Trump DOES have a reputation for short paying bills. “Mr. Trump, here’s your bill for $300,000.” “Mr. Vendor, here’s your check for $150,000”.
You can call it a hit piece all you want, but there’s lots of history of this. You can defend it as good business or not.
“Trump DOES have a reputation for short paying bills. Mr. Trump, heres your bill for $300,000. Mr. Vendor, heres your check for $150,000.
You can call it a hit piece all you want, but theres lots of history of this. You can defend it as good business or not.”
And what’s you proof?
So vote for Hillary, along with the never trump crowd. Yeah that’s the ticket.
Please provide a list of the businesses affected otherwise, please post a picture of your paycheck from George Soros that you earn from the trolling sites you are assigned to post to.
It’s called price negotiation.
There may have been an original contracted price, but for various reasons, having to do with the terms of the contract, the actual bill may be submitted for some figure different from the contracted price. If it is for less, both parties have concluded a deal that was highly efficient, in market terms. But if the bill submitted for some figure that the purchaser of those goods or services considers to be of more than value received, because of missed deadlines, of lesser quality than agreed upon, or for just cost overruns not specified in the contract, then there is a great likelihood of the deal going to either adjudication or civil court.
Or sometimes the contracts are written with a number of the clauses in invisible ink, or ink that disappears once it is dried. That is a hot potato that nobody wants to get caught with.
But I would expect a good many of these disputes fall into that last category.
I read this to my husband and he said what the hell did us steel do to us. Our company wanted paid in 90 days they told us tough you’ll get it in 180 days.