Rock band Journey has amassed an impressive catalog of hits over the past 50 years, but the song that may resonate most with the band members and crew right now is “Separate Ways.” The latest in a string of legal disputes between band founder and lead guitarist Neal Schon and longtime keyboardist Jonathan Cain has asked a Delaware judge to rule on a dispute involving Freedom 2020, a company formed three years ago to handle the finances of the band’s tour. According to court filings, Schon is Freedom 2020’s chairman, but he and Cain each own a 50 percent stake in the company. In a motion filed last week, Cain said he and Schon “completely disagree” about how the company is managed and operated. He wants the court to appoint a trustee to act as an independent director who can resolve the dispute. Cain’s lawyers are also asking the judge to expedite the case amid the band’s current 50th anniversary Freedom Tour, which ends in London on Nov. 17. During Wednesday’s hearing, Cain’s attorney, Sidney Liebesman, told Vice Chancellor J. Travis Laster that the current situation was “inefficient.” “It was a crisis,” Liebesman said. “The damage was done during the tour.” Liebesman complained that Schon was wasting the company’s assets and believed that as chairman of Freedom 2020, “he could do whatever he wanted.” “It was his own personal interests that drove his decisions,” Liebesman said. In a court filing Monday, Schon’s attorneys said many of Cain’s allegations were unfounded. They specifically denied allegations that the tour’s production and vendors had not been paid on time. “Plaintiff’s allegation that the company is suffering immediate and irreparable damage from its failure to pay its debts is baseless,” according to Schon’s attorneys, who will file a fuller response to Cain’s motion Monday. “Our client denies any mismanagement,” Schon’s attorney, Jack Yoskowitz, told Laster, adding that any irregularities were caused by Cain acting solely in his own interests. Including allegations to the media that the band had suffered damages. Laster has set a final hearing date for Sept. 3, Labor Day weekend, as requested by Cain’s attorneys. Schon’s attorneys have asked for a trial in late September or early October, after the North American tour concludes. Cain’s attorneys said a quick resolution was needed because the impasse had become a “public battle” that had also created a “toxic internal environment” during the tour. https://github.com/elmoallistair/google-data-analytics/issues/29 https://github.com/Mirkoddd/GoogleDateTimePickers/issues/8 https://github.com/jcheng5/googleCharts/issues/13 https://github.com/antonitz/google-cloud-associate-cloud-engineer/issues/8 https://github.com/agasthik/GoogleCloudArchitectProfessional/issues/4 https://github.com/BirdAPI/Google-Search-API/issues/6 https://pastelink.net/jxwo3xop https://linksome.me/trsaxazaew
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