Depends on the state you live in and their repossession laws. If you are smart you will return the car if you are unable to pay for it. The car belongs to the bank until it is payed for.
I think so
a place is very popular or you cannot take something because it is property of someone else.
You may cause an accident, injure yourself or someone else, cause damage to property or end up with a traffic violation.
The reason to take safety precautions is to prevent injury, illness or death to you or someone else, and to prevent damage to property. The consequences of not taking appropriate safety precautions are the you or someone else may be injured, made ill, or killed, or you may cause substantial damage to someone else's property or to your own.
In most areas, if you are in fear for your life, or the life of someone else. You can take lethal action (kill).
Take a copy of the will - your birth certificate and the deeds of the property to a Soliciter and tell him what you want to do.
Yes, there are many ways to lose your property, including adverse possession, eminent domain, or execution of an unpaid tax levy.
Well I believe if your fence is on someone else is property and they don't like it they can take you to court. And if they can prov it you can be court order to move it.
No
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Whether or not you can take things left for trash legally depends on the state. In most cases probably not because the trash in located on someone else's property and you do not have permission to do so.
The northern states had to return the property of someone (slave owner) back to him. Slaves were property like any thing else as would be a horse. Canada didn't have to do that.