Sunday, November 10, 2013

Third Party Beneficiaries to the multiple contracts the city has re: cable TV

Cable TV subscribers were screwed by fraud money manager Harvey Alberg.

Now Alberg is making statements on the Medford Patch acting as if he's a lawyer! Maybe he went to Carolyn Rosen Law University...oh, wait a minute, he can't because he banned 

Carolyn Rosen from TV3
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We cable TV subscribers might not be lawyers, but we are VOA - Victims of Alberg.


So we find information to bring to lawyers and ask what our rights are when termites and rats like Harvey Alberg, Ron Delucia, Frank Pilleri and Arthur Deluca, along with their other board members, enjoy the resources of access TV while denying those rights to others and, even worse, OUTRAGEOUSLY telling citizens that they don't really need access, even though the four thieves and their other board members and staffers used computers, cameras and cablespace to benefit themselves while screwing the entire community.

It is time Alberg and his fraud co-conspirators are brought to justice.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Third-party_beneficiary


A third party beneficiary, in the law of contracts, is a person who may have the right to sue on a contract, despite not having originally been an active party to the contract. This right, known as a jus tertii, arises where the third party (tertius or alteri) is the intended beneficiary of the contract, as opposed to a mere incidental beneficiary (penitus extraneus). It vests when the third party relies on or assents to the relationship, and gives the third party the right to sue either the promisor (promittens, or performing party) or the promisee (stipulans, or anchor party) of the contract, depending on the circumstances under which the relationship was created. This principle is known as ius quaesitum tertio. A contract made in favor of a third party is known as a third-party beneficiary contract or simply third-party contract (stipulatio alteri), and any action to enforce a ius quaesitum tertio is known as a third party action.