Want this question answered?
A contractor can be charged with theft and fraud. The crime is the same regardless of the relationship. The contract can be used to show what was expected.
No
depending if your a corp. and what type s-corp,LLC.etc.. No they can still file suits against you but it can help with lawyers and payments. No it does not.
Do the work, the claim is going to count against you now that a check was issued. You should not have filed if you did not intend to do the work.
As they relate to businesses, legal documents concerning city codes, permits, and licenses are filed at a city hall.
Yes and no. The contractor can file a lien against your house for non-payment. Even if you honestly don't owe the contractor any money, he may still lien your house; he will eventually have to prove the lien's validity in court or it is automatically released. No lien can be filed against your car. However, if the contractor gets a judgment against you, that judgment may be executed against your car and home to secure payment.
Yes, I've done it for a military contractor. As long as you can prove you are in a better position financially, and not subject to bribery's.
No. The contractor must sue the tenant for the money due.
"First and formost, to be/have a licensed contrator to build, secondly to have recieved education in the field and having filed for permits. All are needed to build a house."
Take This To Civil Court, I Don`t Think So. Talk To Your County Attorney About This, Its Free And He`s On Your Side.
A contractor's bond is a requirement for the issuance of an active license, reactivation of a license, and for the maintenance of an actively renewed license. The bond is filed for the benefit of consumers who may be damaged as a result of defective construction or other license law violations, and for the benefit of employees who have not been paid their due wages.
probably none.