Sunland Company purchased goods on account with a cost of $1150 on July 15 , terms 2/10, net/30, on which a return of $150 is granted on July 18. In the tabular analysis that follows, the payment of the account in full on July 24 is recorded as a decrease to Cash $980, a decrease to Inventory $20, and a decrease to Accounts Payable $1000. decrease to Cash $980, an increase to Interest Expense $20, and a decrease to Accounts Payable $980. decrease to Cash $1000, a decrease to Inventory $20, and a decrease to Accounts Payable $980. decrease to Cash $1150, and a decrease Accounts Payable $1150. CONSIDER: Whether employees and unions have the right to delay a third party from access to and from an employer's business in order to inform the public while picketing during a strike (video). In Unifor Canada Local 594 v Consumers' Co-Operative Refineries Limited, 2021 SKCA 34 , the union appealed an injunction restraining picketing, and in particular, a term of the injunction that allowed persons who crossed picket lines to decline to listen to the union's message and proceed without delay. The Saskatchewan Court of Appeal held that picketing was a form of expression and an essential tool in the economic arsenal of workers in the collective bargaining process. However, a third party had the right not to listen. The court held that the driver's exception, allowing a delay of 2 -minutes or until the driver of the motor vehicle indicated a desire to proceed, was a reasonable limit on the union's freedom of expression. The union appealed. The Supreme Court of Canada refused leave to appeal. ASSIGNMENT \#1: Do you agree with the driver's exception rule as a reasonable limit on the union's freedom of expression at a picket line? Explain your reasoning