
31 July 2024 | 53 replies
Here's an example:https://hawaiisclassifieds.com...Hawaii is a judicial state so the proceedings are handled by the county courts.

31 July 2024 | 9 replies
As an alternative solution, most of the apartments in Lawrence Township now evict through Superior Court.

1 August 2024 | 35 replies
Those were the first couple of versions, there was only a few tabs when i got the copy --if i remember correctly, only two or three--, I believe it is more complex now, constantly adding more stuff around, for sure there was no business plan then for example.

31 July 2024 | 13 replies
Continue this until they are either evicted or their lease ends and they leave.My eviction process only stops when they pay everything they owe, which includes late fees and any fees associated with the eviction action (service of Notice, court filing, summons fees, etc.).

31 July 2024 | 10 replies
They can verify it meets current law, explain some of the more complex clauses (e.g. joint and several liability), and maybe provide suggestions on where you could strengthen it based on their experience.In my experience, most attorneys have very little experience with landlord-tenant disputes.

30 July 2024 | 2 replies
Not too much IRS guidance on this without going through some complex rules.

29 July 2024 | 5 replies
Read on.)The actual law does not specify any length of time from the time you give Notice before you can take the matter to court.
1 August 2024 | 125 replies
When the California legislature passed tougher anti-crime laws in the 2000s, the legislators knew they wouldn't work (based on Justice Department statistics), but elected officials have to do what the voters want if they want to keep their jobs (assuming the Supreme Court is OK with the legislation).I believe each person is an individual and should be treated as such.

31 July 2024 | 18 replies
It's a complex business, but I do believe in it.

29 July 2024 | 3 replies
In judicial foreclosure states, like FL, the proceedings must be conducted through the courts with a judge making a final ruling.