Web Summit founders told to resolve lawsuits before losing years they will 'never' get back

business
Web Summit Founders Told To Resolve Lawsuits Before Losing Years They Will 'Never' Get Back
Web Summit co-founders (from left) David Kelly, Paddy Cosgrave and Daire Hickey. Photo: Collins
Share this article

High Court reporters

A High Court judge has warned all parties in the bitter dispute between the three co-founders of the tech conference company Web Summit to resolve matters ahead of going into evidence.

At the beginning of the second week of the trial, Mr Justice Michael Twomey quoted French philosopher Voltaire when telling all three businessmen the case could take years they will never get back.

Advertisement

On Tuesday before Web Summit co-founder Daire Hickey was due to give evidence in his action against majority shareholder Paddy Cosgrave, Mr Justice Twomey told the parties to work "every day" on a resolution and commended them for entering into mediation efforts before it broke down ahead of the trial.

The judge urged all three not to focus on the "rights and wrongs" of the history of their business disputes and said they should focus on resolution.

Mr Justice Twomey said mediation was "a thousand times more preferable than going into litigation".

The judge quoted Voltaire when saying "I was never ruined, but twice – once when I lost a lawsuit, and once when I won one.”

Advertisement

Mr Justice Twomey warned that the three months for which the case is scheduled could mean a judgment from him in the winter and that all three parties may not be satisfied by that judgment.

This, he said, may lead to appeals and possibly thereafter to Supreme Court appeals, which could take up to three years from now to deliver a final judgment.

The judge said there would be a personal cost to the proceedings and that should matters be litigated to their fullest it would be three months of their lives they will "not get back, never get back" and that there would be a "real and human" cost to all involved.

The court then adjourned so the parties could consider the judge's remarks.

Advertisement

Evidence in five separate actions, brought variously by Mr Cosgrave, Mr Hickey and David Kelly, was due to begin at the High Court on Tuesday morning. The proceedings, which opened last week, are scheduled to run for nine weeks.

Ireland
Proceeding brought by minority Web Summit sharehol...
Read More

Mr Cosgrave is suing Mr Kelly, who owns 12 per cent of the shares in Web Summit, for alleged breaches of his fiduciary duties as a director of the company. Majority shareholder Mr Cosgrave is, in turn, being sued by Mr Kelly and Mr Hickey, who holds 7 per cent of the shares in Web Summit, for alleged shareholder oppression and breaches of a profit-sharing agreement.

Last week, when lawyers for all parties made their opening statements, Bernard Dunleavy SC, for Mr Cosgrave, said that proceedings brought by Mr Kelly and Mr Hickey are an attempt to avoid a discount on the potential sale of their shares in the tech conference firm.

Mr Dunleavy, who was responding to opening statements delivered in the proceedings by Mr Hickey and Mr Kelly’s counsel, said Web Summit is "big enough and valuable enough" to make the two minority shareholders "millionaires many times over in the morning" if they sold their stakes.

Advertisement

"This is a case driven by greed. Mr Hickey and Mr Kelly invested nothing in this business. They risked nothing for this business. They both, in their separate ways, betrayed this business," Mr Dunleavy said. "They want this court to craft for them a windfall which they do not deserve."

Read More

Message submitting... Thank you for waiting.

Want us to email you top stories each lunch time?

Download our Apps