
Developer's evidence 'flatly contradicts' claims at the centre of penthouse overheating row
A development company at the centre of a dispute with a businesswoman over alleged overheating in her €6 million Ballsbridge, Dublin, penthouse apartment "flatly contradicts" her claims, the High Court heard.
Aideen O'Byrne claims that, due to a failure to maintain or repair the district heating system, temperatures in her Lansdowne Place apartment, thought to be the most expensive in Ireland at the time she bought it, have reached "unbearable" highs of 33 degrees. Temperatures in lobby areas have been recorded to reach 29 degrees, she says.
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Ms O'Byrne was last week given an interim injunction preventing the developer from transferring its beneficial interest in the buildings and common areas to an owners management company until problems are resolved. The case is against the developer, Copper Bridge C 2015 ICAV, and O'Connor Sutton Cronin and Associates Ltd.
That application was made ex parte, or with only the O' Byrne side represented.
The case returned before Mr Justice Brian Cregan on Thursday, when Hugh O'Keeffe SC, for Copper Bridge, said his client has a full defence to the merits of this case and experts who "flatly contradict" the claims of Ms Byrne.
"We spent three years trying to address them without any progress," he said. He was seeking an early trial as his side wanted the matter determined as quickly as possible.
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Counsel said it was also their case in relation to the substance of the injunction preventing a transfer of interests that the transfer had already happened in accordance with required standards upon the making of a statutory declaration of completion of the development under the Multi-Unit Development (MUD) Act.
The legal interest had previously been transferred, and the transfer in accordance with MUD takes place upon completion of the statutory declaration, he said.
Gavin Mooney SC, for Ms O'Byrne, said it was curious that the statutory declaration took place on April 3rd when his side had already been on inquiry into the matter.
Counsel said if he now has to seek to change his application to one of setting aside that transfer of beneficial interest, "then so be it".
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Mr Mooney also said he was also seeking to join the Lansdowne Place Owners' Management Company (OMC) as a defendant in the proceedings.
While the first application was only against the developer, after "we did not get very far", his side approached the OMC to see if they would assist, he said.
"But it was not forthcoming, and the OMC has now targeted us because we seem to have annoyed them," he said.
Siobhán Gaffney BL, for the OMC, said her clients first wanted to set out on affidavit their position in relation to Mr Mooney's application, but it was their case that the OMC was now "being dragged into the proceedings" when it is only responsible for the common areas, and the issue in relation to overheating was a structural and engineering matter.
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Deirdre NíFhloinn BL, for the co-defendant, said they supported the developer's request for an early trial.
Mr Justice Cregan said that given that the overheating also allegedly affects the common areas and that excess heat is alleged to be coming from pipes and fittings, he was satisfied to join the OMC to the case. Ms O'Byrne would have to amend her papers, he said.
Mr Mooney asked that he be allowed to do so after a forensic engineer's report is completed shortly.
The judge, who continued the terms of the interim injunction, gave directions for exchange of papers and adjourned the matter to late next month.
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BreakingNews.ie
2 hours ago
- BreakingNews.ie
Schools have to send 'begging bowl' to parents due to inadequate funding
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Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE Inside Ireland's unmarried mothers house of horrors - by historian whose discovery shocked the world: Church-run home 'didn't value illegitimate children', fed them 'bare minimum to survive' and 'dumped bodies in sewage system'
Tuam has come to embody Ireland's shame. For decades, mothers who had fallen pregnant outside of marriage were sent to the home to give birth and hand their newborns over to the church. The young women would stay for a year, working for the nuns who ran the institution, before being released once they had 'paid for their sin'. Many of their babies however, didn't make it out alive. Thousands of children died in Ireland's notorious mother and baby homes, a 2021 enquiry found. The deaths were hidden from the world, with residents in the quiet town north of Galway unaware for years that as many as 800 babies had been buried at their local home. 'It was always late in the evening when the burials took place. We never knew what was going on because you couldn't see over the high walls,' historian Catherine Corless, who first uncovered the scandal more than ten years ago, told MailOnline. 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The children were buried at first in 'box coffins', but were later placed 'one on top of the other' in the chambers of a former sewage tank, Corless described. After a long battle by the local historian, survivors of the home and their families, the site is now being excavated, with many hoping it will finally bring Tuam's dark past into the open. Despite growing up in the town and even seeing some of the 'terrified-looking' children at her school when she was very young, Corless like many others thought it was just an orphanage, and that 'the good nuns were looking after all those orphans.' That was until she began her research in 2011, and discovered that a site many dismissed as a burial ground for famine victims was in fact the final resting place of some of the home's children. The mother and baby home, which was run by nuns from the Bon Secours order, was demolished long ago and is now the site of a housing estate and playground. 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'They had no nappies and would spend an awful lot of time sat on potties, which the mothers trained them to do from a very early age.' She said much of the childcare was left to the women, with only only five nuns running the home which housed as many as 300 babies at any one time. According to the 1947 report, 34 per cent of children died in the home in 1943, and more than one in four living in the home in 1946, far higher than the average mortality rate at the time. The home remained open for almost twenty more years after the report was published, while other mother and baby homes stayed open until as late as the 1990s. Speaking to the Irish Mail on Sunday in 2014, an 85-year-old woman who survived the home in Tuam described the conditions she faced. The woman, who gave her name only as Mary, spent four years in the home before being placed with a foster family. She said: 'I remember going into the home when I was about four. There was a massive hall in it and it was full of young kids running round and they were dirty and cold. 'There were well over 100 children in there and there were three or four nuns who minded us. 'The building was very old and we were let out the odd time, but at night the place was absolutely freezing with big stone walls. 'When we were eating it was in this big long hall and they gave us all this soup out of a big pot, which I remember very well. It was rotten to taste, but it was better than starving.' She recalled that the children were 'rarely washed', and often wore the same clothes for weeks at a time. 'We were filthy dirty. I remember one time when I soiled myself, the nuns ducked me down into a big cold bath and I never liked nuns after that.' Corless has also recalled her experience as a young girl encountering the 'home babies' when they attended her school in the late 1950s and early 60s. 'I remember the children would come down to the schools hand in hand, a mother at the front and a nun at the back of the line. 'They were brought to school later and left earlier than us because they were not allowed to mix with children from the town, not allowed to talk to them, not allowed to play with them.' She said she believes this was done so the children would not ask them about their lives in the home. 'I remember them being miserable and afraid,' she said of the children's physical appearance. 'They were very skinny, they always had sores of some sort, some of them would have diarrhoea in the classroom and they would have to bring them out. 'They were really impoverished and always pale. I still remember the terrified look on their faces. They were treated like a species apart from the rest of us.' As well as the children, the mothers who were shamed and forced into the home also faced mistreatment. 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The little girl died after just six months, with Annette saying her mother recalled how 'she was pegging washing out and a nun came up behind her and said 'the child of your sin is dead'.' She has welcomed the exhumation, saying it will hopefully, at long last, expose the home's dark secrets. 'When that place is opened, their dirty, ugly secret, it isn't a secret anymore. It's out there.' Now, with the excavation underway, Corless, the survivors and families of those lost are at last hopeful that there is a light at the end of the tunnel. 'It's absolutely wonderful it's got to this stage,' Corless said, sharing her approval of the team behind the dig, which is headed by Daniel Macsweeney who has vowed to get 'every little bone out of that soil.' 'It's in good hands, the director said they are focussing on the families first, and what they want,' she said. 'I hope this sends a very strong message to Ireland and the world that this can never be allowed to happen again.' The Bon Secours sisters who ran the home issued an apology and acknowledged that children were buried in a 'disrespectful and unacceptable way' in a 2021 statement. The order said it did 'not live up' to its Christian values in its running of the Co Galway facility between 1925 and 1961. The Irish government also issued an apology in 2021 over the mother and baby home scandal, calling it a 'dark and shameful chapter' in Irish history.


The Independent
4 hours ago
- The Independent
US strikes on Iran an ‘extraordinarily dangerous escalation'
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