Manchester City took another step in his latest legal step against the Premier League over the Associated Party transactions, understands Sky Sports News.
Premier League announced other clubs about claim statements.
Premier League does not mean any comment, but this latest development has been expected and is part of the ongoing legal process.
APT rules are regulated by commercial stores closed between clubs and companies associated with their owners and require “real market values”.
These legal measures are separated to the one that covers more than 100 fees against the city for alleged violations of the Premier League financial rules.
The APT rules were first introduced in December 2021 after the Saudi takeover of Newcastle to ensure that commercial agreements with companies associated with the ownership of clubs were at real market value.
They also focused on income that could increase the city supported by Abu Dhabi from state entities through sponsorship.
The city brought a legal challenge after the Premier League blocked in progress in new, lucrative Etihad Airways and the first Abu Dhabi Bank. Premier League champions are owned by Vice President of Sae Sheikh Mansour.
The arbitration panel’s decision in February found that the error with the Premier League ability as a regulator to create rules is followed by an initial verdict in October.
The league responded to this by rewriting three areas of rules that were considered illegal, and the revision was handed over by most clubs in November.
Most remarkably, the real market value of loans for shareholders must now be involved in the evaluation of the profits and sustainability of clubs that determine how legitimate income is.
The League also ensured that the clubs will have access to the databand with comparable sponsorship values to evaluate their shops.
Richard Masters, CEO of Premier League, believes that these new rules have been replaced by the one that has now found that they are invalid by the court – trying to underline the impact of this decision.
However, the city also challenges the legality of the new rules that are designed to prevent the richest clubs to inflate the value of shops to spend multiple players and follow the rules of profit and sustainability (PSR).
Clubs can only lose £ 105 million in three years under PSR, which will remain on the spot next season in the middle of legal problems by blocking new regulations.
The city hopes that prefabricated rules for the third time in their favor, claim that the Premier League in November altered the rules that has now been found, should never be introduced.
All this is before the verdict is passed in a much larger and subsequent case, and the verdict is immediately due to more than 100 alleged violations of the financial rules dating back to 2009.