Doom wrote:
Skull wrote:
Doom wrote:
It has to be said, you never physically own the plate, you buy the ability to act as a cabby and the goodwill of existing custom, ok it's jumping a queue, but so it's the same when one company buys another, or in football it would be I've bought say Plymouth Argyle so I can be in the football league rather than have to start ground up and hope to win my way into the league, it happens in every field of business, it's only in the taxi trade some seem to have a problem with it, and to be extreme about it, if the taxi trade has to accept an un-regulated environment then that means nobody should ever be turned down when applying to open a bar as well and however many bars they want to open, it's the same principle, and when it's saturated to the point where men are fighting each other over a job and one pulls out a gun and shoots the other because he thought it was his job, whose going to explain to his widow how that situation was ever allowed to become?
How can you compare the pub industry to the public transport industry? There is almost no comparison.
A pub licence is not transferable, and the business is sold only on the condition the proprietor is issued with a new licence by the council.
The establishment is also subject to planning permission. You can't drive a pub around the streets picking up punters.
Oh and your "goodwill and existing custom" is a load of nonsense also.

1 - It's unit comparison.
2 - Yes it is, if I wanted a pub and the LL didn't want to go but would for a good drink it's the same.
3 - Granted, but my point is how can you limit one i.e pub, and then say all can have the other, it's still a business that requires a license.
4 - How so? who buys a business if there is no custom, you buy to be able to serve existing custom, hence the goodwill.
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1 - It's unit comparison.
What, buildings to vehicles? Get a grip.
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2 - Yes it is, if I wanted a pub and the LL didn't want to go but would for a good drink it's the same.
No. The new proprietor has to apply for a new licence in his name. The building is subject to planning permission as a licensed premises.
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3 - Granted, but my point is how can you limit one i.e pub, and then say all can have the other, it's still a business that requires a license.
Buildings are fixed due to space and suitability, not public demand.
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4 - How so? who buys a business if there is no custom, you buy to be able to serve existing custom, hence the goodwill.
Goodwill is a pipe dream, you wouldn't be saying that if you'd just spent 40K, and the council de-restricted the next again day.
You can't quantify goodwill. It's like me saying give me 40k, for wishing you all the best.
