In 2014, the owners of the building on Celovška Street in Ljubljana unanimously agreed on a separation agreement. The notary's office electronically filed the agreement in August 2014 under DN No. 171892/2014 and is currently still awaiting assignment to the court. A few days ago we called around and got a reply from the District Court that currently cases from 2011 are being assigned to the courts, but there are still about 50 cases to go. In business, the success of a business is a matter of responsiveness, which is counted in days, if not hours, and we do not understand how one such case can take almost a year to be assigned to court and will probably take another 3 years. Within a year, we have sold 1 office space in the building, 1 owner has entered bankruptcy proceedings, 1 owner was already bankrupt and 3 tenants have changed. Due to pending ownership issues, purchase payments remain partially unpaid as all purchase payments are linked to the transfer of ownership by the Land Registry, as well as complications with insolvency proceedings and lease agreements. Why do such cases, where the separation agreements are clear and all creditor consents have been obtained, take so long to be allocated and dealt with in the courts? The economy cannot function normally with the courts organised in this way, as more and more unresolved/unfinished business then accumulates in a chain due to unresolved cases. We do not know what the rest of the pending cases are, but we suggest that such cases should be prioritised according to the urgency of the case. A trivial case like ours, where all that is needed is \\\\\\\"stamp\\\\\\\", simply cannot wait 4 years for a court allocation. If some in society are not in a hurry, the economy is always in a hurry.