Big cats won't be killed, say receiver
18 January 2012
The receiver says it has no intention to have any of the big cats at Zion Wildlife Gardens euthanased.
The future of the 36 cats was set to be the subject of a hearing at the High Court in Auckland on Wednesday following a bid asking for the cats to be removed from the park by February 3 or euthanased.
The bid was withdrawn on Wednesday ahead of a court hearing to determine the status of the cats which was already scheduled later in February.
Rabobank, the appointor of the park's receivers PriceWaterhouseCoopers, said a bid had been made to buy the park as a going concern and the court action was solely about facilitating the sale process.
"There is not, and has never been, any intention to euthanase any animals at Zion Wildlife Gardens," Rabobank's New Zealand general manager Ben Russell said.
"The welfare of the wildlife is a priority - they are being very well cared for and the planned sale of the park would enable them to remain in place."
Though he dropped the application about the future of the cats on Wednesday, the receivers' lawyer Justin Toebes told the hearing he reserved the right to make another application once the scheduled hearing had been held.
Mr Toebes also made an application to confirm the receivers' right to enter the park.
Evgeny Orlov, the lawyer for the park's operator Patricia Busch, told the court the application about the cats and subsequent resiling from it was an abuse of process.
Zion Wildlife Gardens became famous through the television series The Lion Man, featuring Ms Busch's son Craig.
The park subsequently got into financial trouble and there was a falling-out between Craig and Patricia Busch, which resulted in Craig Busch leaving the park in 2008 after an employment battle.