Judge bars Starbucks from closing 77 failing Teavana stores
No fan of Starbucks, but a private business being told by government it can't prevent its losses? WTF??
"In a 55-page order, found that the very profitable Starbucks could absorb the financial hit — estimated by Starbucks to be $15 million over five months — better than Simon could. The mall operator did not provide an estimate of how much the closings of the Teavana stores would hurt them."
Atlas has Shrugged.
"In a 55-page order, found that the very profitable Starbucks could absorb the financial hit — estimated by Starbucks to be $15 million over five months — better than Simon could. The mall operator did not provide an estimate of how much the closings of the Teavana stores would hurt them."
Atlas has Shrugged.
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How about a "karma is a bitch" view 3?
View 3:
In the past Starbucks management has championed progressive left wing causes "for the common good" and is now getting a lesson in what they were really supporting.
An interventionist progressivist judge tells Starbucks how to run their business
since they can afford it, and presumably 'for the common good'.
Gross, but there is another view.
View 2:
A court rules that a contract agreed between two parties must be complied with
even if compliance is unexpectedly unprofitable for one party.
I go for View 2.
The observance of freely agreed contracts is crucial for all business and private relations.
I thank CBJ for mentioning that possibility.
It is too easy to jump on a bandwagon.
if starbucks is in any other malls owned by this company they should close them.
Simon argues that if Starbucks is allowed to “prematurely” break its lease, it could be forced to fill the vacancies with “less creditworthy tenant(s)” or less desirable tenants “who will only agree to less desirable lease terms, and/or a shorter-term lease,” according to the court filings.
Now me dino be waiting for some judge here or there to tell the public where it is mandatory shop so stores can stay open. Hey, even what restaurants we must eat at to support.
Oh, and landlords, wait for some judge here or there to tell you that you can't have vacant space. Not ever. Or else!
(Judge) Welch admitted that “no court has ever entered preliminary or permanent injunctive relief to specifically enforce a continuous operations covenant against a non-anchor tenant” — but she did so anyway.
If there was a "continuous operations covenant" in the lease, that puts a somewhat different light on the issue. "Absorbing the financial hit" should have had nothing to do with the Judge's decision, but enforcing a lease covenant might be a legitimate exercise of judicial power.
I can't even express how angry this makes me (unless there is something really weird in the lease contract and the media has misrepresented the ruling.)