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<squash@peoriadesignweb.com> wrote in message
news:ngttr0hqqu1rdber2og6oi9v1e0jmo1oae@4ax.com...
> Is it ok to have my clients simply initial a word document and email it
> to me? Would this be an acceptable substitute to having them sign a
> paper co
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On Tue, 23 Nov 2004 18:14:01 -0500, Mark <mhet@freqhome.net> wrote:
>
>
>I am writing a novel and require help with one important detail.
>
>In general, how long on average does it take after the death of a person
>to settle an uncontested and str
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On Tue, 23 Nov 2004 18:14:44 -0500, sunNO6SPAMdog181@webtv.net (just
dave) wrote:
> Hi,
> I recently received a minor traffic ticket. But, if found guilty I
>am liable for a fine of up to $150 bucks & 2 points on my license.
> On the
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On Mon, 29 Nov 2004 13:41:58 -0500, "V" <vbiggs@frontiernet.net>
wrote:
>There are many parents of whom, in family/child support court that has not
>gotten any effective outcome from one particular judge. They elude, and he
>does nothing (not a benc
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On Mon, 29 Nov 2004 13:42:53 -0500, kewlkarun@yahoo.com (KK) wrote:
>Greetings,
> This is the same question someone asked in past without a reply to it.
>Could anyone kindly address this issue,
>I got a job offer and eventually I signed the offer le
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This is a reminder about the misc.legal.moderated policy on
submissions containing munged headers such as
From: biff@willy.NOSPAMloman.org
1. Posters are free to munge headers (leaving aside forgeries in the
name of an actual third party). Spammer
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I was convicted of DUII in Oregon back in 1999 and was also in an accident
where several were injured. I was then charged with and assault for each of
the injuries which were also felonies. Since them I completed treatment, go
to AA and have just
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This question pertains to a Texas homeowner association which has the legal
form of a Texas non-profit corporation.
When legal documents of the assoc. (bylaws, deed restrictions) are amended,
does anything have to be filed with the county or state
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hi - i have a non compete signed with my current employer in new
jersey. if i go work for a competitor in california can they sue me in
the nj courts. i have heard that non competes are much harder to
enforce under california state law.
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Has anyone had a positive outcome with a private detective in New Orleans? I'm
giving another try to nailing the bastard who damaged my kitchen roof. I've
done all the recommeded calls, filed all the papers in civil court, but the
court marshal and a l
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I've heard all about this: "oh well that's what they're expected to do"
and perhaps they won't get re-elected and perhaps they might get a
reprimand.
Bull Shit.
It doesn't happen, and if it does, it rarely affects their paycheck.
So, someone (pre
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In California, assume the following situation. A zero net worth,
soon-to-be judgement debtor forms a Florida LLC while domiciled in
Florida. The manager member of the the multi-member LLC headed by
soon-to-be judgement debtor relocates to California
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JohnSmith wrote:
> Hello everyone.
>
> I got a ticket last week for sppeding. I got what's called a "Uniform
> Traffic Ticket". I was clocked at 103 MPH in a 65 MPH zone. I do not
> have a license, but a learners permit. I never got a ticket (Which
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I had some $2K balance with American Express. I have been paying them
3 years without late and for some reason, they did not receive a
payment in July 04 and the late fee and interest charges jumped from
prime to 27% and my account was assigned to a co
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Paul Cassel wrote:
> I don't understand your position here. If we agree that the SoL only
> applies to filing a suit to recover a debt and does not affect the
> debt's existence at all, then why would the OP prevail in court? The SoL
> isn't at is
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I wrote:
> >For example, assume there are meters, and the sign says "2 hour parking
> >8AM - 6PM" You park your car and put in the coins for 2 hours. 1 1/2
> >hours later you come back and put in another 1 1/2 hour's worth of
> >coins. This wou
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On Tue, 07 Dec 2004 21:51:47 -0500, Stan Brown <the_stan_brown@fastmail.fm>
wrote:
>"Natedawg" wrote in misc.legal.moderated:
>>After ordering the audio tape of the infraction hearing, from what we
>>could make out of the terrible recording the ju
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I was wondering if anyone can help me with this legal issue.
I have a friend of mine who was physically struck while standing on the
sidewalk, by a passing car . This accident was witnessed by multiple
witnesses, and then the "suspect" then immediat
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Got a quick question about statute of limitations in Pennsylvania. A 25
year old guy just accused me of beating him severely with a tire rod
when he was 5 years old. He said he remembered it happening when he had
a nightmare a few months ago. He is thr
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I need a little help with the phrasing in a purchase agreement;
specifically about a cloud on the title and lack of title
insurance\uninsurable title. I am selling a piece of vacant real
estate. The buyer is aware that the property has a clouded titl
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"David Martel" <marte005@earthlink.net> wrote in message
news:lfttr01r4o8encgaq72i4tmi6g0fnfv3o2@4ax.com...
| . I think most Christmas carols are in
| the public domain, that is they are no longer protected by
copyright.
|
While the songs themse
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[cc'd to previous poster; follow-ups in newsgroup suggested]
"Dick Adams" wrote in misc.legal.moderated:
>Nol Pros.
>
>Is that the correct spelling?
I have heard it as "nolle pros.", orally abbreviated "nolle", to
rhyme with "Polly".
>What i
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"rocky" wrote in misc.legal.moderated:
>I have been at my apartment on a six month lease, which ended st of
>October. The landlord sent me a reminder letter to renew my lease for a
>further six months. After they sent there third letter I wrote a lette
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"dce3535" <rajgolig@pediatrics.ohio-state.edu> wrote in
news:pgttr0lqdqotfa5le1vdl16pkbkvdk8ebs@4ax.com:
> We recently signed a purchase agreement with a prominent builder in
> Columbus, OH. However, we have come to realize that throughout the
> pr
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Rob <rob@yoohoo.com> wrote in
news:lgttr0lhhik47rg2kfs74o1o37ct5vp7a0@4ax.com:
> Two years ago I purchased a 4 year old seashore home with my
> girlfriend as "tenants in common", 50/50. The home was appraised at
> $490k and we paid $489k. I put 100
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>Interesting. Does that mean, because I _am_ a RADAR expert, I shouldn't
>have much trouble challenging RADAR data on a factual basis, if I do
>get a RADAR ticket?
>(Yes, I probably would challenge it, if my fine plus estimated
>insurance premium i
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I have a friendly helpful next-door neighbor here in the woods (PA)
where the zoning ordinance does NOT prohibit open burning. This is a
lifelong neighbor (30+) who grew up along with us and with whom we have
up until now been on very good terms. (Th
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On Tue, 14 Dec 2004 09:21:56 -0500, rdadams@smart.net (Dick Adams)
wrote:
>Nol Pros.
>Is that the correct spelling?
Yes, more or less.
>What is the correct pronunciation?
Roughly, "null prahs."
>What does it mean?
"We're not going fo
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I am an engineer working for an engineering firm. Our firm was working
on a project in another state. While I am a licensed engineer in my
home state and not the state we're doing the project in, I have not yet
stamped any drawings in
any state as I
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Thoth wrote:
>
> "Barry Gold" <barrydgold@comcast.net> wrote in message
> news:7i0nr09ukrli595n3rtnvacsg5kq711jv6@4ax.com...
> > It's true that if OP does nothing, BofA can keep the money. But she has
> > the option of suing for the return of h
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"John F. Carr" wrote:
>
> In article <7i0nr09ukrli595n3rtnvacsg5kq711jv6@4ax.com>,
> Barry Gold <barrydgold@comcast.net> wrote:
> >
> >
> >> Thalia Noir wrote:
> >> [BoA charged his new account for what they claim is an arrears condition
> >
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Dick Adams wrote:
> Nol Pros.
>
> Is that the correct spelling?
Short for "nolle prosequi", straight Latin for "will not pursue it".
> What is the correct pronunciation?
>
> What does it mean?
Prosecution will not pursue the case, effectiv
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JimJx wrote:
> I live in VA and about 4 months ago, the transmission in my car gave
up
> the ghost.. While my wife was talking to my step daughter, who lives
> in FL, she mentioned to her tht we were going to have to buy another
> car. Since step
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Barbara Harris wrote:
> If there is a Life Estate, with my aunt has the owner, and her son is
> designated in the estate, with no other living heirs other than her
son's
> wife,now that my aunt has been dead for 7 years, if the son should
die, will
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<jobeth66@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:anttr01g4sl8ki2o1biqr77m4qvditfc72@4ax.com...
>(And
> remember - anyone who tells you that you WILL get more with a lawyer?
> That lawyer is going to take 33% off the top of your settlement. So if
> the c
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In article <1fttr0plfqcmggf1gbglch9krbkqn2vii8@4ax.com>,
Thalia Noir <thalia_noir@yahoo.com> wrote:
>> [BoA charged his new account for what they claim is an arrears condition
>> on an account from 1989. He wonders about the SoL here]
>Now, assum
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Rob wrote:
[bought house with g.f. where he d/p 100k and she 20k. Now she wants to
split the sheets and keep house]
..
>
> I'm confused about the following:
>
> Wouldn't she have to re-qualify for a mortgage if I decide to take her
> payout?
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Dick Adams wrote:
> Nol Pros.
>
> Is that the correct spelling?
>
> What is the correct pronunciation?
>
> What does it mean?
>
> Under what conditions can you get a judge to do it?
>
It's an abbreviation for Nole Prosequi or Nolle Prosequ
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<<<<<I don't have a survey of the firms' billings much less profits, but my
personal unscientific info is that the only small firms doing well are
those who have done well in a few big PI cases or those doing stuff like
mass collections for credit c
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In article <4fttr0di14f5kpophjgstlok4g53qjd584@4ax.com>,
rdadams@smart.net (Dick Adams) wrote:
> Nol Pros.
>
> Is that the correct spelling?
"Nol. pros." is an abbrebiation for "Nolle Prosequi"
================================================
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In article <4fttr0di14f5kpophjgstlok4g53qjd584@4ax.com>,
rdadams@smart.net (Dick Adams) wrote:
> Nol Pros.
>
> Is that the correct spelling?
Yes. It's an abbreviation of "nolle prosequi" (Latin, "to be unwilling
to pursue").
> What is the
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Question about closing an Estate in New York City
1) All known creditors have been paid
2) All assets distributed
3) Inventory filed, no estate taxes needed, but too large to be
processed as "small estate".
4) More than 7 months have passed since a
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"rocky" <rochellebaker@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:ugttr05ialjs9a4jgc02fejmqus4imng66@4ax.com...
> After they sent there third letter I wrote a letter
> back of acceptance but never signed a new lease aggreement.
Why don't you sign the lease
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Barbara Harris wrote:
> If there is a Life Estate, with my aunt has the owner, and
> her son is designated in the estate, with no other living
> heirs other than her son's wife,now that my aunt has been
> dead for 7 years, if the son should die,
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Jorge Mendez wrote:
> my mother had a life estate on her home, with remainder going to
> me upon her death. When she died in 1998, I did not transfer the
> property, just left it as is, showing a life estate in mother's
> name, (property tax bill
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rocky wrote:
> I have been at my apartment on a six month lease, which ended
> st of October. The landlord sent me a reminder letter to renew
> my lease for a further six months. After they sent there third
> letter I wrote a letter back of accep
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Rob wrote:
> Two years ago I purchased a 4 year old seashore home with my girlfriend
> as "tenants in common", 50/50. The home was appraised at $490k and we
> paid $489k. I put 100k down and she put 20k down. Based on our incomes at
> the time we
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Dick Adams wrote:
> Nol Pros.
> Is that the correct spelling?
I think so.
> What is the correct pronunciation?
The way it looks. It's short for "nolle prosequi."
> What does it mean?
According to Black's Law Dictionary:
"A formal en
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Arthur L. Rubin wrote:
> I seem to recall that some such laws didn't apply to Federally
> chartered banks, although I'm not sure of that particular law.
> In California, it's (fairly) clear that a Federally chartered
> bank need not follow state
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John F. Carr wrote:
> In some states the statute of limitations is disregarded for a
> counterclaim up to the value of the original claim
That's the rule in California. Except that the offsetting claim can
only be asserted if there was a time
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