FreeAdvice has a new Terms of Service and Privacy Policy, effective May 25, 2018. By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our Terms of Service and use of cookies.
The waiver will cover negligence, but gross negligence is hard to get waived. I think the manager is safe unless there is some fact showing gross negligence or above.
The neighbor's duty in this situation is unclear. What did the neighbor do, exactly, that caused the damage? What would a...
In re Marriage of Arvin, 540 NE 2d 919 - Ill: Appellate Court, 2nd Dist. 1989
If the language is not there:
"Unless otherwise agreed by the parties in a written agreement set forth in the judgment or otherwise approved by the court, the obligation to pay future maintenance is terminated upon...
I think that is at least one important fact that will help determine if the act was "reckless" or not.
I also think /u/bartdesoma would be foolish to answer it in a public forum even if he believes the answer would help him.
I have some big dogs. They love kids and kids love them even though the dogs look scary to the parents. When the kids come to pet, even with my permission, I am on ninja alert and physically ready to pull the dogs off if there is a problem.
The point is, even though I am comfortable with them...
I manage/general partner many entities that I materially participate in (by ownership) that own and rent real property as their sole function. I do this for more than 1/2 of my time and for more than 750 hours a year. I also have a couple of properties in my own name. I have elected to aggregate...
I've been on many mailing lists, many forums, many newsgroups and many places like here of like and different topics since before there was a World Wide Web and you get to feel social connection after a while through the electronic media. It was always very touching when one with a living...
Sure there is.
Sure, there is.
Sure, there is, xxxxxxxxxx.
While I understand the joke of taking the word literally, tone in writing is getting the attitude of the writer across to the reader.
It seems the new section 199A in the proposed regulations released today has essentially the same issue and commentary I see say it is unresolved. Is renting real property a trade or business if the owner is a real estate professional?[With qualifying material participation in the activity.]...
The mortgage is secured by the property, it does not show ownership of the property. The deed is the guide.
But, it is a guide. There can be any number of problems with a deed that can only be fixed by other information.
Please, people, I'll be as polite as a politician telling the people how lucky they are they voted him in. (Which, admittedly, is a lot less of a guide today.) Looking at the thread, that fellow /u/latigo would probably approve of the path I've chosen. I haven't seen his postings. Is he still...
Professionals can be nice and professionals can be not nice.
From the focus on the contract and ability to justify all costs, I'm thinking I'm going not nice. I will professionally expect him to make assurances he will complete the work he agreed to for the price agreed to and will remove the...
I agree that most (but the deed) can pretty easily be done by myself. But, while I deal with attorneys on a regular basis, I'm not one. This is my wife's inheritance. She's the one who picked this attorney because it was the one dad choose so he must be alright. However, she recognizes the time...
My wife's father died a couple of years ago. We went to the attorney who wrote the parent's trust years ago to settle things. She is the sole direct beneficiary with her son as contingent beneficiary. We had four goals:
1. Make wife trustee of the trust.
2. Create a declaration/abstract of trust...
The difference is only $20-30,000 and the offer you made is $200,000?
I guess I'm missing something. But, since you're in court already, my knowing what is going on helps about zero. So the best I can say is good luck.
I thought we were talking of a major issue over millions of dollars. That many years of errors in capital accounts in an entity of what you're talking about could mean the shifting of millions of dollars from one to another. You've got to consider the cost of litigation in your argument. Even if...
I don't know if getting a lawyer letter is the best choice.
The OP has a right to get his property. The normal lawsuit to recover wrongfully withheld personal property is conversion. The OP should win such a lawsuit in regards to his tools. But, isn't the other party going to counterclaim for...
This site uses cookies to help personalise content, tailor your experience and to keep you logged in if you register.
By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies.