
9 May 2016 | 6 replies
anybody can sue anybody for anything,,,it even costs big bucks to defend the innocent.Besides all that,,, here,,, those houses need thin osb to seal the cracks in sheathing,housewrap and making the windows proper depth.HERE we can take off our own,which is a cool drizzly day job.

26 January 2016 | 4 replies
But a New York appellate court made the astonishing ruling that the house was haunted:"Whether the source of the spectral apparitions seen by defendant seller are parapsychic or psychogenic, having reported their presence in both a national publication (Readers' Digest) and the local press (in 1977 and 1982, respectively), defendant is estopped to deny their existence and, as a matter of law, the house is haunted."

24 May 2017 | 2 replies
Unfortunately, your agent does not have access to a proper policy, so they need to hobble this one together.You should get a commercial policy listing the LLC as the Named Insured with a $1M limit, which is standard for a commercial policy.Regarding your coverage concerns, the General Liability policy covers you agains Bodily Injury and would help defend you in a claim resulting from PM negligence.The Property policy would cover fire damage and most water related claims, except flood.You would need to buy a separate flood policy to get this coverage.
13 July 2017 | 46 replies
Typically it is the people who live in these places who feel they must defend their city.

10 January 2019 | 6 replies
it wont defend against CC&Rs right?
5 April 2017 | 20 replies
Who knows what she spent defending her case but I do know you want to think hard before you try to force something in court.RR

30 April 2017 | 31 replies
The whole concept of Small Claims is that you don't have to have an attorney to litigate, nor defend yourself.

8 May 2017 | 19 replies
To verify the defendant in the eviction lawsuit was the same person as my applicant, through searching online I found a list of properties associated with the plaintiff (real unique name).

13 May 2023 | 74 replies
I would not ever give him specifics as to why you have not chosen to rent to him - that just opens yourself up to having to explain, justify and defend your decision.

12 April 2009 | 13 replies
She could get into an accident running an errand for you and the plaintiff's attorney will be happy to prove she was your employee at the time and you will be a co-defendant, and then the government guys show up with back taxes and fines.etc.Now for paying a percent of each deal.