Southend United pays HMRC tax debt ending administration fears
- Published
A winding-up petition that threatened to end Southend United's 116-year history has been dismissed after the High Court was told the football club had paid off its tax debt.
The club owed an estimated £275,000 to HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC).
However, an HMRC representative told the High Court it had been paid in full and asked the judge to withdraw its petition.
Separately, Blues announced on Tuesday it had agreed the sale of the club.
Charlotte Cooke, appearing at an insolvency and companies hearing on behalf of HMRC, said: "My instructions are that the petition debt has been paid in full and we seek dismissal with costs."
In what amounted to only a 60-second hearing, Judge Nicholas Briggs concluded: "Very well, dismissed with costs."
Owner and chairman, Ron Martin, and club chief executive, Tom Lawrence, were both at the court.
The latest winding-up petition had already been adjourned three times, while Mr Martin sought bridging finance to cover the debt.
The BBC understands some members of staff went four months without being paid last season.
He previously referred to the financial troubles as "legacy debt" and pledged he would never place the club in administration.
At almost the eleventh hour before the hearing, at 16:40 BST on Tuesday, the club announced it was being sold to a consortium headed by Australian businessman Justin Rees.
The team was already docked 10 points by the National League in August because of the debt.
The Shrimpers beat Oxford City 2-0 on Tuesday night, to lift them to 21st place and within a point of safety from the relegation zone.
Follow East of England news on Facebook, external, Instagram, external and Twitter, external. Got a story? Email eastofenglandnews@bbc.co.uk, external or WhatsApp 0800 169 1830
Related topics
- Published4 October 2023
- Attribution
- Published3 October 2023
- Published21 September 2023
- Attribution
- Published17 March 2023