‘Sell a cow or jail’ dealer hands in €5,000

2 hrs ago
A cattle dealer served with a child maintenance arrears ultimatum by a judge of “sell a cow or go to jail” has handed €5,000 in €50 notes to the court.
At the Family Law Court, the cattle dealer told Judge Mary Larkin that a man he buys cattle for phoned him to help out on his child maintenance arrears debt.
Judge Larkin had issued the “sell a cow or go to jail” ultimatum on the cattle dealer last month.
The cattle dealer said the friend gave him a loan of €5,000 in the form of a cheque, which he cashed and handed into court.
The cattle dealer said: “He is a well-off person and he rang to help me out.”
Judge Larkin said that after the €5,000 has been paid over, the cattle dealer owes a further €1,600 in maintenance arrears.
After the cattle dealer handed over the bundle of €50 notes, Judge Larkin told him: “It was only when I threatened you with jail that you paid out the €5,000.”
The cattle dealer has fallen into arrears on his child maintenance payments of €100 a week as he can’t afford it due to a lot of cattle dealing now going online due to Covid-19. The man said he is currently paying €50 a week in maintenance for his two children.
In response, Judge Larkin said: “You can’t just do what you feel like — these are court orders for €100 per week. When are you going to bring it up to the correct amount?”
The man said that he receives €203 per week in social welfare and an average of €80 per week for his cattle dealing work.
Judge Larkin told the man that if he wishes to have his weekly maintenance payments reduced, he should provide financial statements that include the amount of stock he owns.
Judge Larkin stated: “If you want to reduce the maintenance, you have to produce a full and complete statement of means.”
The cattle dealer said that there may be weeks when he doesn’t buy any cattle or he may have a week when he sells 20 cattle at €10 a head.
The man’s ex-partner and mother of their two children said she is working 65 hours a fortnight but is living in “relative poverty”.
