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Mike Morgan wrote:
> Decedent left tangible personal property to A and intangible personal
> property to B. Part of the assets of the estate is ten Krugerrands (1 oz.
> gold coins).
>
> Are these tangible personal property or intangible?
>
Tangi
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Mike Morgan wrote:
> Decedent left tangible personal property to A and intangible personal
> property to B. Part of the assets of the estate is ten Krugerrands (1 oz.
> gold coins).
>
> Are these tangible personal property or intangible?
>
> Mik
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In article <8tek629t3vb37kdnm45e3iuof27vtgik2f@4ax.com>,
Mike Morgan <jandmmorgan@earthlink.net> wrote:
>Decedent left tangible personal property to A and intangible personal
>property to B. Part of the assets of the estate is ten Krugerrands (1 oz.
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Mike Morgan wrote:
> Decedent left tangible personal property to A and intangible personal
> property to B. Part of the assets of the estate is ten Krugerrands (1 oz.
> gold coins).
>
> Are these tangible personal property or intangible?
Is this
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prabbit1@shamrocksgf.com wrote:
> Not a lawyer and it would definitely depend on the laws of the
> state your in but my guess is that it actually started at the time
> the contract was signed and not when the job actually ended. But
> I'm willing to
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katrinapeker@yahoo.com wrote:
> Mr.Stuart Bronstein wrote:
>
>> I still don`t understand...The court had held that they had
>> wrongfully included a copyright statement.
>
> In the case of a "wrongfully included copyright statement" a
> publis
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In article <qsek6257m6eqvvbk95d8on065cr5va9g1s@4ax.com>,
<katrinapeker@yahoo.com> wrote:
>But in my case the *defendants position* (and practice) was that the
>artist`s images were his property,
No, that the derivative work (OK, that was hard t
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Hello
My friend is a Pimp (really he is :-) lol ) and he is thinking of
making a website advertising some prostitutes that they work for
him..is it legal??obviously is illegal correct?
what does he need to have in terms and conditions that he migh
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In article <hsek629428a9kabhnung7tv6r9l0u0mbsr@4ax.com>,
<barry@psyber.com> wrote:
>Hi,
>
>I have a friend whose daughter was convicted of DUI (under 21) and
>currently has a California restricted driver's license. She's
>ignoring the restrictio
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"Mark A" <nobody@nowhere.com> wrote in message
news:dsek62l2c65ub2pcro6i48r4kfeic7cd3m@4ax.com...
> The standard "CONTRACT TO BUY AND SELL REAL ESTATE" that has been approved
> by the Colorado Real Estate Commission, states the following:
>
> Mega
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DG wrote:
> To answer your question: restriction violation A does not pardon
> restriction violation B.
> "Selective enforcement" is illegal - but selective enforcement happens
> over the same issue, not differing issues.
You raise some excellent
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bgold@nyx.net (Barry Gold) wrote:
> Robert Bonomi <bonomi@host122.r-bonomi.com> wrote:
>>Nope. The family has no basis to sue. Responding is a
>>'discretionary' function. They don't _have_ to come when called.
>>Lots of case-law on this. Police
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I am writing a research paper on the specific domestic laws, practices
and regulations for the representation of the EU member states before
the ECHR. I am looking for its codification and the related the texts
in the national laws. I would deeply appr
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--------------------------------------------------------------
AN E-BULLETIN
LEGAL INFORMATION INSTITUTE -- CORNELL LAW SCHOOL
lii.law.cornell.edu
---------------------------------------------------------------
The following four decisions have just
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Barry Gold wrote:
> [OP's mother involved in traffic "accident" with another car. Mother
> has learner's permit, father was the car's owner and supervising
> licensed driver]
>
> [snip]
> >peter83810 wrote:
> >> Right after that, the other guy c
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I am planning on giving my employer the standard 2 weeks notice. However, I
am planning on giving them 1 week before my vacation and 1 week after my
vacation. This vacation has been scheduled for a long time and hence I
cannot change dates and am le
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The City of Raleigh, NC requires a "Home Occupancy Use Permit" (under
zoning laws) for anyone that uses their residential home address as a
business address. The fee is $65 per year. (This is in addition to the
$55 for a city business license.)
Some o
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