Attorneys representing HyLife, the Canadian pork company that shuttered a processing plant in Windom, Minn., this year, say the Iowa company that bought the facility owes it $214,650 for property taxes.
HyLife said it mistakenly deducted the tax obligation — which should've been paid by the buyer, Premium Iowa Pork — from the $14 million sale of the sprawling pork facility due to a bookkeeping error.
So far, Premium Iowa Pork is refusing to return the money.
In a court filing entered on Wednesday in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware, HyLife's attorneys said the parties "mistook an amount due for post-closing taxes as being pre-closing taxes."
The Manitoba-based company calls the six-digit figure an unearned "windfall" for the Iowa processor.
"Upon realizing that an incorrect figure was provided" to Premium Iowa Pork's attorneys, HyLife's legal team "made multiple efforts to resolve the mistake," wrote HyLife's attorneys, in the motion calling for Judge Thomas Horan to settle the dispute.
Premium Iowa is unmoved.
"The figures for the property taxes due and payable as of the date of closing were provided by your firm," said Premium Iowa's Des Moines-based attorney Sheridan DeJong, in a July 7 email to Jerry Hall, an attorney representing HyLife. "As a result, no additional funds are owed to the debtor."