Exactly, so Michael was quite within his rights to refuse the extra shows, even after they were announced with no threat of being sued.
Agreed Last Tear, however, Michael did not refuse. I do not believe this meant he agreed. I believe this meant he would do what was required to prevent others from feeling disappointed. AEG committed Michael to those shows without any written approval which was necessary for those shows to be legally valid.
I was just thinking about the COST of relocating and who picked up that tab. Was he in town because of Michael, or was he in town because he wanted to be with his girlfriend? In any event, he was in LA, and not in Texas/Las Vegas working with his regular patients. So I'm thinking that he gave up his practice(s) even before the contract was fully signed. I mean, why didn't he stay put while the negoitations were going on.
I work at a law firm, we recruit attorneys from all over the country. If they have to relocate, the firm picks up that cost and provides any other services that may be necessary, BUT none of that happens until their contract is fully executed.
It will be interesting to see who was financing Murray while he waited for his contract to be fully executed. We know it wasn't AEG. Maybe the "instrument" was back on the POLE, and she was Murray's financial backer. Time will tell, I guess.
Big Apple2, great question! I would like to know as well.
Could AEG representatives be reading this board as they prepare their defense?
CherubimII, Big Apple 2, Qbee, Ivy, the plaintiffs and the defendants’ lawyers as well as witnesses may review posts on forums such as this if they desired. Not so much for strategy but, to gauge public opinion on what has already occurred in the courtroom. There is a rumor however, that Robson’s lawyer will use a strategy found on a forum.
Bouee, the insurance was for non-appearance/cancellation. Lloyds was concerned cancellation probability would be high if the shows were back to back. Spacing the shows would decrease the chances of cancellation (and therefore, payout). You are correct about the 19 shows; no written approval and yes; I see these are separate arguments.
I don't see why Jacksons focus on the number of shows, the more shows the more damages.
Ivy, the focus is not on the 50 shows; it is on the fact that those additional 19 shows needed written approval to be valid. AEG sold tickets for those shows which committed Michael to those shows without written approval. The same with the increase in preproduction costs. Will the jurors see it as the same with the doctor’s employment? We shall see.
I went through some testimony from CM's trial. Cherylin Lee last saw Michael on April 19/20th. Her prior visit was april 12, before that it was late March.
One of Cm's patient said he received a letter in april from CM, saying he would leave his practice.
I don't see how it could be relevant (Murray start date) : No one is claming Michael did not want Murray, so ?
let me copy something from judge's ruling on summary judgment
Judge makes a note that Michael retaining services of Murray before AEG hired him could be a factor in determining proportional damages and liability.
this is why the April dates are important.
Bouee, I believe it is relevant. It showed Michael and the doctor had an existing doctor-patient relationship. It also shows there were some payment agreement in place or one was being discussed because Michael was not one of the doctor’s pro-bono patients. Who was paying the doctor at that time? Big Apple 2’s post about relocation costs points to this as well. Who would reimburse the doctor for expenses? Was there conversations about this leading to verbal agreements?
AEG was only necessary to pay the doctor with an advance if Michael could not continue to pay or found it preferable to pay the doctor that way. Instead, AEG allegedly hired the doctor as an independent contractor making themselves a third party in the doctor-patient relationship which allegedly allowed them some form of control over Michael's doctor.
I agree with Ivy’s posting of the judge’s ruling in that if the jury finds Michael blameworthy in his death, for example, by 50%, they could see AEG responsible for the other 50% or other lower percentage which may affect the possible damages awarded.
elapentela;3837607 said:
They communicate the way everybody would communicate in this situation.
I disagree.
The nose comment of Phillips does not point to Michael's nose being detachable from my view. It is just a dramatic and belittling statement on his part. He spent his time on the stand today with as much confusion, memory lapse, denial, and deflection as his partner Gongaware.
He testified he saw Dileo as Michael's manager and Dileo received $50K. Trell said Dileo received $50K because of the TII movie. If Dileo was Michael's manager, why was Tohme signing documents for Michael after his passing? He wrote an email to Tohme in June. I thought Michael fired Tohme in April?