Yes. If a company forges your name and signature on a contract and you can prove it, you have a right to pursue legal action.
Easy, you go to company and sue it.
If the provision of advance payment is there in the policy bond, you are at liberty to sue the Insurance Company for breach of contract.
Of course you can, and having a copy of that signed contract would be helpful...
no
A person cannot sue their spouse for breach of marriage contract. They can however sue them for divorce and end the contract of marriage.
A person can sue a forger if the person suffered damages as a result of the forgery.
Yes. The contract for services between you and your bail bondsman is an enforceable legal contract.
A minor cannot enter into a legal contract. Any loan they are a party to is invalid.
Sue Golding has written: 'The forging of a post liberal-democracy: Gramsci's attempt to ground democracy on the fractured terrain of historical subjectivity'
No. Only intended beneficiaries and contract parties can sue for breach of contract.
If there was a contract for services in effect, you can sue them for breach of contract.
You would be in breach of the contract and the other party to the contract would have cause to sue you. It would get more expensive for you in the end.You would be in breach of the contract and the other party to the contract would have cause to sue you. It would get more expensive for you in the end.You would be in breach of the contract and the other party to the contract would have cause to sue you. It would get more expensive for you in the end.You would be in breach of the contract and the other party to the contract would have cause to sue you. It would get more expensive for you in the end.