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Finance firm takes case to repossess Twink's house

Composite of Twink and her house in Knocklyon
Adele King, better known as Twink, faces a bid by Pepper Finance Corporation to repossess Idrone House

Adele King, better known as Twink, faces a new battle to save her €1.5 million home from a bank that claims she has failed to maintain monthly repayments on her mortgage.

The 74-year-old Irish entertainer, with her ex-husband David Agnew, faces a bid by Pepper Finance Corporation to repossess Idrone House, where she lives, on Idrone Avenue, Knocklyon, Dublin.

Ms King, also known as Adele Condron King, and Mr Agnew, who now lives at The Green, Bracken Hill, Kilmessan, Co Meath, have been fighting banks for almost 20 years to keep the bailiffs from the front door of the listed mansion.

A new application by Pepper Finance to take possession of Twink's home came before Dublin County Registrar Patricia Hickey.

Neither Ms King nor Mr Agnew turned up in the County Registrar’s court to meet the bank’s application to take back and sell the €1.5 million property, which had been bought in 2002 with the help of a €200,000 loan from Bank of Scotland.

Twink has stated no one had ever paid her anything towards maintaining the historic building

Since then, the couple’s original mortgage, along with another €30,000 loan taken out a couple of years later, has transferred through a number of fellow lenders to Pepper Finance.

County Registrar Hickey told barrister Mason Napier, counsel for Pepper, that since the new application came before her today for the first time, she would adjourn the proceedings until early July to allow Ms King and Mr Agnew to consider their legal position.

Mr Napier, who appeared with Lavelle Partners Solicitors, said the bank was agreeable to an adjournment.

Twink and her ex-husband fought the banks since early in the last decade and the threat to their property had been lifted when a deal for monthly repayments, including a lump sum payment of €18,000, had been agreed several years ago.

Today, the bank alleges that repayments on the two loans, both of which are charged against Idrone House, have been reneged on and it sought a possession order in respect of the property.

In its proceedings, Pepper claimed that in breach of undertakings attached to the loans, both defendants had failed to make the agreed monthly repayments and, despite demands having been made, had failed to discharge the debt due or to deliver up possession of Idrone House.

The bank stated in its claim that Idrone House was currently the primary residence of Ms King.

Ms King earlier claimed that her home, an 18th-century Georgian mansion, is a listed building and that she had been reliably informed by The Georgian Society and Dublin City Council that she was only the "current caretaker/custodian of the building".

She has stated no one had ever paid her anything towards maintaining the historic building which, she said, required colossal upkeep for keeping it safe for the State.

At the time, she said she was attempting round 90 of the battle to save her home from the banks and see if the county council would help to keep the house from falling in again as it had been a wreck when she had taken it over.