KeiKo403 wrote:I imagine it would be quite a hostile environment for VdG to go and work in now. I think he's saying he wants the seat but probably just wants his money back plus damages to take else where, or maybe even to buy the team when they're about to collapse.
If his money back causes Sauber to shut up shop then I fear the blame will be placed on him and not Monisha.
I've heard that desperate times calls for desperate measures but Sauber have really put all of their staff in risk here! There is no other team that they can go to considering their base in Switzerland, and when the brown sticky stuff hits the big spinny thing....well, it's been a long time coming for Sauber hasn't it. I feel that Monisha is on a power trip, using her knowledge of law to to try and play unfairly.
Roll on Wednesday! Lets just hope that Mr E doesn't have a word with Mr Oz Justice!
Godius wrote:the first thing that popped up in my mind were the images of Nasr who crashed his car into Wolff during a testing day in Barcelona:Jonnycraig wrote:Some of Saubers attempts at defence were so tragic as to be hilarious.
"He's never driven a 2015 Ferrari engine, he could kill someone"
Quite incredible to hear that Ericsson & Nasr had no idea VDG & Sutil had contracts already and we're still on the scene. In a less shady business than F1 that would qualify as a quite major act of fraud.
https://twitter.com/grandprixradio/stat ... 4659009537
eh obviously not. what do ericsson and nasr have to do with this? GvdG's company has made a deal with Sauber somewhere in 2014 possibly as early as 2013. The arbitrary ruling is about GvdG, Sauber states they have no deal with Guido but with his company, something that probably is technically correct and thus bins the entire ruling in the trash, leaving guido empty-handed. That would make it a costly activity for VDG to engaged such a ruling.- wait, are you trying to say Ericsson or Nasr are actually employees of GvdG's company?
Sure maybe he can't drive right now, due to safety regs, but the Swiss tribunal, seems to have ruled, that vdG is to be one of Sauber's drivers for the 2015 F1 Championshipefuloni wrote:I guess this has to do with human basic rights (the right to work) and the worldwide right to free market (your right to employ and unemploy).
That being said, its absolutely unthinkable, by my point of legal view, to force a company to give vd Garde a seat. Its not that simple. This is a job. It has salary. It has to do with thousands of other people, including another drivers.
This kind of lawsuit must end in an agreement or in a sentence to solve the issue with indemnization. That's what's going to happen.
Sauber could not force vd Garde to race if he didn't want, even with a contract. He is not a slave. I know that the other way around is not the same, but I just can't see a way, by all the conjucture of facts and international rights, to demand Sauber to allow him to drive no matter what.
All the court can say is: let him drive OR pay the clause. There's no chance any judge say: 'let him drive, he has a contract'. That simply does not exist.
You are right, it is not an office job. He's a driver, a commodity just like a professional football or hockey player, he goes or does what the team tells him to do. If he gets to drive or are benched are up to the manager if he's fired he has the right to restitution but he's still fired.Per wrote:I don't know about that, this is not an office job. Not giving him the seat means taking away from him the chance to compete in the 2015 Formula One World Championship. It is more than just a job with a salary, it is also a service that Sauber (allegedly) agreed to provide to Giedo van der Garde.
You are talking about team sports which is totally irrelevant as the WDC is an individual competition.Sniffit wrote:You are right, it is not an office job. He's a driver, a commodity just like a professional football or hockey player, he goes or does what the team tells him to do. If he gets to drive or are benched are up to the manager if he's fired he has the right to restitution but he's still fired.Per wrote:I don't know about that, this is not an office job. Not giving him the seat means taking away from him the chance to compete in the 2015 Formula One World Championship. It is more than just a job with a salary, it is also a service that Sauber (allegedly) agreed to provide to Giedo van der Garde.
I'd love to see a court force New England Patriots, Real Madrid or SC Bern to start a player they do not want because they "provide a service" to him.