
27 March 2013 | 2 replies
They may accept the liability and pay, but you may need to do a friendly law suit at which point his liability will then defend the suit and if found to be the cause of damage, then pay damages which will probably include legal costs.

25 January 2016 | 103 replies
I don't believe he was defending the practice.

20 February 2014 | 13 replies
A shorter time would be less equitable to the defendant.

21 February 2014 | 5 replies
I don't know for sure if you can give it to the court, I think that is something the tenant has to do.There was a landlord who was there and the tenant wasn't even there to defend themselves and he lost his case because he casually mentioned the tenant owed him a couple thousand dollars after a partial payment he received.

12 March 2014 | 3 replies
If the first mortgage was recorded prior to April 1, 1992, the super lien will still be operative if the condominium declaration made reference to future amendments to the Florida Condominium Act (Chapter 718).The amount of the "super lien" is the lesser of: (a) unpaid common expenses and regular periodic assessments that accrued or became due during the six months immediately preceding the acquisition of title; or, (b) one percent of the original mortgage debt.The one-percent limitation does not apply unless the first mortgagee joins the association as a defendant in the foreclosure action.

25 February 2014 | 8 replies
For some of you who might have a distaste for lawyers or more importantly Criminal Defense lawyers, I don't defend people who commit murder, child molestation, rape, child abuse or anything of the sort.

26 February 2014 | 21 replies
Detroit has always been one of the riskiest cities but there are people who defend it.A lot of it depends on what your risk comfort level is, how much work do you want to do on a long-distance property, do you want some appreciation potential with it on top of the cash flow, are you a fan of headaches or prefer to avoid them (some markets are better for avoiding them than others), etc.

17 March 2014 | 11 replies
Texas may be different, but odd that IRS is a named defendant, without any lien in the public records.

28 April 2014 | 5 replies
@Sam Leon @Jeffrey Yates Obviously not a lawyer, but my understanding from multiple attorneys is: 1) The Super Priority Theory is dead, and unenforceable 2) If the county/city that holds the lien, filed the lien prior to the bank LP: a) If the FC complaint named the city/county as a Defendant, the lien is wiped out.

17 April 2014 | 19 replies
I like all the perspectives.I want to defend myself a little here . . .