kennadog
Dog On It!
Thanks VF.
AS: We do know about the Oct 6th deadline.
Actually I do think Thomas Enterprises is pulling a version of your 11-year old, $14,000 Nissan. First rule of negotiation is to ask for a lot more than you realistically think you can get.
But I don't think that's the real reason. I think they are asking a ridiculous price exactly to say "look elsewhere." I don't think TE wants the arena on their development site (provided they ever close escrow). I think they probably feel they can make a lot more money developing that land with something else. They ticked off the Maloofs way back when their first proposal for the site contained no arena.
However, as to the term sheet, no one can sue to enforce a void, unenforceable deal. Well they could, just like a lot of other frivolous lawsuits. Just no legal point to sue over. And I don't think the opponents can have it both ways. If they think its too vague a deal for public to vote on, and/or that certain terms were bad for the taxpayers, then it would certainly be silly or look stupid to try an enforce what was too vague or bad in the first place, according to them.
Besides, if they bring up what MSE agreed to, MSE can also point to what the City/County agreed to. Just a useless debate at this point. If a deal is to be done, sit down and figure out what you can mutually still agree to in that deal and re-negotiate from there. And not in public. Come up with a deal and then present it publicly for approval or disapproval.
AS: We do know about the Oct 6th deadline.
Actually I do think Thomas Enterprises is pulling a version of your 11-year old, $14,000 Nissan. First rule of negotiation is to ask for a lot more than you realistically think you can get.
But I don't think that's the real reason. I think they are asking a ridiculous price exactly to say "look elsewhere." I don't think TE wants the arena on their development site (provided they ever close escrow). I think they probably feel they can make a lot more money developing that land with something else. They ticked off the Maloofs way back when their first proposal for the site contained no arena.
However, as to the term sheet, no one can sue to enforce a void, unenforceable deal. Well they could, just like a lot of other frivolous lawsuits. Just no legal point to sue over. And I don't think the opponents can have it both ways. If they think its too vague a deal for public to vote on, and/or that certain terms were bad for the taxpayers, then it would certainly be silly or look stupid to try an enforce what was too vague or bad in the first place, according to them.
Besides, if they bring up what MSE agreed to, MSE can also point to what the City/County agreed to. Just a useless debate at this point. If a deal is to be done, sit down and figure out what you can mutually still agree to in that deal and re-negotiate from there. And not in public. Come up with a deal and then present it publicly for approval or disapproval.
Last edited: