand Folkestone Partnership Ltd. But from September 17th 2018, right up to the publication of this register earlier this month, the Council seemed to have ignored the insolvency, and instead of pursuing the flat’s owners while they were still solvent, sat on their hands, did nothing and left the Council budget with a huge hole. To make matters worse, throughout this period, these flats were rented out for between £140 and £200 per night? So where’s the money gone? Will we ever get it back? Anything to say Mr Stainer?

In the meantime, the Insolvency Practitioners play hide and seek with Mr Stainer, who should be cooperating in every way with their efforts to identify, value and realise the assets for the benefit of all creditors. Mr Stainer “has a statutory duty to give to the official receiver such information as he/she may reasonably require concerning the company and its promotion, formation, business, dealings, affairs or property and to attend any meetings as the official receiver may reasonably require.” If he doesn’t, beware: “A failure to co-operate by a company officer, constitutes a criminal offence for which he/she may be prosecuted”.

So what assets do the Stainers have in the UK? 18 flats in the Grand for starters, plus ultimately, their own flat.

But the rental income from the holiday flats keeps the whole trading edifice of the Grand afloat, according to Mr Stainer’s own solicitor, Andrew Duncan of Allsquare Law. As it seems highly unlikely that MacIntyre Hudson see themselves as running a holiday let business, and anyhow, the leases prohibit this, the future looks bleak. And guess who will suffer? The undeserving staff of the Grand while their bosses and manager will probably walk away, if not laughing, smiling.

Just for the record, there is one director responsible for all currently solvent businesses, including Hallam Estates Ltd. He is Mr Robert Graham Moss and he is a very brave man who has to prise Michael Stainer’s hands of the tiller. Henry Bolton OBE, a man of undoubted and proven bravery in known war zones, lasted less than a week – good luck Mr Moss.

The Shepwayvox Team

Dissent is NOT a Crime

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Our sole motive is to inform the residents of Shepway - and beyond -as to that which is done in their name. email: shepwayvox@riseup.net

3 Comments on It’s Business as “Normal” at the Grand ….

  1. According to the Government website “Business rates are charged on most non-domestic properties, like……….holiday rental homes or guest houses”. In the Grand, Mrs Stainer used to own some 12-14 flats let out via the Grand’s website 365 days a year. Holiday lets attract VAT at 20%. Let’s hope those pesky VAT returns are up to date…………….. no problem — hubby’s an accountant……

    Would an FOI request produce an answer to the question ‘what is the gross loss to the Council due to the insolvency of the Stainers?’ Mind you, the bankruptcy service would know.

  2. Well it is really worse on the Council Tax front. Apart from the fact that The Grand is called an Hotel but where are the other apartments with leases created in a panic just before the first FTT hearing. More Council incompetence, since they after all granted planning permission and allowed bathrooms to be created which exhaust into an interior space. Some of these have existed since the noughties so how about the back tax on these. I believe several residents had alerted the Shepway Tax Office about this but as usual they did not wish to know.

  3. The man in the white coat // February 2, 2019 at 15:41 // Reply

    There is no ‘normal’ at the Grand — just a bunch of narcissistic sociopaths who think they’re in charge, living in a world of denial and fantasy, jet-setting to posh events in London, filing meaningless appeals……………..

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