George Magan, Baron Magan of Castletown

George Morgan Magan, Baron Magan of Castletown (born 14 November 1945), is a Conservative member of the House of Lords of the United Kingdom. He comes from an Anglo-Irish family, and is the son of the late Brigadier Bill Magan, who served as a director at MI5.[1] He was educated at Winchester College and then became a Chartered Accountant. He was declared bankrupt in September 2020.[2]

The Lord Magan of Castletown
Member of the House of Lords
Assumed office
25 January 2011
Personal details
Born
George Morgan Magan

(1945-11-14) 14 November 1945 (age 79)
Delhi, India
NationalityBritish/Irish
Political partyConservative
Children2
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In 2017, Lord Magan of Castletown obtained a loan from a fellow peer, Lord Ashcroft, to avoid a bankruptcy application in London. [3]

In 2018, he was ordered to pay €572,000 in rent arrears for his use of Castletown Cox House in Ireland.[4]

In September 2019, Magan was evicted from Castletown Cox for failure to make rental payments of €100,000 per annum to the trust he had placed the estate into, which had sold the property for a reported €19m in 2018. [5] The High Court in Dublin ruled that Lord Magan of Castletown was not entitled to a new tenancy of the Castletown Cox mansion. Unable to pay his lawyers, there was some evidence of a legal move against his residence in London. [6]

In October 2019, the High Court in London sentenced Magan to one week imprisonment, suspended for six weeks, after ruling that he was in contempt of court for failing to provide all the information requested about his finances, adding "His current attitude, that this seems to be a wholly voluntary process, is highly mistaken."[7]

On 8 September 2020, Lord Magan of Castletown was declared bankrupt by the High Court of Justice in London. [8]

In December 2020, Magan lost his appeal in the Irish High Court to overturn his eviction from Castletown Cox. Ms Justice Faherty, on behalf of the three-judge Court of Appeal, dismissed the appeal. She said the defendant had not shown he had a good defence on the merits or had a defence with a reasonable prospect of success.[9]

House of Lords

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On 25 January 2011, Magan was created a life peer as Baron Magan of Castletown, of Kensington in the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea,and was introduced in the House of Lords on 27 January 2011, where he sits as a Conservative.

In January 2021, the House of Lords Conduct Committee convened as Lord Magan of Castletown had failed to notify the committee of his suspended sentence of imprisonment in 2019. Lord Mance, Chairman of the House of Lords Conduct Committee, observed that Magan was in breach of the House of Lords Code of Conduct Section 18. [10]

References

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  1. ^ "Brigadier Bill Magan". The Daily Telegraph. 22 January 2010. Retrieved 20 December 2016.
  2. ^ "From high life to high court, saga of the €20m mansion and changing fortunes". 25 November 2018.
  3. ^ "From high life to high court, saga of the €20m mansion and changing fortunes". 25 November 2018.
  4. ^ "Judgment against Lord Magan over mansion rent arrears". The Irish Times.
  5. ^ "British peer loses tenancy of €20m Castletown Cox estate". The Irish Times.
  6. ^ "Lord Magan loses High Court battle over tenancy of €20m Kilkenny mansion and estate". 10 September 2019.
  7. ^ "Conservative peer in money fight with estranged wife given suspended jail term". 7 October 2019.
  8. ^ "Lord Magan of Castletown declared bankrupt with debts of £14m". 28 November 2020.
  9. ^ "British Lord loses appeal over palladian mansion in Kilkenny". The Irish Times.
  10. ^ https://committees.parliament.uk/committee/402/conduct-committee/news/138890/correspondence-between-the-chair-and-lord-magan-of-castletown/
Orders of precedence in the United Kingdom
Preceded by Gentlemen
Baron Magan of Castletown
Followed by