Quote:
Originally Posted by You Need a Thneed
They couldn't really try to break the current lease until there was a contractual reason to do so. Obviously, it would have taken longer than the deal with to Reserve to process.
If there was a way to guarantee it, it would have happened.
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I'm no lawyer, but it sounds like the same family has been leasing the land for ages, and also leases land from the Tsuu T'ina already. I would have thought that all of the parties would have been able to come up with something - the ownership changes hands but the lease continues, or making a legal agreement that the title would change on the land at the end of the lease.
Obviously it is more complicated than that, but there must be some way that all parties could have agreed for a mutually beneficial outcome.
It is probably all moot anyway as the lease ends in November anyway, apparently.