Laois man in dispute with couple over 'alligator in garage' loses appeal

Laois man in dispute with couple over 'alligator in garage' loses appeal

A MAN has lost an appeal following a dispute with a couple over a domestic garage in which they kept exotic pets, including a female caiman alligator.

Mr Justice Brian O'Moore, on behalf of the three-judge Court of Appeal (CoA), this week rejected appeals over the way the High Court handled contempt of court applications against Noel Martin Sr and Drumgoan Developments Ltd.

The case arose when on 21 February 2024, Alan O'Neill and his three-year-old daughter were sitting in the home where he and his partner June Finnegan had lived for 20 years at Crann Nua, Edenderry Road, Portarlington.

Mr O'Neill heard loud hammering on the door of the adjacent garage where the couple kept various reptiles, including chameleons, scorpions, tarantulas and an alligator.

He found two men smashing the walls of the garage with power tools while another approached Mr O'Neill holding a piece of paper claiming Drumgoan owned his garage.

A fourth man arrived in a JCB digger and said he intended to drive the digger through the wall. The men were directed by Noel Martin Sr.

After Mr O'Neill told them there were animals in the garage, the digger driver said he was aware of this and did not care.

"As I turned to pick up my daughter, the JCB driver drove the digger through the wall of the garage, causing substantial damage," Mr O'Neill told the court in a sworn statement. Gardaí were called and the work stopped.

The couple got a High Court injunction preventing any further interference with their garage by Mr Martin Sr, his son Darren and Drumgoan.

Mr Martin Sr later admitted breaching the court order by sending various texts, which Mr O'Neill said were threatening and designed to intimidate them.

They included Mr Martin Sr saying he would report Mr O’Neill to Túsla “for keeping pets” and also sent images via text message implying that he had reported Mr O'Neill to Túsla.

The High Court found Mr Martin Sr was wilfully in breach of the orders and said as a result it was awarding full costs against him, Darren and Drumgoan. Mr Martin appealed the decision.

In his judgment on behalf of the appeal court on Tuesday 29 July, Mr Justice O'Moore said "this bizarre incident" occurred because at the time the estate in which Mr O’Neill and Ms Finnegan live was built, both they and some of their neighbours paid extra amounts to purchase a garage for each of their properties.

The homes and the garages had been built by Drumgoan and, as a result of an error, the land on which the garage was built was not conveyed to the homeowners. By late 2023, Drumgoan was still the registered owner of this garage and other garages in the estate.

Mr O’Neill claimed that Drumgoan, Noel Martin Sr and Darren Martin had been “grabbing plots of land from my neighbours in the estate, claiming that these plots of land belong to them.” Mr Martin Sr demanded money for them, even though he had negotiated the sale of the homes in the estate in the first place, the judge said. This was also in circumstances where Mr Martin Sr said he had not been involved in Drumgoan for some time and it remained unclear as to why the company required title, the judge said.

Dismissing Mr Martin Sr's main appeal, claiming the High Court erred on a number of grounds, Mr Justice O'Moore said the rationale of the High Court judge in making the order as to costs that he did make was clear.

In relation to a claim that Darren should not have been fixed with the costs order, the judge said the injunction case was brought against all three defendants ‒ Mr Martin Sr, Darren Martin and Drumgoan.

Whether or not the individual defendants were acting as agents of the company, their behaviour was such as to justify the bringing of the application, he said.

"It may be the case that either Mr Martin Sr or Darren Martin can seek an indemnity from Drumgoan. That is a matter between themselves," he said.

More in this section

Laois Nationalist
Laois Nationalist
Newsletter

Get Laois news delivered directly to your inbox.

Sign up