Chubb conf여주안마ident court ruling wont affect business.
State Attorney General Tom Wolf in a court filing Friday said he’s confident a federal appeals court decision won’t affect an agreement with CTL Holdings, a unit of CTL Corp., the company that owns the property.
“My personal belief is the decision is not going to affect the way the business is conducted and executed. That’s our position, and my position is that’s why we were successful,” Wolf said in a statement Friday.
That case is a rare example of a state or local agency suing a larger company over property rights issues. Because it’s one-on-one, CTL has only sued one other big company, according to the Minnesota Tax Court.
Wolf says the state 우리 카지노will keep fighting against the transaction until the company comes clean with all of the docume포항출장안마nts it possesses, which it will do eventually.
But in the meantime, it appears the deal — the first major property agreement in years with CTL — is on track to generate more than $100 million in taxpayer fees and costs, according to state and county financial officials.
The case was decided by U.S. District Judge Richard B. Jones on the complaint filed on behalf of the Minnesota Taxpayers Federation.
He ruled that while there are some “important legal differences” between the property agreement and a separate corporate structure, “the state’s ultimate obligation” is to be able to maintain good-faith practices in a complicated and fast-changing industry.
Jones also said he would set a preliminary hearing date for October. The county, which has agreed to spend $75,000 to hire an outside attorney to prepare and defend CTL in court, also would pay attorney fees and other costs.
In a filing Friday, the state said “the financial benefit of the property agreement could exceed $100 million and potentially include up to $30 million in revenue.” It cited several examples from state tax documents, such as the 2012 tax payment of $33.9 million.
Tribune reporter Steve Young and Minnesota Public Radio’s Rachel Mabry contributed to this story.
The U.S. Marshals Service says it will pay CTL $10,200 for security measures after the meeting. The agency will cover other costs including hiring additional officers and other resources.
The state says it has agreed to pay the CTL company about $1 million in legal fees and costs and about $1 million in costs related to the matter before the federal appeals court, the ruling said.
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