NietzscheKeen
Well-Known Member
I have a question for everyone that is interested. I already have my own feelings on this subject, but wanted to make sure I wasn't being unfair or biased.
Here is the situation, a son wants to start a business against the advice of his parents. He needs a loan and eventually convinced his parents to put up about 40 acres of their land and two rent houses as collateral. The business fails rather quickly and the property is lost. The son manages to buy most of it back from the back, but keeps it as his own. I feel that him deeding the land that he purchased back to his parents is the right thing to do since it was theirs and they lost it because of him. He feels that since HE bought it, it is HIS regardless of the prior arrangements. Am I being unreasonable to feel that he has an ethical obligation to give the land back to his parents?
Here is the situation, a son wants to start a business against the advice of his parents. He needs a loan and eventually convinced his parents to put up about 40 acres of their land and two rent houses as collateral. The business fails rather quickly and the property is lost. The son manages to buy most of it back from the back, but keeps it as his own. I feel that him deeding the land that he purchased back to his parents is the right thing to do since it was theirs and they lost it because of him. He feels that since HE bought it, it is HIS regardless of the prior arrangements. Am I being unreasonable to feel that he has an ethical obligation to give the land back to his parents?