The Companies Register shows a document submitted on May 21, removing Leggat and adding Russell PKR Trustee Ltd as being the sole shareholder of APL.
Russell PRK Trustee is directed by Valmont and also names Chevin as a previous director.
Another document names Valmont as APL company director and removes Leggat.
Chevin and/or Valmont allegedly then secured a $990,000 mortgage from Basecorp Finance on the APL properties.
Court documents show on June 15, Leggatt discovered information suggesting the money had been paid by lawyer Graeme Skeates to a Kiwibank account in the name of APL, then to another account with the notation "PAY Northern Investors Trust".
Valmont is the sole shareholder and director of Northern Investors Trustee Ltd (NIT) and Chevin was a director until he was disqualified in 2017.
On June 18, the plaintiffs applied for an urgent injunction freezing the asset without notice, which Justice Palmer granted, saying the claim was "supported by sufficient evidence".
"Weighing the need to protect the applicants with the prejudice to the respondents, I consider it is in the overall interests of justice for freezing orders to be made," he said in the judgment.
The judge made an ancillary order requiring Chevin and Valmont to each swear an affidavit providing information including:
• All funds purportedly borrowed in the name of APL, including copies of all loan documentation
• The whereabouts of the funds purported borrowed in the name of APL and/or secured against APL's properties.
Chevin is best known for building Auckland's skinniest high-rise tower and in 2017 was sentenced to nine months' home detention after pleading guilty to nine charges of theft by a person in a special relationship.
He said he would comment later today.