Your reading list

Leon’s Manufacturing in receivership

Saskatchewan equipment manufacturer had been plagued by complaints over delivery delays

Reading Time: 2 minutes

Published: June 12, 2024

, ,

Ernst & Young has been named the appointed receiver for the case, according to a court order dated June 11. The document names both Leon's Manufacturing and Ram Industries Inc. as debtors. The Bank of Montreal, which submitted the application for receivership, says the named companies owe over $16.6 million. | File photo

Glacier FarmMedia – Farmers waiting for equipment purchased from Leon’s Manufacturing are dealing with new uncertainty now that the Yorkton-based company has been placed in receivership.

Ernst & Young has been named the appointed receiver for the case, according to a court order dated June 11. The document names both Leon’s Manufacturing and Ram Industries Inc. as debtors.

The Bank of Montreal, which submitted the application for receivership, says the named companies owe over $16.6 million.

Read Also

A man in a Tilley hat stands in front of a research plot next to a sign that reads,

Fertilizer method’s link to emissions studied

A researcher says others studying greenhouse gas emissions aren’t considering how the loss of nitrogen into the atmosphere correlates with fertilizer application or if there is an impact to yield.

The bank had initially set out repayment demands with a deadline of Aug. 9, 2021. The companies then made “satisfactory arrangements with BMO for BMO to agree to continue to make credit available,” according the bank’s affidavit.

The companies failed to meet their obligations in winter 2023, and a new repayment deadline was set for Jan. 31, 2024.

The owing companies consented to a receiver being appointed in spring 2024.

BMO’s affidavit further pointed to the companies’ difficulty meeting payroll and utilities payments, as well as 15 creditor judgements registered against Leon’s Manufacturing since Aug. 1, 2023.In April 2024, the Western Producer noted several legal claims filed against the company by farmers who said they had purchased equipment that they had not yet received.

The company had accumulated years of similar complaints, the Western Producer and Manitoba Co-operator reported as early as 2020. As of January 2024, farmers had registered complaints against the company with the Saskatchewan agriculture ministry, Better Business Bureau and Alberta Farmer’s Advocate Office. The latter said it had been hearing those reports for two years. Farmers complained of paying deposits for equipment that then failed to appear for months or even years.

Those with questions about company assets or who want to file a claim can contact the receiver’s office at 780-441-4237 or mark.shtay@parthenon.ey.com, according to notice posted by Ernst & Young.

About the author

Alexis Stockford

Alexis Stockford

Editor

Alexis Stockford is the editor of the Glacier FarmMedia news hub, managing the Manitoba Co-operator. Alexis grew up on a mixed farm near Miami, Man., and graduated with her journalism degree from Thompson Rivers University in Kamloops, B.C. She joined the Co-operator as a reporter in 2017, covering current agricultural news, policy, agronomy, farm production and with particular focus on the livestock industry and regenerative agriculture. She previously worked as a reporter for the Morden Times in southern Manitoba.

explore

Stories from our other publications