Kingsley Napley Sues Southend FC
Owner For Unpaid Fees
By Ashish Sareen
March 8, 2023, 3:41 PM GMT
Kingsley Napley LLP has filed a legal claim against the owner of Southend United Football Club, saying he owes almost £200,000 ($237,000) in unpaid legal fees
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Law360, London (March 8, 2023, 3:41 PM GMT) -- Kingsley Napley LLP has filed a legal claim against the owner of Southend United Football Club, saying he owes almost £200,000 ($237,000) in unpaid legal fees as a client of the firm.
The London law firm said in a newly public Jan. 5 claim that Ronald Martin, the owner and chairman of Southend United, owes £197,530 plus interest and legal costs. He has yet to pay up despite admitting "on multiple occasions" that he needs to repay it, according to the claim.
"Despite repeated requests by the claimant to the defendant to settle the outstanding invoices, all the invoices remain outstanding and unpaid," the claim says. "The defendant has admitted liability for the debt on multiple occasions, including, most recently, by email on July 21, 2022 and by telephone call on Nov. 8, 2022 but payment has not been made."
The claim says that Kingsley Napley delivered five monthly invoices to Martin between March 2022 and July 2022 totaling £188,602. Martin also owes £8,928 in contractual interest that accrued from the date of delivery of each invoice to the date of the claim, plus further interest, it says.
Kingsley Napley claims that each invoice immediately became due for payment at the date that it was delivered to Martin. The firm says it wrote to Martin in October warning him that it could issue proceedings. It also made "a final effort" to avoid court action a month later by giving Martin a 30-day deadline to respond to an email or pay the debt, but the email was ignored, according to the claim.
Martin had signed a letter in 2016 that set out the law firm's terms of engagement, Kingsley Napley says.
"There has been continual dialogue with Kingsley Napley and payment is in hand," a Southend United spokesperson said Wednesday.
Southend United, which is based in Essex in southeast England, plays in the National League, the fifth and lowest tier of the country's professional football system.
Martin is the chief executive of a U.K. property development company known as Martin Dawn PLC. It joined forces with Delancey Estates — then a commercial real estate company — to buy Southend United from Vic Jobson in 1998. Martin became the club's chairman two years later.
According to information on the Companies House website, Southend United last published its full accounts in 2021, and those statements were for the financial year ending July 31, 2019. The club said at the time that the filing was delayed because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
HM Revenue and Customs had previously threatened to wind Southend United up because the club owed the authority £1.4 million in unpaid taxes. But the club said in a Feb. 28 statement that it had paid the bill in full ahead of a winding-up hearing.
"We take a supportive approach to dealing with customers who have tax debts and only file winding-up petitions once we've exhausted all other options, in order to protect taxpayers' money," a spokesperson from the tax authority said Wednesday.
Kingsley Napley declined to comment on the case against Martin.
Kingsley Napley is represented by its own Daniel Staunton.
Counsel information for Martin was not immediately available.
The case is Kingsley Napley LLP v. Ronald Martin, case number KB-2023-000044, in the King's Bench Division of the High Court of Justice of England and Wales.
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