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A handler guides one of Australian coal baron Nathan Tinkler's horses on stage at an auction last month.TIM WIMBORNE/Reuters

The holding company of Australian mining magnate Nathan Tinkler looked set to avoid a winding-up claim after paying a creditor A$160,000 ($165,500 U.S.) on Thursday, hours before a court hearing to consider appointing liquidators for the third time this week.

A winding-up action over Tinkler Group Holdings Pty Ltd. would have dealt yet another blow to the 36-year-old coal baron, who has been grappling with a slew of lawsuits over commercial disputes and unpaid bills.

His financial troubles have raised questions over the future of his near one-fifth stake in Australia's largest independent coal miner Whitehaven Coal Ltd.

The latest creditor, Internet Fraud Watchdog, said Tinkler Group had provided evidence that it had paid the money owed, plus costs and interests, and expected to drop its winding-up action at the New South Wales Supreme Court on Friday.

"It's good news, it's been a long and hard battle," Internet Fraud Watchdog's executive chairman Ken Gamble told Reuters.

Internet Fraud Watchdog had been hired to protect Mr. Tinkler's reputation and provide personal security, Mr. Gamble said.

A second creditor due at the hearing on Friday, Gilbert + Tobin, was owed almost A$350,000 and was paid earlier this week, a spokeswoman with the law firm said.

Mr. Tinkler's spokesman could immediately be reached for comment.

Mr. Tinkler's legal battles are not over yet.

Another of his companies, Aston Resources, is also due in the NSW Supreme Court on Friday. It is being sued for A$157.4-million by a former executive of the firm, Hamish Collins, who alleges Mr. Tinkler reneged on a promise to hand over the equivalent of 5 per cent of the value of the company's main mining assets.

Mr. Tinkler has managed to settle some lawsuits on the court steps to avoid liquidation or a public expose of his finances. In those deals last month, Mr. Tinkler's companies paid A$17-million to property firm Mirvac Group and A$2-million to mining services company Sedgman Ltd.

But he could not save Patinack Farm Administration Pty Ltd and Mulsanne Resources Ltd. Liquidators were appointed to the two companies this week, over debts totalling more than A$28-million.

Mr. Tinkler, who had long held a dream to make it big in the "sport of kings," had splashed out more than A$300-million since 2007 to build his Patinack horse racing business, including A$19-million on 59 horses at one sale in 2008.

A former coal mining electrician, Mr. Tinkler turned a A$1-million bet on a coal deposit into a billion-dollar fortune, spending millions on racehorses, sports clubs, luxury homes and fast cars.

Coal prices have since slumped and his stake in Whitehaven, a holding that represents the bulk of what remains of his wealth, has shrunk to below A$600-million from A$1.1-billion at its peak.

Sources previously told Reuters the stake is heavily leveraged and lenders have been looking at options including pressing for the sale of shares or converting some of the loans into equity.

In August, Mr. Tinkler pulled a $5.5-billion bid to take the company private, with sources saying he failed to raise enough equity to finance the deal.

Last week, Patinack said it will sell hundreds more of its horses and shut down a major stable to cut costs after a rapid expansion in recent years.

On Thursday, Patinack's liquidator Anthony Matthews and Associates said it had reached a deal with the company over the jobs of more than 240 workers.

"I advise that following discussion with the management of the company that employees will not have their employment terminated," Tony Matthews said in a statement.

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