
26 June 2015 | 8 replies
The article mentions Millennials following the "American prescription for success" which I think is key to why my (millennial) generation is in our current situation.

1 August 2019 | 2 replies
Clause wording:To the maximum extent permitted by law, Tenant shall not be permitted to, and shall notpermit any family, visiting friends, dependents, guests, licensees or invitees of Tenant to grow, produce,possess, consume, use, smoke, or ingest any marijuana, cannabis or any products or ingestibles containingmarijuana or cannabis in any location in, on or about the Premises; the foregoing prohibition to beabsolute and without exception and shall include any growing, production, possession, use orconsumption pursuant to any medical use or medical prescription, or any medical, retail or recreationalmarijuana activities that may otherwise be permitted under any local, state or federal laws, rules orregulations now or hereafter in effect.

11 August 2019 | 5 replies
Now, with a somewhat newer home that is up to code, the prescription is more about doing a remodel, but using rehab contractors, not remodeling contractors.

21 September 2019 | 40 replies
You still need a prescription from a doctor. https://www.akc.org/expert-advice/lifestyle/everything-about-emotional-support-animals/

23 September 2019 | 1 reply
See this article by Indiana Attorney, Patrick Murphy, discussing recent Indiana cases of Adverse Possession.If the driveway is on your land, and she has no easement, then it could be possible that your neighbor developed a prescriptive easement right to use the driveway by her and her predecessors using it along with you and your predecessors for 20 years.

13 June 2019 | 18 replies
That's why unwritten doctrines such as prescription, adverse possession, parole agreements, unrecorded land contracts, wills, etc exist.
3 May 2019 | 4 replies
In your case here, there's probably a prescriptive easement through the church area that you can have enforced if it comes down to it.

5 May 2019 | 5 replies
Doctors are writing prescriptions without verifying the need, making any attempts to correct the actual problem, or considering how it impacts society or business owners.
19 July 2019 | 39 replies
I do know the state statutes do not forbid a landlord from adding a provision in the lease stating any personal property left behind may be considered abandoned and that the landlord may dispose of it in any manner they deem reasonable, save for prescription drugs.

2 July 2019 | 8 replies
You have to actually evaluate someone to know if that is the right prescription.