The document shows that an unpaid contractor is seeking to end a company owned by Adelaide developer Theo Samaras to obtain an invoice for unpaid payments. Documents submitted to the Supreme Court of South Australia show that the civil contractor\'s bottle brush claimed that Kyren Pty Ltd, a development company in Samaras, failed to comply with the statutory payment requirements of approximately $19,000. Matthew Spitzer, general manager of the bottle brush, said that with U- The park develops on Mill Street, on the city\'s high street. Spitzer said the company has been trying to pay for civil works completed on site for nearly two years. \"We have done the work in good faith (but) We didn\'t get a penny. The amount is not big, but it is annoying. \"Mr. Samaras\'s lawyer, Anthony Kelly of Melle Olsen, said that Mr. Spitzer\'s claim was\" basically incorrect \"and that the amount of the bottle brush claim was Mr Kelly said that Kyren advised the bottle brush on \"many occasions\" and that it was prepared to pay the offer but no longer paid. He said the payment for the original amount had been sent out, but the lawyer for the bottle brush returned. In a statement issued by Kelly, Samaras said that the statement of the bottle brush \"has no advantage at all \". \"Kyren Pty Ltd has a lot to do with all the people and companies that work for it because it can pay any invoices in a timely manner,\" he said . \". \"Kyren has never tried to imply that the bottle brush is not entitled to a payment of the quoted amount. Mr Kelly said Kyren intended to negotiate a solution with a bottle brush.