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Past,Present and Future

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Has anyone ever heard of a Federal Judge ordering a physician who discovered fraud on the part of a former associate to hold that former associate harmless in a hold harmless settlement agreement that specifically demands the release of not only known past harm of any kind but unknown past items, present items and ALL FUTURE as well?
 

Just Blue

Senior Member
Has anyone ever heard of a Federal Judge ordering a physician who discovered fraud on the part of a former associate to hold that former associate harmless in a hold harmless settlement agreement that specifically demands the release of not only known past harm of any kind but unknown past items, present items and ALL FUTURE as well?
Who are you in this situation? Are you one of the legal parties?
 

LdiJ

Senior Member
Has anyone ever heard of a Federal Judge ordering a physician who discovered fraud on the part of a former associate to hold that former associate harmless in a hold harmless settlement agreement that specifically demands the release of not only known past harm of any kind but unknown past items, present items and ALL FUTURE as well?
Could you perhaps rewrite that sentence. I am not certain of what you are asking.
 

quincy

Senior Member
Has anyone ever heard of a Federal Judge ordering a physician who discovered fraud on the part of a former associate to hold that former associate harmless in a hold harmless settlement agreement that specifically demands the release of not only known past harm of any kind but unknown past items, present items and ALL FUTURE as well?
I agree with LdiJ that your post as written is confusing.

Settlement agreements can be written to include terms that all parties agree to, including terms that address the future acts or actions of the parties.

If all evidence of fraud might not have been discovered yet, a hold harmless clause that addresses any future findings might be reasonable in order to reach a settlement. It ensures that another action cannot be filed against a party later on the same matter should additional evidence be discovered.
 

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