
Cengage Advantage Books: Essentials of Business Law 5th Edition by Jeffrey Beatty,Susan Samuelson
Edition 5ISBN: 978-1285427003
Cengage Advantage Books: Essentials of Business Law 5th Edition by Jeffrey Beatty,Susan Samuelson
Edition 5ISBN: 978-1285427003 Exercise 13
Ethics Case: Truth ( ) in Borrowing
Rob is in the business of buying dental practices. He finds solo practitioners, buys their assets, signs them to a long-term contract and then improves their management and billing processes so effectively that both he and the dentists are better off.
Rob has just found a great opportunity with a lot of potential profit. There is only one problem. The bank will not give him a loan to buy the practice without checking the dentist's financial record. Her credit rating is fine, but it turns out that she filed for bankruptcy twenty years ago. That event no longer appears on her credit rating, but the bank asked about bankruptcies on the form it required her to sign. She is perfectly willing to lie. Rob refused to turn in the form with a lie. But when the bank learned about the bankruptcy, it denied his loan even though her bankruptcy in no way affects his ability to pay the loan. And the incident is ancient history-the dentist's current finances are strong. Four other banks also refused to make the loan.
Rob is feeling pretty frustrated. He figures the return on this deal would be 20 percent. Everyone would benefit-the dentist would earn more, her patients would have better technology, he could afford a house in a better school district, and the bank would make a profit. There is one more bank he could try.
Who would be harmed by this lie
Rob is in the business of buying dental practices. He finds solo practitioners, buys their assets, signs them to a long-term contract and then improves their management and billing processes so effectively that both he and the dentists are better off.
Rob has just found a great opportunity with a lot of potential profit. There is only one problem. The bank will not give him a loan to buy the practice without checking the dentist's financial record. Her credit rating is fine, but it turns out that she filed for bankruptcy twenty years ago. That event no longer appears on her credit rating, but the bank asked about bankruptcies on the form it required her to sign. She is perfectly willing to lie. Rob refused to turn in the form with a lie. But when the bank learned about the bankruptcy, it denied his loan even though her bankruptcy in no way affects his ability to pay the loan. And the incident is ancient history-the dentist's current finances are strong. Four other banks also refused to make the loan.
Rob is feeling pretty frustrated. He figures the return on this deal would be 20 percent. Everyone would benefit-the dentist would earn more, her patients would have better technology, he could afford a house in a better school district, and the bank would make a profit. There is one more bank he could try.
Who would be harmed by this lie
Explanation
Every company wants to have a good reput...
Cengage Advantage Books: Essentials of Business Law 5th Edition by Jeffrey Beatty,Susan Samuelson
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