London instrument dealers are banned from trading

London instrument dealers are banned from trading

News

norman lebrecht

August 30, 2021

The two owners of Top Wind Ltd, which shut at the onset of Covid with irrecoverable losses for many musicians, have been banned from trading for the rest of the decade.

Here’s the ruling from the Insolvency Service:

Fred Patrick Onn, 58, from southeast London and Andrew Thomson, 63, of Whaley Bridge in Derby, were the directors of Bright Film & TV Casting Limited from March 2006.

The company was renamed Top Wind Limited in January 2007 and operated as a musical instrument retailer, part of which involved selling musical instruments on behalf of customers and taking 18% commission from each sale.

Top Wind Limited traded until April 2020 when it entered liquidation and an Insolvency Service investigation into the directors’ conduct began.

Enquiries discovered that from July 2019 until April 2020, whilst the company was insolvent, Top Wind Limited sold at least 20 musical instruments, but the proceeds, which totalled more than £33,000, were not passed to the owners.

Fred Onn held a meeting in July 2019 with an Insolvency Practitioner to discuss insolvency options and both directors were aware of the financial position of Top Wind. At this point, at least 10 customers who had sold their instruments through the company had not received proceeds of at least £16,330.

At liquidation in April 2020, at least 30 customers had submitted claims in respect of instruments sold, totalling almost £50,000. More than £33,000 of these claims were for instruments sold after July 2019 when the directors knew the company was in financial difficulty.

The Secretary of State for Business accepted disqualification undertakings from Fred Onn and Andrew Thomson after they did not dispute that they caused or allowed Top Wind Limited from 9 July 2019 to the date of liquidation, whilst insolvent, to sell at least 20 musical instruments owned by third parties and for which proceeds of the sale were not passed to the owners.

Their 9-year bans started on 22 June and mean they cannot, directly or indirectly, become involved, without the permission of the court, in the promotion, formation or management of a company.

 

Comments

  • Henry williams says:

    Who do you trust today.

  • Freewheeler says:

    We are doomed: the only known cure for the Dreaded Lurgi is to play a brass instrument.

  • Will says:

    They could still carry on retailing musical instruments as ‘sole traders’. That is what the Gloucester brass shop ‘Horns of plenty’ did after they went into liquidation owing money to clients.

  • G'day says:

    Seems like a load of hot air.
    Feel for those who lost their money.

  • G'day says:

    Seems like a load of hot air.
    Feel sorry for those who lost their money.

  • MOST READ TODAY: