
26 August 2020 | 5 replies
To adverse possess, you need to fence of and notoriously defend that property against others and most especially the true owner for the requset time period.

5 September 2020 | 12 replies
So in short, no.What type of litigation do you plan on having to defend against?

7 September 2020 | 9 replies
In my experience notice through publication is a last resort after all other methods of locating and serving the defendant(s) are exhausted.

8 September 2020 | 3 replies
As he stood in the doorway he told them to come on it but if they touched him, he'd defend himself.

29 September 2020 | 49 replies
I won't name names, because I don't need people coming at me to defend their state, haha.

21 September 2020 | 5 replies
Write to your MLA or to Steve Clark (Minister of Municipal Affairs and Housing).

19 December 2020 | 4 replies
They will defend against the claim and determine if it's legit.

9 August 2012 | 7 replies
I don't know about your state but don't take home inspectors reports as the gospel.As a buyer learn as much as you can and challenge them to defend their findings.In GA anyone can be a home inspector.So qualifications,number of inspections,previous industry history,ongoing training etc. is critical.So your home inspector who went up in the attic didn't see the cut outs for the vents showing on the roof??

20 August 2012 | 13 replies
Your CPA's advice is "aggressive" (gets you to a lower tax bill), but the challenge is in showing that it is also applicable and accurate to some degree - can you (and the CPA) defend the CPA's position?

22 August 2012 | 22 replies
I am not saying he is wrong or would lose but any suit costs money to defend and is stressful.