INVESTIGATION: Advance Payments, Audit Discrepancies, and Builder Termination — Lux Property Rejects “Unpaid Work” Narrative
Developer Claims Overpayment, Substandard Construction, and Fabricated Counterclaims Behind Bali Dispute
A recent BaliNews article alleging unpaid work by a contractor against Australian developer Jamie McIntyre and Lux Property Bali is now being strongly contested, with Lux presenting a dramatically different version of events.
According to Lux Property, the issue is not unpaid invoices but substantial advance funding, significant performance shortfalls, and what it describes as inflated and retrospectively constructed financial claims.
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“Builders Don’t Fund Developers”
Industry professionals familiar with Indonesian development structures say one central claim immediately raises questions.
In commercial construction arrangements, developers fund projects through staged or advance payments. Builders do not typically lend capital to developers.
Lux states that across the disputed projects, more than AUD $1.45 million in advance payments were made to the contractor.
If accurate, that would reverse the narrative suggesting the developer was financially dependent on the builder.
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Hotel K Seminyak: 94% Paid, 45% Delivered?
Lux’s most detailed counterclaim relates to its Hotel K Seminyak project.
According to Lux:
•The contractor, Made, had received approximately 94% of contracted payments in advance.
•Made claimed the project had reached 84% completion.
•Multiple audits later assessed actual progress at approximately 65%.
After new contractors were appointed, Lux alleges further deficiencies were discovered, including incomplete internal plumbing and structural defects.
The company states the entire roof had to be removed and rebuilt at significant cost, requiring hundreds of thousands of dollars in additional expenditure.
Following rectification assessments, Lux estimates effective progress on the project was closer to 45%.
If those figures are substantiated, Lux claims this represents an overpayment of approximately 49% of the project value, estimated at more than AUD $800,000 on that project alone.
These figures have not yet been judicially tested.
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Terminated From Three Sites
Lux states the contractor was given multiple opportunities to:
•Rectify workmanship issues
•Catch up on delays
•Account for advance payments
According to Lux, those efforts failed.
The contractor was subsequently terminated from three Lux projects, allegedly after being more than 12 months behind schedule across sites.
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The Disputed $900,000 “Design Fee”
Lux also challenges claims relating to alleged unpaid design fees.
According to Lux:
•Initial claims were approximately AUD $650,000.
•The amount later increased to approximately AUD $900,000.
•The contractor was not engaged as the project designer.
•Lux already possessed architectural documentation.
•No formal quotation for $900,000 in design services has been produced.
•No historical invoices or overdue notices were allegedly issued prior to the dispute.
Lux characterizes the design claim as an after-the-fact figure rather than a documented contractual entitlement.
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Alleged External Funding and Commercial Rivalry
The dispute does not exist in isolation.
Lux alleges the contractor was financially supported by Kinnara-linked interests in pursuing the claim.
Kinnara was previously removed from the Marina Bay City project, which Lux says it bought out last October.
Lux claims tensions following that separation may underpin the current dispute and alleges that reputational damage to Lux may serve broader commercial objectives.
These allegations remain unproven and have not been independently verified.
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The Central Question
At its core, the dispute presents two sharply different narratives:
Narrative One: A contractor left unpaid.
Narrative Two: A contractor advance-funded, underperforming, overpaid, and later terminated.
The Denpasar District Court will ultimately examine:
•Payment transfers
•Construction progress audits
•Remediation costs
•Design documentation
•Termination procedures
Until evidence is fully presented, the matter remains contested.
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A Broader Warning for Bali’s Property Sector
The case highlights a recurring risk in fast-growing development markets:
Advance-funded construction agreements can become flashpoints when progress claims, quality standards, and contractual scope are disputed.
For investors and buyers, the lesson is clear:
•Verify staged payment structures
•Confirm independent progress audits
•Ensure defect rectification clauses are enforceable
•Examine dispute history before forming conclusions
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The courtroom, not headlines, will determine the facts.
