Sitting across a courtroom from someone you once had dinner with might cause a certain type of professional pain. Wilson Parking NZ CEO Ryan Orchard told Employment Court Judge Helen Doyle that Peter Turner was a good manager, a diligent worker, and someone he had personally supervised since 2013, when Orchard was sent down from Auckland to train him. They ate dinner. They attended a concert. Orchard stated, “I considered him a friend,” while testifying. It’s the kind of statement that seems heavier in a courtroom than it would in a casual discussion.
A four-week trial that started in Christchurch in June 2026 is focused on what Orchard claims occurred during the next 10 years, particularly in the last months of Turner’s employment. The parking business in New Zealand is closely monitoring this story. Turner, who was elevated to Wilson’s Southern Regional Manager in 2018, is accused of subtly undermining the company that gave him his career by abusing the trust that was developed over many years. The complaint that has come to be known as the Ryan Orchard Peter Turner litigation claims that there was a systematic, intentional, and covert program of sabotage.

Wilson’s legal team, headed by Rachael Reed KC, claims that while Turner was still there, he started adding odd early-termination terms to Wilson’s contracts with landlords. These clauses gave landlords the ability to terminate agreements for almost any reason with little warning. Orchard stated that such words would never have been acceptable to him. He informed the court that it “fundamentally” compromised the portfolio’s stability.
The business didn’t start looking into these terms until another Wilson employee noticed a pattern. In a brief amount of time, hundreds of parking spaces had already been lost. Orchard disclosed the figures in commercially sensitive detail, and they were noteworthy. Wilson calculates that Turner’s actions are costing the business about $9,600 per day, with possible losses of $4.4 million.
The accusations extend beyond the terms of the contract. Reed said the court that Turner continued to steer clients away from Wilson after leaving the company in late 2023 by working with a senior Wilson employee, whose identity is still being withheld. According to reports, the two used burner phones to converse.
After Wilson’s attorneys gave him orders to preserve evidence, Turner allegedly destroyed one of those phones. Additionally, he is accused of using his business laptop to access his personal email in incognito mode during the last weekend, copying private papers, such as price structures and lease details, before erasing the drive. Reed created an image of someone who recognized the worth of what he had and knew just how to use it, but it’s still unknown how much information was obtained.
Prior to the trial, Reed also disclosed what she called a “ruse to hide Mainland profits”—a business known as TPM Holdings Ltd. that was unrelated to Turner and whose only beneficiary was Turner’s wife Gaynor. It is implied that Turner was using this organization to route income in order to circumvent a court-issued freezing order intended to safeguard contested assets.
Glenn Jones, Mainland’s attorney, denied that his client had violated any court orders. Since then, the court has moved to freeze both Gaynor Turner’s and TPM Holdings’ accounts. It’s a detail that could either prove devastating or completely innocent, depending on the evidence, but it has complicated already complicated proceedings.
All of the main accusations are refuted by Turner and Mainland Parking. Turner’s argument, as stated in previous trials, is that his restraint of commerce, a 12-month clause, is too broad to be enforceable, that leave clauses were typical industry practice, and that any preparation made prior to his resignation was legal.
Wilson’s prior attempt to completely prevent Turner from trading was rejected by the court on the grounds that it would essentially destroy Mainland before a fair trial. With its disputed lease agreements suspended but its doors open, the business keeps running while the lawsuit is being heard.

