I think Sauber have never come out in court and said something simple to the effect of "we signed three drivers for two cars". If they did then they'd be guilty of fraud on contracts worth a minimum of $20 million each. White collar fraud of this magnitude would likely bring significant prison time for the people who did it. So Sauber has never factually told the court what the 3 driver vs 2 car situation is even though everyone knows it.turbof1 wrote:I still don't get why there has not been a verdict yet to simply pay vd Garde for his damages and be done with it. Truly the damage in the relationship between vd Garde and Sauber is this deep now that the contract can impossibly be forfilled. It'll simply result in Sauber not racing.
The court does not want to assume this for Sauber and then figure out a solution for them because--
1. that's not the court's job,
2. the court would like to see Sauber's leadership take responsibility for their team and any fraudulent acts,
3. simple admission of the 3-contracts-2-cars situation would probably quickly lead Sauber into administration but the court doesn't want to assume the team into this legal status because again it's the teams responsibility to be grown-ups and make any necessary applications or requests.
I think yesterday's original written decision by the judge made a somewhat vague note that the parties could come back to the court anytime if there was something they needed to tell the court about why they could not fulfill the judgment. I'm beginning to understand that note better.
EDIT: Also notice Sauber's continued odd use of the phrase "nominated drivers" instead of "contracted drivers". The term "nominated driver" has never been used before in F1 to describe a team's current driver lineup. Sauber is using this terminology in courts because "contracted driver" has legal implications as described above. Courts can adjudicate contracts, but not "nominations".