Assignment task:
Before leaving California to accept my dream job teaching at NMSU, I try to find a buyer for my legal advice/ice cream shop where people can buy an ice cream cone while also getting legal advice or getting a quick will, trust, divorce, or bankruptcy. I find a potential buyer and tell her that my total revenue from operations in 2018 was $1 million even though I know my total revenue was $500,000. In response, the buyer agrees to pay me two times annual revenue, and gives me a check for $2 million. The buyer quickly realizes that revenue is not meeting her expectations, and discovers that my revenue in 2018 was really only $500,000. Can the buyer sue me? Group of answer choices Yes, for Wrongful Interference with a Business Relationship. Yes, for Misrepresentation/Fraud. No, under the concept of buyer beware (caveat emptor). No, because she assumed the risk when she purchased the business without seeing documentation for past revenue.