Fridays outcome? (6 Viewers)

dongonzalos

Well-Known Member
I am going for SISU win and ACL to be left with egg all over their face.

Technicality delays created by SISU till the end if the season.
If we go up they will cough u something and agree a deal. Then try and discover who the investors are and try and do business with them.
 

Spencer

New Member
My guess is, and it is only guess, is that they will seek to prove that those who originally signed the lease didn't have the knowledge, authority or power to do so and therefore the club have been wrongly or over charged from the beginning. That is a basis they could dispute that the current arrears are not due, which if accepted means the debt isnt taken in to account when assessing solvency and would lead to a large claim against ACL for repayment, interest possibly compensation at a later date. That breaks the lease, would probably break ACL too. Is it possible yes is it likely I dont know, but SISU need to do something because otherwise they prove solvency now and are still locked into a contract they say the club cant afford, the debt going up and no prospect of getting the other income sources (ACL simply wont let them have them). The ruling of solvency is in reality a sham if that happens. Otherwise the whole situation makes no sense at all. What other grounds are there to break the lease because it doesnt fail on value no matter how much we think it is expensive. SISU need control of the Ricoh or to move the club away both options require breaking the lease

The comments about directors is there because members of this forum keep saying ACL should act in the best interests of the club. It simply isnt the case. The directors of ACL act in the best interests of ACL - they take in to account the interest of all trading partners but they dont have to if there are good reasons not to, and they will prioritise their duties to best affect ACL. I believe the statement from ACL also refers to looking after the interests of ACL before looking after the club, but we focus understandably on what they said about protecting the club. That means the actions of ACL indeed the actions of SISU should be looked at slightly differently to always looking at it from a Club point of view. Was just explaining that to other members, and that is why i think it is relevant

I don't know, and I guess nobody does, but one thing is for sure, at the minute SISU, in theory, owe ACL over £1m and, from sisu's perspective, throwing £100k at solicitors, if it saves £150k is money well spent.

And, as that is the case, I think ACL have a battle on their hands.
 

grego_gee

New Member
I don't know, and I guess nobody does, but one thing is for sure, at the minute SISU, in theory, owe ACL over £1m and, from sisu's perspective, throwing £100k at solicitors, if it saves £150k is money well spent.

And, as that is the case, I think ACL have a battle on their hands.

Well I agree sort of, but CCFC have paid 300k over the period in direct matchday costs normaly paid by ACL. Bear in mind this is nearly double the much discussed average rent for L1.

:pimp:
 

torchomatic

Well-Known Member
I'm going for admin with lots of people throwing a party in celebration.
 

coundonskyblue

New Member
<p>
Well I agree sort of, but CCFC have paid 300k over the period in direct matchday costs normaly paid by ACL. Bear in mind this is nearly double the much discussed average rent for L1.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><img src="images/smilies/hat.gif" border="0" alt="" title="Pimp" smilieid="48" class="inlineimg" />

Matchday costs have nothing to do with rent.
 

SkyblueBazza

Well-Known Member
My guess is that the court will simply schedule a new date with the order for SISU to provide details of any revenue & expenditure, & SISU & ACL for contractual intricacies.

Then it'll be dragged out while each party & the courts assess the accumulated information. As someone earlier suggested...promotion will lead to some kind of pacification from SISU to ACL in anticipation of bigger gates. ACL will be pacified in anticipation also...& it'll calm down. BUT at a later date something will surface showing SISU or their representatives have misled the court & we will be in even deeper do-do's...but hey! That's showbiz
 

torchomatic

Well-Known Member
God knows why. But some will be celebrating. Not me, I hasten to add.

Why? All the best players will be gone and we will have 10 points deducted !!!
SISU could still be with us as well.
 

grego_gee

New Member
<p>

Matchday costs have nothing to do with rent.

Well on the face of it that would seem true. But apparently under the current rental agreement it is ACL's responsibility to pay them on behalf of CCFC! Hence under current agreement CCFC paying them direct constitutes a part payment towards the rent that normally includes them.

:pimp:
 
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Flying Fokker

Well-Known Member
Is this court day set in stone? On the basis that SISU is insolvent now will there be a court hearing if they pay up beforehand?
 

oldskyblue58

CCFC Finance Director
Thank ob,
I see wnere you are on this and don't disagree, although the original contractors had authority for themselves at that time, and there could be arguments of acceptance over a period of time by the current owners. Maybe there could be an arguement that CCFC had no real alternative except acceptance over the original agreement.
Can you see any of this being within the remit of the application for administration? Perhaps if they wanted to, SISU could force it to be considered if they wished not to demonstrate that they could pay the full amount? But that would seem too risky and therefore very unlikely to me?

:pimp:

The judge will have to consider it in his initial evaluation of solvency because it is a tipping point. ACL will argue it is a valid debt previously uncontested and in line with the terms of the lease/licence, to counter that I would guess SISU will need to argue that it is not a valid debt and the basis for those assertions. I would also think that SISU wil argue they have paid most of it by matchday fees and the Escrow. I would have thought that will all lead to legal argument as to what has been done or not done. Once the debt has been valued then the judge can begin his assessment of solvency. So the lease/licence will have to be considered even if it is just to adjourn everything to a later date. Friday is only the start of the process in my opinion.

Could SISU force it to be considered, well if my guess is correct then they have to. The proving of a debt is different to settling a debt so there is room for discussion there. If SISU come across as concilliatory on the day then the judge might be sympathetic to their claims - the judge is there to decide on the evidence placed before him on the day, he is not there to delve into the situation and history.

All that points to a long process in my opinion
 
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hutch1972

Well-Known Member
The judge will have to consider it in his initial evaluation of solvency because it is a tipping point. ACL will argue it is a valid debt previously uncontested and in line with the terms of the lease/licence, to counter that I would guess SISU will need to argue that it is not a valid debt and the basis for those assertions. I would also think that SISU wil argue they have paid most of it by matchday fees and the Escrow. I would have thought that will all lead to legal argument as to what has been done or not done. Once the debt has been valued then the judge can begin his assessment of solvency. So the lease/licence will have to be considered even if it is just to adjourn everything to a later date. Friday is only the start of the process in my opinion.

Could SISU force it to be considered, well if my guess is correct then they have to. The proving of a debt is different to settling a debt so there is room for discussion there. If SISU come across as concilliatory on the day then the judge might be sympathetic to their claims - the judge is there to decide on the evidence placed before him on the day, he is not there to delve into the situation and history.

The judge will see sisu have the money to pay if they wish and therefore will not grant acl the administration they want. If it was a court case for the debt itself ,it would be a different matter.
I personally think sisu will show the judge adequate funds to be trading.
 

italiahorse

Well-Known Member
Is this court day set in stone? On the basis that SISU is insolvent now will there be a court hearing if they pay up beforehand?

SISU are not insolvent. I guess if they wanted to they could pay this out there back pocket. After all they have put £45M in with no return to keep us going.

Trouble is, at some point the fair play rules will stop this. Income needs to be more than expenditure etc etc etc
 

ashbyjan

Well-Known Member
Italia - SISU may well have put in £45 million over the past few years, no published recent accounts to prove this one way or another so lets accept it at face value, but remember this is not their money but their investors money. We have it on good authority that those investors have said no more pouring money into this bottomless pit for no return and any money now coming in is either directly from Joy or from the hedge fund side of the business. How long will that go on for? The root of this whole dispute is the clubs inability to balance the books, not due to high rent (although it is far too high) but due to too high a wage bill. The club has budgeted next season for a multi million pound loss - hardly going to fill a judge with confidence that this is a solvent business. The club has to be run on a more prudent basis especially with the FFP being very restrictive to clubs in the third tier (60% of revenue next season) and if they had built up rather than destroyed their relationship with ACL the two sides could have worked together to come up with answers to allow both to thrive. This hasn't happened and the bridges have been burned and can never see them being rebuilt between the current owners and their landlords.
 

hutch1972

Well-Known Member
tbh i dont have much of a clue about laws and regs about these matters , i just think the judge will say this is an issue about an outstanding debt (granted,its a large one) and pass it on to another court to deal with.
 

Flying Fokker

Well-Known Member
In which case we may end the season without going in to admin. It would give us a stab at the playoffs and maybe we will get the ten points next season regardless of outcome on the football pitch.
 

oldskyblue58

CCFC Finance Director
The judge will see sisu have the money to pay if they wish and therefore will not grant acl the administration they want. If it was a court case for the debt itself ,it would be a different matter.
I personally think sisu will show the judge adequate funds to be trading.

I am sure they will provide evidence of having money ........ but how does the judge know if that is sufficient if he isnt given details of all valid debts that CCFC owe?. If SISU have the money, the debt is valid just wont pay it then is CCFC trading fraudulently by contracting for on going costs it has no intention of paying? Is relying on a stakeholders money and loans actually trading? Does that mean that SISU have to pay ACL to satisfy the judge that CCFC are solvent? If SISU are successful and the admin petition is knocked back where do the two parties go from there? SISU are not going to get the additional income they say is vital for CCFC to survive, the original lease still stands, and i would guess the arrears. If ACL get knocked back what is their next step......... it would seem only one option left but perhaps there are others?

Seems more questions than answers to me
 

Pete in Portugal

Well-Known Member
The judge will have to consider it in his initial evaluation of solvency because it is a tipping point. ACL will argue it is a valid debt previously uncontested and in line with the terms of the lease/licence, to counter that I would guess SISU will need to argue that it is not a valid debt and the basis for those assertions. I would also think that SISU wil argue they have paid most of it by matchday fees and the Escrow. I would have thought that will all lead to legal argument as to what has been done or not done. Once the debt has been valued then the judge can begin his assessment of solvency. So the lease/licence will have to be considered even if it is just to adjourn everything to a later date. Friday is only the start of the process in my opinion.

Could SISU force it to be considered, well if my guess is correct then they have to. The proving of a debt is different to settling a debt so there is room for discussion there. If SISU come across as concilliatory on the day then the judge might be sympathetic to their claims - the judge is there to decide on the evidence placed before him on the day, he is not there to delve into the situation and history.

All that points to a long process in my opinion

I agree OSB. It's likely to be long drawn out legal process. I also believe there is a high level of uncertainty of the eventual outcome - of the court case itself and crucially, the subsequent implications of the judgement for both SISU & ACL. This uncertainty over the outcome, combined with the already high level of risk affecting the future of our club, is not an easy thing for us as supporters to live with. Unfortunately, I think that's the reality of our current predicament.
 

oldskyblue58

CCFC Finance Director
I know TF has said CCFC owe no one else but I wonder if there are any of the other creditors that will join in the action against the club ? If that happened it takes it away from from an action just about the rent I would guess
 

SkyBlueSwiss

New Member
Just a minute everybody...........

People keep on talking on here that SISU can easily prove they are solvent, but it is not SISU in the dock here, it is CCFC, and that puts a totally different light on things.
CCFC - if we are to believe Fisher and pals - have been, are and will be trading at a very significant loss.
The resaon that the accounts of CCFC are for the third year in a row past due is that CCFC is not capable of continuing without a third party guaranteeing to finance its operations. To date, SISU have belatedly agreed to guarantee that financing and the accounts have ultimately been filed. They have not yet guaranteed to finance CCFC for a third time, so the accounts of CCFC cannot be filed.
The judge will see that CCFC - the defendent in this case - is in fact insolvent (as has been stated publically by both Fisher and Labovic), and if SISU do not want the judge to put CCFC into admin, then surely they are immediately going to have to give substantial financial gurantees to the judge to prove CCFC is not insolvent.
Is this the case, or am I misunderstanding something here?
 

oldskyblue58

CCFC Finance Director
Just a minute everybody...........

People keep on talking on here that SISU can easily prove they are solvent, but it is not SISU in the dock here, it is CCFC, and that puts a totally different light on things.
CCFC - if we are to believe Fisher and pals - have been, are and will be trading at a very significant loss.
The resaon that the accounts of CCFC are for the third year in a row past due is that CCFC is not capable of continuing without a third party guaranteeing to finance its operations. To date, SISU have belatedly agreed to guarantee that financing and the accounts have ultimately been filed. They have not yet guaranteed to finance CCFC for a third time, so the accounts of CCFC cannot be filed.
The judge will see that CCFC - the defendent in this case - is in fact insolvent (as has been stated publically by both Fisher and Labovic), and if SISU do not want the judge to put CCFC into admin, then surely they are immediately going to have to give substantial financial gurantees to the judge to prove CCFC is not insolvent.
Is this the case, or am I misunderstanding something here?

all evidence that ACL's Barristers can put before the court SBS ............ SISU may of course feel that they can rebutt it with very good explanations
 
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Flying Fokker

Well-Known Member
They have a few days to come up with an answer. I would not like to be in their offices at the moment.
 

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