However, that court recognized the fact that Ferrari had the right to veto. That means that Ferrari can veto any rule changes this year. If FIA does not accept, then the contract is void. I think Ferrari are fine.ISLAMATRON wrote:Ferrari has already taken that to court and lost, they didnt follow the proper procedure, and they have no legal ground to stand on... it looks to me that their selling out of the GPMA the first time will come back to bite them in the ass for the sum of a couple hundred million pounds.vall wrote:monkeyboy1976 wrote:The FIA still beleives that Ferrari and the Red Bull teams are bound by contract to race in 2010. This would leave Ferrari (the main component of any FOTA breakaway series) in a legal limbo with a protracted set of court proceedings to deal with and hence distrupt, if not scupper, the rival series.
Any thoughts?
Ferrari says that they had rights to veto the proposed changes to the regulations. They did vote against, but FIA ignored that. So, Ferrari thinks their contract is no longer valid. We will see how things develop.
To sum up:
- Veto is recognized
Ferrari exercises veto against new rules
Mad Max refuses veto
Contract breached
Ferrari in the clear