Does the company consider itself transcendent to not only the contract itself, but also to all the laws that govern the creation and enforcement of contracts (of which they willfully availed themselves to create the MOU)? Its one thing for a Harvard business student to invent such twists of logic, but for a federal judge to contemplate such... it must take toilsome, agonizing time to create such prose. I can't wait to read Silver.
None of the signatory parties to the MOU agreed to acknowledge or confer rights other than what they memorialized in the agreement. No un-named party has any standing to participate in the rights and obligations agreed to among the parties, and no party to the agreement has the right to unilaterally confer (or assume for themselves
😛 ), rights (or authorities
😛 ) not agreed.
Additionally, the company may argue that any dispute about the
obligations of the MOU in this matter is subject to arbitration, according to paragraph 10 e......
However, the company's inventive creation of an un-named party to the MOU, and the company's assertion that this dubious party is entitled to non-stipulated rights is not a question of any of the parties'
obligations (subject to arbitration), but this is a question of each party's
authority to invent new rights for themselves or others.
Welcome to the new corporate culture. Same as the old corporate culture.
😀