
18 April 2015 | 3 replies
Her parents sued the family who had the swingset and won.This article by a lawyer says they won't win a lawsuit against you unless you knew the playset was dangerous, but that still wouldn't stop people from suing you.http://www.zimmetzimmet.com/faq/child-injuries/im-...You could take the chance, but you'd need to make sure it was really well maintained, and as I said, you would probably still get sued and even if you won, it would be expensive.

2 August 2019 | 154 replies
Everyone has to be treated and screened equally and any Gov't support should be considered income just as some people choose to use child support as income.

19 April 2015 | 7 replies
I just don't see anything ever coming of it, so I really don't think you have to worry about it.I know these relationships can be tricky, with the child involved.

24 April 2015 | 14 replies
Kind of like with children....if you ask a child to eat his vegetables, most will put up a fight.

25 April 2015 | 12 replies
The tenant can violate their entitlement agreement (or whatever it's called) for personal reasons - like getting behind on child support, drug use, or having a guest who is a convicted felon on the property, but if the actual property does not pass - even if it fails because of a condition the tenant caused, my experience has been that it's going to fall on the homeowner.

21 May 2015 | 23 replies
I think she may be a bored house wife but she's more of an ex-lawyer who has enormous anxiety about her quasi gifted, quasi autistic child and needs to convince herself she is protecting him.

6 September 2017 | 30 replies
I accept any parent signing the point is not the parent income. it is their willingness to stand behind their child should they trash the house.

25 May 2015 | 35 replies
Cons: A bankruptcy "less than a year old" (I'm not sure if that's since filing or since discharge), no recent rental history because he was a homeowner, a new wife from his native country joining him soon with her child, and a poor financial condition reportedly from an ex-wife who ran off with the money.Pros: A seemingly stable but not particularly lucrative corporate job, apparent sincerity about starting a new life, and willingness to put down $10,000 on a one-year lease for $1,550 a month.

24 May 2015 | 18 replies
If a child tresspasses, jumps on the trampoline, gets hurt...the property owner is liable.
25 July 2015 | 17 replies
. - The ERMI testing protocol was derived to analyze a home's history of elevated mold levels to help determine if early childhood mold exposure could impact a child's health.