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- Wil Fay
http://www.bizjournals.com/stlouis/news/2016/01/13/st-louis-fans-sue-rams-alleging-deception.html
Didn't take long. I hope they win.
Didn't take long. I hope they win.
I don't know, you guys. It may seem like sour grapes - and I'm sure a lot of it is - but there are legal grounds here.
When a business is selling you something - the things they say in order to sell you those things matter. We want them to matter. We want to hold businesses accountable for misleading sales pitches.
The rich and powerful are getting a bit too rich and way too powerful for my taste. They own politics, they own what used to be information, and generally - they can whip just about anyone they want to in the legal world - but that doesn't mean we shouldn't be putting up a fight where we can.
I don't know, you guys. It may seem like sour grapes - and I'm sure a lot of it is - but there are legal grounds here.
When a business is selling you something - the things they say in order to sell you those things matter. We want them to matter. We want to hold businesses accountable for misleading sales pitches.
The rich and powerful are getting a bit too rich and way too powerful for my taste. They own politics, they own what used to be information, and generally - they can whip just about anyone they want to in the legal world - but that doesn't mean we shouldn't be putting up a fight where we can.
The problem I envision for a lawsuit like this is that the NFL is a multibillion dollar per year industry, they will buy some of, if not the, best lawyers money can buy.
Secondly, if the lawsuit is about false hope, then the Rams could flip it, and include the Missouri Gov, St Louis Mayor, the task force, and all the media writers and talking heads as well. The Rams told them they weren't interested in saying, the media, task force, and government turned and told the fans they were confident, that they thought the NFL would block the Rams from moving, that the stadium deal was good enough even after the NFL said it wasn't. Seems easy for the NFL to flip that around, and I'm obviously not a lawyer.
I don't think it really goes anywhere, I'd be shocked if it even gets picked up. Similar to the Missouri Senator who threatened anti-trust suits, he's gotta convince 99 others to follow up, and quite a few would be going against their NFL teams, for what? There's gonna be a lot of saber rattling from people looking to sue and get revenge, but I don't see any of it going anywhere. If it does go somewhere, the NFL probably wins and then crosses off St Louis as possible locations for relocating or expansion. Just my opinion anyway.
The problem is that only those living under a rock would not know this was a distinct possibility. There is still a buyer be ware common sense factor to what is being alleged here.When a business is selling you something - the things they say in order to sell you those things matter. We want them to matter. We want to hold businesses accountable for misleading sales pitches.
I don't know, you guys. It may seem like sour grapes - and I'm sure a lot of it is - but there are legal grounds here.
Not really. Demoff's statements quoted in the article all included qualifications and wording that was far from concrete. I'll have to read the statute but I have a hard time seeing this suit go far right now.
Interesting thought about being able to simply refund the PSL moneys of those still holding the ones that don't have the wording "exact seats". I wonder what that would amount to.Is there grounds? Maybe. I'm not sure of the statute.
What triggers the uncertainty for me are the damages as 503 mentions and that is key, especially in the quest to achieve class action status.
Did they lie? Turns out they did. Yep. Okay.
However, the Rams can turn around and mea culpa and STILL say that they delivered an NFL product to ticket holders and, well, the merchandise is the merchandise.
The ONLY interesting legal question in all of this, to me anyway, has to do with the legal rights of the PSL holders.
The language for them has the potential to be a massive headache for the now Los Angeles Rams going forward. Especially because precedent was set that the PSL was NOT tied to the EJD, but the team since the team did not initially play in the Dome, but an alternative stadium and their first game in the dome wasn't until November of '95. Thus, there is precedent that the PSLs purchased STAY WITH THE TEAM, NOT THE VENUE.
So... Come March, will letters be going out to all the PSL owners asking if they want to renew their season tix? It seems to be their right under the existing PSL and some absolutely WILL have the money to purchase them and will see it as a huge investment to buy them and sell them to ticket brokers.
Will the NFL have a means to sever PSLs? Refund? I mean, this is the first team to move that has sold PSLs. And rest assured, ALL 32 teams will want input into this because if they screw this up, it will affect the ability for any other team to relocate that has sold PSLs. So, imho, this is actually a pretty big deal or at least has the potential to be. I mean, they might just refund the PSL and screw any St. Louisan fan who might have actually wanted to travel and maintain their season tix and fight the fight in court, because they have to sever in some fashion, but... I dunno.
I dunno, but THAT is the only remaining unresolved LEGAL question I see that has actual damages pending that HAS to be resolved...and soon.
I'm not arguing with you if that is actually what it says. I haven't seen the wording so I am a little skeptical that it actually said that. My guess - only a guess - is that there was some specificity that it was for the purchase of specific seats in the Dome. I'm a little dubious on the thought that PSLs ranged from $250 - $4,500 and didn't specify seats. I'm doubting that the PSL agreement said that a PSL owner could buy any seats he wants. I also am guessing the PSL owners were set in order of preference on Busch Stadium seats according to the price they paid for PSLs but the PSL itself specified the seat in the Dome - not Busch Stadium. Are you saying that the PSLs had no seat assignments at all? Maybe so but that doesn't make sense. I'd like to see the wording before I could agree there is precedent.That's not the point. A person who bought an PSL initially had the right to purchase a Season ticket to the first game which wasn't in the EJD.
Even as a temporary venue, it means that the PSL was NOT venue specific. Moreover, the language of those initial PSLs did NOT state anything beyond giving PSL owners the right to purchase Season tickets to ALL FUTURE GAMES. No mention of venue is ever mentioned and you know that in the law, if it isn't in the contract, it doesn't exist.
Do you have a link or anything we could look at? I'm again - not disagreeing with you either. I would just like to see what the agreement actually says.The Rams PSL's were based on the Panthers which stated only as long as the team played in the stadium.
I'm not arguing with you if that is actually what it says. I haven't seen the wording so I am a little skeptical that it actually said that. My guess - only a guess - is that there was some specificity that it was for the purchase of specific seats in the Dome. I'm a little dubious on the thought that PSLs ranged from $250 - $4,500 and didn't specify seats. I'm doubting that the PSL agreement said that a PSL owner could buy any seats he wants. I also am guessing the PSL owners were set in order of preference on Busch Stadium seats according to the price they paid for PSLs but the PSL itself specified the seat in the Dome - not Busch Stadium. Are you saying that the PSLs had no seat assignments at all? Maybe so but that doesn't make sense. I'd like to see the wording before I could agree there is precedent.
So people bought PSLs blindly?If memory serves the team just assigned seats in the new dome..........I thought I heard that on a trip to STL.
Do you have a link or anything we could look at? I'm again - not disagreeing with you either. I would just like to see what the agreement actually says.