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I'm not a lawyer, but I've had to hire many in my life, and I can say that, from my experience, that reasoning does not nullify a contract.In my non lawyer experience, "I don't want to pay him what the contract says we owe him" is a not a legal tactic that works very often.
Maybe some of the board lawyers can chime in.
Mississippi says hold our hot toddys.no, it's not.
there is a reason Louisiana ranks dead last in every important statistical category in the country.
An investor in the first company I ever started had just retired as President of one of the largest steel companies in Ohio. He once told me, "your lawyer is not there to tell you what you can't do; your lawyer is there to tell you how to do what you want to do."I'm not a lawyer, but I've had to hire many in my life, and I can say that, from my experience, that reasoning does not nullify a contract.
I'm not a lawyer, but I've had to hire many in my life, and I can say that, from my experience, that reasoning does not nullify a contract.
If Kelly’s lawyers/agent agreed to have the contract governed by the laws of Louisiana then (which they probably did) then he deserves what he’s about to get.I realize you live really close to the Mississippi border, but I figured you would know more about how things work in the state of Louisiana.
let me help you out.
is a politician involved? if so, ignore actual common sense and laws. just follow the corruption money
is a lawyer involved? if so, then ignore actual common sense and laws. just follow the corruption money
is an elected judge involved? if so, ignore actual common sense and laws. just follow the corruption money
is it happening somewhere within the borders of Louisiana? if so, ignore actual common sense and laws. just follow the corruption money

this is Louisiana.If Kelly’s lawyers/agent agreed to have the contract governed by the laws of Louisiana then (which they probably did) then he deserves what he’s about to get.
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