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Hong Kong’s Housing Authority contests bill of HK$30m in management fees

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Tin Chung Court resident Mok Yim-hay has taken on the Housing Authority over HK$70 million in outstanding management fees. Photo: Bruce Yan

The Housing Authority is asking an appeal court to send an order for it to pay HK$71 million in outstanding management fees on a Tin Shui Wai estate back to the Lands Tribunal for reconsideration as the tribunal judge failed to determine when part of the fees were incurred.

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Included in the sum was HK$30 million that was incurred between December 1999 and October 2001 and for which the authority had told the tribunal it did not accept liability because a law provided for only up to 12 years in pursuing outstanding charges.

But the tribunal ruled last year, upon a challenge by Tin Chung Court resident Mok Yim-hay, that the authority was responsible for outstanding fees 8totalling HK$71 million.

The fees stemmed from unsold subsidised flats at two Tin Chung blocks that were taken off the market because of a short-piling scandal in 1999, and covered the period from December 1999 to August 30 last year.

Tin Chung Court resident Mok Yim-hay (centre) accompanied by Labour Party's Chiu Yan-loy (right), protests at Housing Authority's decision to further appeal against Lands Tribunal decision outside High Court in Admiralty on Tuesday. Photo: Edward Wong
Tin Chung Court resident Mok Yim-hay (centre) accompanied by Labour Party's Chiu Yan-loy (right), protests at Housing Authority's decision to further appeal against Lands Tribunal decision outside High Court in Admiralty on Tuesday. Photo: Edward Wong
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Earlier at the tribunal, the authority cited the Limitation Ordinance in arguing it should not be liable for the HK$30 million.

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