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The Supreme Court of the State
of New York today granted an order sought by the
Golden Gate Yacht Club (GGYC) requiring the Société
Nautique de Genève (SNG) to promptly answer a request
to speed up the legal process for resolving its
proposed new rules for defending the next America’s
Cup.
The San Francisco club sought the Court ruling alleging
SNG is in serious breach of its fiduciary duty under
the Deed of Gift that governs the Cup. It says SNG
has accepted an invalid challenge from a sham yacht
club, and is seeking to impose an unprecedented
one-sided set of rules that hugely favor the defender
to the detriment of all other competitors.
"We are very pleased with this ruling by the
Court, because we believe the Cup will be irrevocably
damaged if we don’t get SNG’s Protocol changed,"
Tom Ehman, Head of External Affairs for BMW ORACLE
Racing, the US club’s team, said. "The new
Protocol would give SNG’s team, Alinghi, radical
new powers to control nearly all aspects of the
event that are still unsupported by any explanation
from SNG as to why they are needed".
Ehman said the syndicate whose challenge had been
accepted by SNG, the Club Náutico Español de Vela
(CNEV), was a shell organisation that had been formed
only days prior to issuing a challenge and did not
comply with the terms specified by the Deed of Gift.
"We would still prefer to negotiate a solution
outside the court, but we see SNG as violating its
responsibilities as Trustee", he said. "And
we are fully prepared to go the legal distance if
needed to stop the America’s Cup being subverted
into a hopelessly one-sided event".
The Deed of Gift that protects the Cup as a perpetual
sporting challenge is governed by a fiduciary trust
established under New York law in 1887.
The GGYC court action also seeks a preliminary injunction
to obtain critical information related to the club’s
challenge under the Deed of Gift. The American challenge
is for a race next summer under the Deed’s 10-month
rule.
GGYC need to know where SNG intends to hold that
competition and what the SNG sailing rules are.
Under the Deed, the Swiss Defender is required to
provide these important details to the Challenger.
GGYC filed a challenge on July 11th, and asserts
that SNG must accept it.
If successful in this motion, the GGYC case could
be heard by the Courts as early as October 2007.
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