You agreed to such action(s) when you signed the contract for the services or items.
You can word your settlement OFFER any way you want. It will be up to the lender whether they agree to it or not. It will not come off completley do not waste your time.
As many as they pay you for. You and the company were supposed to agree on that number before you started on the job.
Underwriters are the institutions/individuals who agree to buy the shares of the company in case the company is unable to sell all its shares to the public. For providing this safety, the underwriters charge a commission to the company for providing this service
There are a couple of loan terms one must agree with before one could apply for a CCJ loan from Ocean Finance (not Oceans). But that is about it. One could check all the terms online at 'OceanFinance'.
Underwriters are the institutions/individuals who agree to buy the shares of the company in case the company is unable to sell all its shares to the public. For providing this safety, the underwriters charge a commission to the company for providing this service.
The lender must agree, and is unlikely to agree if you cannot refinance.
No. Insurance is the responsibility of the equipment operator. The bank my require the individual to prove they have insurance on the equipment.
Yes, Almost every Auto finance note contains language that requires you to maintain "Full Coverage" Auto Insurance for the term of your finance note. It just part of the contract you agree and sign when you financed the car. This is to protect the finance company from a loss of the vehicle. Remember the finance company still owns the vehicle until you pay it off. Failure to comply with the insurance requirements of the finance note you signed constitutes a default on your loan subjecting the borrower and the vehicle to whatever remedies are at the finance companies disposal, including repossession. If you act quickly, Are not behind on your car payments, Get your full coverage insurance in place and pay the towing fees, Call the company and be nice with them and assure them that you understand your obligations with apologies for any oversight, Most finance companies will let you take the vehicle back and continue paying your note.
They will charge based on the laws of the jurisdiction. And they will charge the maximum allowed under the law, but must have the court agree.
Absolutely. When you purchase and finance a vehicle you sign a legally binding contract. Perhaps you should read what you sign. The contract states that you agree to carry insurance that includes comprehensive and collision with a maximum deductible of usually $500. If you let your insurance cancel then you have broken the contract and therefore the finance company can reposses the vehicle.
A futures contract is a legally binding contract that agrees to buy or sell something at a previously agreed upon time with a previously agreed upon price. For example, a company might agree to purchase another company in July next year for 1 million dollars today.
Definitionally no. However, some carrier do have rules that regulate how long you must wait to be insured with them again. To get coverage before that time has elapsed they can allow you to reinstate only if you agree to pay the fee for the missed premiums.