The largest asset listed in Elliott’s will was an $825,000 loan that he advanced to Ebek Pty Ltd,his family’s private company,which lists Caroline as its sole director.
The one liability was a loan of $163,471.72,which Elliott owed to his daughter.
Elliott (centre) with Prince Charles and Princess Diana at the Melbourne Cup in 1985.Credit:Bruce Postle
When asked if he was bequeathed anything else,Tom Elliott said he inherited his father’s tie collection,many of which had elephants on them. “There were hundreds of them,” Tom said.
Elliott was known for collecting elephants,a sign of good luck,which Tom said were also passed down.
It’s not clear if the children got much else aside from nicknacks and mementos. In his will,Elliott provides instructions for his former partner Joanne Hurley to have first priority of the estate – up to a sum of $280,000 – if he still owed money to her as part of a financial agreement from 2018.
While Elliott became one of the dominant figures in Australia’s corporate landscape in the 1980s,his personal fortunes never came close to his contemporaries,such as Robert Holmes a Court – who became Australia’s first billionaire – or even Alan Bond.
John Elliott’s former house on Towers Road in Toorak,which sold for a then-record $11 million.
The latter emerged from thelargest personal bankruptcy in history in 1992 with a net worth of around $265 million in 2008.
Elliott controlled billions of dollars of assets,including one of the biggest brewers in the world with Foster’s the jewel in the crown,and had all the trappings of wealth. But his net worth was never more than $78 million.
His attempt to join Holmes a Court in the rarefied air of the truly rich,by seeking to take Elders IXL private,collapsed under the weight of the company’s debt.
Legal battles with corporate regulators,and divorces,took their toll on his wealth. Elliott declared himself bankrupt in 2005.
Elliott with his son Tom,doing their regular spot on 3AW Radio in 2015.Credit:Luis Ascui
Reports from that time showed the key role played by Ebek,which was owned by the Elliott family trust. When Elliott sold $1 million worth of antique silver,furniture and lithographs the previous year,his entire share of the proceeds – about $400,000 – was paid to Ebek creditors.
This infuriated his personal creditors,who voted against Elliott’s proposal to avoid bankruptcy by paying them 5c for every dollar owed on debts totalling $9.24 million.
They received just 2.3c for every dollar owed after his bankruptcy. Bond’s creditors were offered just 0.5c for every dollar owed.
Elliott’s offer to creditors included a $300,000 cash contribution from Ebek,which owed Elliott $621,000 at the time.
Elliott and Robert Holmes a Court in 1986.Credit:
A 2004 report from the administrators of failed rice miller Water Wheel Holdings – which Elliott was involved with – said Ebek’s main asset was the southern NSW homestead Woorooma Station.
It was valued at $1 million but heavily mortgaged.
Bond also died with little to his name,but there were suspicions about what was held in a series of family trusts.
“I can confirm,as executor of Dad’s estate,that there absolutely zero funds for distribution and a mass of debts that I am still in the process of tallying,” Bond’s daughter Jody Fewster said in relation to the bankruptcy of her brother Craig in 2016.
Elliott,Carlton football president and Elders IXL boss,in 1985.Credit:The Age
Elliott always hoped to chart a return to the top of the business world after his bankruptcy,but was never able to manage it.
As Elliott himself once put it:“Life comes in waves,doesn’t it?”
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