10-12-2010, 05:57 PM
Twists in Subtle Senses liquidation saga
Neo Chai Chin | Dec 8, 2010 6:00 AM
Questions arise over True Spa customers' creditor status
SINGAPORE - New twists, jaw-dropping numbers and fresh disputes have emerged in Subtle Senses' liquidation, three weeks after its creditors' meeting.
The amount of unserviced packages the spa assumed by taking over True Spa's operations seems to have been $33 million - more than seven times the $4.5 million at the point of liquidation in October.
Liquidators and the Committee of Inspection (COI) overseeing them have also found that True Spa had paid only $1.25 million to transfer its operations to Subtle Senses - raising the question if Subtle Senses and its parent company had done their "homework", a COI member felt.
The five-member committee - comprising customers, a lawyer for one of Subtle Senses' landlords and an ex-staff - were surprised by the numbers. One, who declined to be named, said: "I found it very questionable."
True Spa customers had turned up for the creditors' meeting at Suntec City Mall on Nov 16 but whether they are entitled to a cut of Subtle Senses' assets is up in the air, with liquidators seeking legal advice on the issue.
Despite the transfer of operations, they "have actually signed a valid binding contract with True Spa", said one of the liquidators, Mr Abuthahir Abdul Gafoor. "True Spa can say, please go to Subtle Senses for treatments, but now that it's no longer there to provide these treatments, what do these customers do?"
While they can still file claims with the Small Claims Tribunal, it is unclear if any orders issued by the tribunal's registrar have been fulfilled at all.
Claimants know of at least 55 orders issued, totalling $180,000. A Subordinate Courts spokesperson said, though, that 296 claims have been made against True Spa this year, as of Nov 27 - or 2 per cent of total cases filed at the Tribunal.
It is up to claimants to execute such money orders, she said. Options include obtaining a writ of seizure and sale.
A spokesperson for True Spa said it was "working out a scheme for all True Spa members affected by the closure of Subtle Senses". The scheme is expected to roll out from next week and details will be available then.
Mr Abuthahir hopes to settle the status of True Spa customers "within this week". But he and fellow liquidator Chee Yoh Chuang have another hot potato to handle. Many customers from both spas have disputed the value of their unused packages extracted from Subtle Senses' records, which affects creditors and those seeking to claim treatments from Spa Beauty and Wellness Alliance members.
The discrepancies are largely due to accounting principles that split the value of a spa package into service and product components. He said: "A lot are unhappy and feel that the amount shown on the (liquidators') website is incorrect."
Neo Chai Chin | Dec 8, 2010 6:00 AM
Questions arise over True Spa customers' creditor status
SINGAPORE - New twists, jaw-dropping numbers and fresh disputes have emerged in Subtle Senses' liquidation, three weeks after its creditors' meeting.
The amount of unserviced packages the spa assumed by taking over True Spa's operations seems to have been $33 million - more than seven times the $4.5 million at the point of liquidation in October.
Liquidators and the Committee of Inspection (COI) overseeing them have also found that True Spa had paid only $1.25 million to transfer its operations to Subtle Senses - raising the question if Subtle Senses and its parent company had done their "homework", a COI member felt.
The five-member committee - comprising customers, a lawyer for one of Subtle Senses' landlords and an ex-staff - were surprised by the numbers. One, who declined to be named, said: "I found it very questionable."
True Spa customers had turned up for the creditors' meeting at Suntec City Mall on Nov 16 but whether they are entitled to a cut of Subtle Senses' assets is up in the air, with liquidators seeking legal advice on the issue.
Despite the transfer of operations, they "have actually signed a valid binding contract with True Spa", said one of the liquidators, Mr Abuthahir Abdul Gafoor. "True Spa can say, please go to Subtle Senses for treatments, but now that it's no longer there to provide these treatments, what do these customers do?"
While they can still file claims with the Small Claims Tribunal, it is unclear if any orders issued by the tribunal's registrar have been fulfilled at all.
Claimants know of at least 55 orders issued, totalling $180,000. A Subordinate Courts spokesperson said, though, that 296 claims have been made against True Spa this year, as of Nov 27 - or 2 per cent of total cases filed at the Tribunal.
It is up to claimants to execute such money orders, she said. Options include obtaining a writ of seizure and sale.
A spokesperson for True Spa said it was "working out a scheme for all True Spa members affected by the closure of Subtle Senses". The scheme is expected to roll out from next week and details will be available then.
Mr Abuthahir hopes to settle the status of True Spa customers "within this week". But he and fellow liquidator Chee Yoh Chuang have another hot potato to handle. Many customers from both spas have disputed the value of their unused packages extracted from Subtle Senses' records, which affects creditors and those seeking to claim treatments from Spa Beauty and Wellness Alliance members.
The discrepancies are largely due to accounting principles that split the value of a spa package into service and product components. He said: "A lot are unhappy and feel that the amount shown on the (liquidators') website is incorrect."
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