
3 April 2021 | 14 replies
The Borrower/Seller shall indemnify, defend and hold harmless the buyer and all persons or assigns, regardless of responsibility, from all costs, expenses, suits, liabilities, damages, attorney fees and claims of every type, including but not limited to those arising out of injury to any person, or damage to any real or personal property to any person, including the borrower and said financial institution, for; (i) any items resulting from the buyer buying the property, (ii) information furnished by the borrower or (iii) those items relating to the financial information, or (iv) the ability or inability to pay for or continue to support the debt of which the buyer is agreeing to.

28 July 2015 | 20 replies
I was hoping to get some valuable conversation out of this thread but instead I have spent my time defending myself.

5 December 2014 | 80 replies
However what does matter is defending the idea of difference.

19 September 2014 | 21 replies
@Joe Gore Joe the only way the defendant could get a default judgment is if he countersued and the plaintiff failed to show.

15 June 2013 | 83 replies
Otherwise, you have an agent taking advantage of you, period.Anyone who tries to defend this act is either a Realtor themselves or doesn't comprehend the true business of Real Estate from an investor's stand point, especially someone who is starting out and/green.

26 June 2014 | 20 replies
The Trustee shall not be required to convey or otherwise deal with the Trust property as long as any money is due to the Trustee under this Agreement; nor shall the Trustee be required to advance or pay out any money on account of this Trust or to prosecute or defend any legal proceedings involving this Trust or any property or interest under this Agreement unless he shall be furnished with sufficient funds or be indemnified to his satisfaction. 20.

29 September 2020 | 21 replies
Even if you did everything right, defending yourself against the SEC can break the bank.
13 November 2017 | 18 replies
Lloyd I am in no way defending him. blowing off appointments is not right.I was more curious as to where you were getting stuck..

19 December 2016 | 4 replies
I successfully defended an attempt at piercing the corporate veil for one of my clients earlier this year, so I may be able to offer you some insight.

14 April 2010 | 1 reply
While you could tell the bank you're walking away in the event of a claim and force them to defend the claim, without coverage the lender or the title company insuring the lender may have grounds to seek indemnification from you in the costs of the defense since title is in your name.You're right in that the insurance is double dipping if a premium is charged for both the lender and the owner.