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A Peculiar Offer By Dempsey: Winner Take All vs. Wills

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  • Originally posted by travestyny View Post
    Dude, you have this entirely wrong. The case was brought to the circuit court for $500,000, and it was dismissed because The Chicago Coliseum Club could not prove their loss based on an event that depends on how many people buy tickets, the weather, etc.

    Yes, every civil case must show damages if you can't there is no suit.

    THE APPELLATE COURT REVERSED AND REMANDED THE DISMISSAL OF THE CIRCUIT COURT'S CASE! MEANING THE REVERSE AND REMAND WAS IN FAVOR OF THE CHICAGO COLISEUM CLUB, NOT DEMPSEY. IT STATED CLEARLY THAT THE FINDING SHOULD HAVE BEEN FOR THE PLAINTIFF BECAUSE THEY WERE ENTITLED NOMINAL DAMAGES, WHICH MEANS THE CASE WAS IMPROPERLY DISMISSED.

    So was there a retrial?

    Clearly both courts believed that Dempsey breached the contract. The circuit court dismissed the case, which was for $500,000, because it believed the amount could not be accurately calculated, while the appellate court said that this decision was the WRONG decision because the court should have not dismissed the case, but awarded the nominal damages.

    You ducked this and you are trying like hell for some kind of technicality that doesn't exist. Did the appellate court say that Dempsey CLEARLY breached the contract? Just give a simple yes or no!!!

    I already said that the judge said that, how many times do I have to repeat myself? - In the end there was a call for a retrial, was there a retrial?. I didn't duck the question I answered it three different times. You got a thing about ducking.


    Man, you really have this backwards. DEMPSEY DID NOT APPEAL. THE CHICAGO COLISEUM CLUB IS THE APPELLANT. When Dempsey appealed the injunction, his case was thrown out because the injunction had expired after September 1926 and he appealed it after that time.

    It was already established that Dempsey breached the contract. The promoter appealed because they wanted to be awarded for some damages that they were denied, such as saying that a net profit of $1,600,000 was lost. They were also told that they couldn't recover the money that was paid in order to procure the injunction. They brought the suit to the circuit court for an amount of $500,000 and after the court looked at the damages, which clearly they wouldn't have even bothered to do if there was no breach of contract, the suit was improperly dismissed. They were denied these amounts in the circuit court because they couldn't prove that the fight would bring in a total of $3,000,000, which was their main contention, and couldn't prove that they should be given money for expenses that happened after the contract was already breached.

    So everything you are saying about not getting a fair trial is actually being stated in support of the Chicago Coliseum Club, being that they are the one who appealed. The appellate court reversed the dismissal and said:

    1. Dempsey clearly breached the contract.

    2. The judgement should have been for the Chicago Coliseum Club because they were clearly owed money, even if not the significant amount they asked for.

    3. The case was reversed and remanded so that the Chicago Coliseum Club could present MORE evidence regarding (nominal) damages.

    And did they? Was there ever a judgment that awarded them damages?

    Now that you went on the rant about Dempsey being in the right because the case was reversed and remanded, I wonder if you will be consistent and say The Chicago Coliseum Club was in the right because actually the case was reversed and remanded specifically FOR THE PROMOTER TO RECEIVE THE DAMAGES THAT THEY WERE OWED DUE TO THE BREACH OF CONTRACT. (Including the $10 that they gave for consideration. Just thought that was a funny bit to add some levity to this conversation. The case brief actually states that! ).

    No I told you the whole thing was a gangster scam being run out of Chicago. If they really had a case they would have gone for a federal injunction and stopped the Phily fight, but they didn't, why? You keep ducking that question. They couldn't get a hearing outside oft heir own corrupt courts.


    DEMPSEY DID NOT APPEAL. THE CHICAGO COLISEUM CLUB APPEALED. SO YOU ARE ACTUALLY ARGUING FOR THE CHICAGO COLISEUM CLUB!

    So should we go around saying that they weren't owed money, when the court specifically said that they were, by law, owed money due to the breach of contract?

    If so why didn't they collect?



    YOU ARE BLATANTLY LYING TO YOURSELF AND TRYING TO GET OUT OF THIS ON A TECHNICALITY. THE SUIT BROUGHT TO THE APPEALS COURT WAS BROUGHT BY THE PROMOTER. THE JUDGEMENT THAT WASN'T LEFT STANDING WAS THE DISMISSAL OF THE $500,000 SUIT IN DEMPSEY'S FAVOR. THEY STATED THAT DEMPSEY CLEARLY BREACHED THE CONTRACT, AS WAS ALSO STATED IN THE INDIANA COURT WHEN THEY GOT THE INJUNCTION, AND THAT HE WAS LIABLE FOR AT LEAST NOMINAL DAMAGES.

    You have to admit that you had this completely backwards, and you can't backtrack now, buddy. The reversal that you have been championing was actually not in Dempsey's favor, but in the promoter's favor. And again, they clearly state, in plain English, that he breached the contract and, more importantly and specifically to their purpose of the appeal, he was liable for damages and that the circuit court erred in the dismissal.

    Yes I admit I had the appeal backwards but the ending result was still the same, a call for retrial; as soon as it reversed the judgment was gone. They had to do it over, did they? That remains the same. If they were so in the right where, when was the retrial?

    Come on, Dempsey-Louis,
    • you went from saying that the injunction was granted by corrupt Chicago judges, but it was actually granted by an Indiana judge.

      Still the same local nonsense, to stop the Philly fight they needed a federal injunction. Why didn't they get one, because the federal courts were not corrupted like the local courts. Indiana didn't mean anything, except what happens in Indiana, and that's not even relevant to the argument you made about the fight being in Chicago. Just how hard did they have to look to find a friendly judge?
    • You claimed the promoters were gangsters whom Dempsey wanted no part of, but that is pure speculation.

      Yea right, Chicago in the 20s and early 30s, I'm just speculating. Read a history book.
    • You claimed Dempsey thought he couldn't trust Fitzsimmons, whom he went out of his way to thank for trying to help him get out of this mess with the Chicago Coliseum Club.

      But still wanted to do no business with him, now did he?
    • You claimed that Dempsey wanted to get away from Chicago, yet the injunction was the only reason that the Tunney fight didn't take place in Chicago.

      Why would an Indiana injunction stop a fight in Chicago but not Phily? No logic here.

    • You then went on and on about Dempsey appealing, when it was in fact the promoter who was appealing, and you claim that the reversal means that Dempsey gets off scot free, and I bet you will backtrack now that it was revealed that the reversal is in favor of the Promoter.


    No need to back track, it still called for a retrial, that looks not to have happened. - It looks like Dempsey did get off scott free; did he pay anyone anything?


    If you look at the above, you have to admit that you are being biased here. I don't really mean to bust your chops (well I do mean it I guess, but not in a malicious way), but you have to admit that you are really distorting things any way you can to not see this clearly.

    Maybe, but I still can't find where Dempsey was found guilty of anything that had standing; in the end did he pay damages?

    After these conversations, we will never want to talk about breach of contracts in Chicago ever again

    Man, what a mess. So what happened with the alleged drugging of Demp?
    One question: was there a retrial? If the appellate court gave the Chicago Club such support why didn't they follow through and seek damages. If so let me read that judgment and I might concede to you, if not, explain to me why they didn't.

    In most States (I think all) you must be able to show harm (economic) damages or there is no civil law suit allowed.

    That is probably why the first judge dismissed the case; and why the appellate judge said have a retrial and show damages. You said there were three trials, what was the third one? Was that the retrial? Did they ever show harm?

    So what this sounds like, the Superior judge dismissed the case because the Chicago Club couldn't show harm/damages; the appellate court then said that Dempsey did breach the contract, so there should be a retrial giving the Chicago Club a second chance to show damages, but for some reason the Chicago Club didn't follow up. Is this correct?

    Comment


    • The Hoffman-Tunney suit had all kinds of corruption laced into it (I will say, 'as well,' while you wouldn't).

      Billy Gibson took Hoffman's 20K and signed over 20% of Tunney without telling Tunney about it. (1926; about a week before the fight)

      After Tunney's defense (Heeney) Hoffman showed up with the contract claiming 20% of the million Tunney was paid.

      Hoffman's contract had Billy Gibson's signature on it, but not Tunney's. It would have been an interesting argument, could Gibson sell 20% of Tunney, without Tunney's knowledge?

      They never got the chance to find out, Hoffman needed Billy Gibson to testify, but Tunney's people blocked it. Gibson at that point was in a sanitarium in Los Angeles (suffering from pugilistic dementia) and the trial judge ruled him an incompetent witness. Without Gibson's testimony, Hoffman had no argument and the case was dismissed.

      Funny thing is, Gibson would live to 1947, but just how lucid he was is hard to say. The timing of Gibson's interment into the sanitarium is suspect.

      Comment


      • In 1927 Hoffman had the contract before the Chicago 'long-count' fight as well. He sought to get an injunction to stop the fight and brought suit, but then for 'no apparent reason' dropped the suit and let he fight proceed.

        He refiled the suit after the Heeney fight.

        Was he paid off in '27, but not for the Heeney defense? If so that would have factored in, in an interesting way to the second law suit, but we will never know.

        Hoffman believed Tunney owed him, which brings us back to the poisoning.

        Comment


        • Wait going back to the Indiana appellate decision: that may well have been a federal court of appeals, but they weren't the court that issued the injunction, that was a Illinois court, correct? That's why it could stop the Chicago fight, but not the Phily fight. That makes sense now.

          Comment


          • Originally posted by Dempsey-Louis View Post
            One question: was there a retrial? If the appellate court gave the Chicago Club such support why didn't they follow through and seek damages. If so let me read that judgment and I might concede to you, if not, explain to me why they didn't.

            In most States (I think all) you must be able to show harm (economic) damages or there is no civil law suit allowed.

            That is probably why the first judge dismissed the case; and why the appellate judge said have a retrial and show damages. You said there were three trials, what was the third one? Was that the retrial? Did they ever show harm?

            So what this sounds like, the Superior judge dismissed the case because the Chicago Club couldn't show harm/damages; the appellate court then said that Dempsey did breach the contract, so there should be a retrial giving the Chicago Club a second chance to show damages, but for some reason the Chicago Club didn't follow up. Is this correct?

            If I miss any part of your questions, please let me know.

            1. As far as I know there was no retrial. The reason that there was no retrial is likely because the plantiff doesn't give a fvvck about winning $10 and other nominal damages.

            2. You're saying that theY couldn't prove damages. That is FALSE. They could prove damages as the appellate court stated plainly. The damages that they could prove were nominal damages. Right or wrong?

            3. Yes, I said there were 3 trials. One was for the injunction in Indiana which was granted because of the breached contract. That was NEVER OVERTURNED.

            The second was the circuit court, which the appellate court stated was improperly dismissed.

            The third was the appellate court, which makes it CRYSTAL CLEAR that Dempsey broke the contract and that the plantiff was due damages.

            4. They couldn't get an injunction elsewhere because the injunction was only good in Chicago! I stated that plainly. That does NOT mean he didn't breach the contract. The whole reason the injunction was granted was because they breached the contract. So what information do you have that says the courts were biased....when you first said it was a biased Chicago judge....and now I'm guessing you are changing that to say that it was a biased Indiana judge. It's like magic how that changes.


            And.....

            Originally posted by Dempsey-Louis View Post
            the appellate court then said that Dempsey did breach the contract
            HALLELUJAH. THANK YOU. THAT'S ALL I EVER ASKED FOR AND ALL I NEEDED TO KNOW.
            Last edited by travestyny; 06-16-2018, 09:36 PM.

            Comment


            • Originally posted by Dempsey-Louis View Post
              Wait going back to the Indiana appellate decision: that may well have been a federal court of appeals, but they weren't the court that issued the injunction, that was a Illinois court, correct? That's why it could stop the Chicago fight, but not the Phily fight. That makes sense now.
              I read this late. The injunction was granted and it stopped Rickard from making the fight in Chicago. It wasn't good for any other state, which is why he was able to escape to Philly.

              Comment


              • Originally posted by Dempsey-Louis View Post
                The Hoffman-Tunney suit had all kinds of corruption laced into it (I will say, 'as well,' while you wouldn't).

                Billy Gibson took Hoffman's 20K and signed over 20% of Tunney without telling Tunney about it. (1926; about a week before the fight)

                After Tunney's defense (Heeney) Hoffman showed up with the contract claiming 20% of the million Tunney was paid.

                Hoffman's contract had Billy Gibson's signature on it, but not Tunney's. It would have been an interesting argument, could Gibson sell 20% of Tunney, without Tunney's knowledge?

                They never got the chance to find out, Hoffman needed Billy Gibson to testify, but Tunney's people blocked it. Gibson at that point was in a sanitarium in Los Angeles (suffering from pugilistic dementia) and the trial judge ruled him an incompetent witness. Without Gibson's testimony, Hoffman had no argument and the case was dismissed.

                Funny thing is, Gibson would live to 1947, but just how lucid he was is hard to say. The timing of Gibson's interment into the sanitarium is suspect.
                Originally posted by Dempsey-Louis View Post
                In 1927 Hoffman had the contract before the Chicago 'long-count' fight as well. He sought to get an injunction to stop the fight and brought suit, but then for 'no apparent reason' dropped the suit and let he fight proceed.

                He refiled the suit after the Heeney fight.

                Was he paid off in '27, but not for the Heeney defense? If so that would have factored in, in an interesting way to the second law suit, but we will never know.

                Hoffman believed Tunney owed him, which brings us back to the poisoning.
                Yes, I definitely disagree with your corruption remark. There is nothing corrupt about granting an injunction for an obviously breached contract. I'm not even sure that the courts could be seen as suspect in this Tunney case from what I've read from you. Seems the people involved who took it to trial were suspect.

                This certainly seems like some shady business going on. So who supposedly got to the bodyguard(?) and convinced him to poison Dempsey. Were there ever any statements from Dempsey or the bodyguard(?) about it?

                Comment


                • Originally posted by travestyny View Post

                  This certainly seems like some shady business going on. So who supposedly got to the bodyguard(?) and convinced him to poison Dempsey. Were there ever any statements from Dempsey or the bodyguard(?) about it?
                  Any answers on this? Curious myself.

                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by OctoberRed View Post
                    Any answers on this? Curious myself.
                    No idea, bro. I was hoping that Dempsey-Louis could help us out with this.

                    Comment


                    • Originally posted by travestyny View Post
                      No idea, bro. I was hoping that Dempsey-Louis could help us out with this.
                      Im waiting as well.

                      Comment

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