In a civil case, yes. Though collections can be a bit of a problem.
You do unless court costs included as part of your award. Otherwise your atty deducts his fees.
The loser.
The plaintiff does when they file a claim. These charges can be recovered if the plaintiff wins his case.
Each parent usually pays their own fees for child support. One parent can always request that the other parent pays for the fees incurred due to the hearing.
The costs a person will typically have to pay are fees of court. The court will generally decide if the person will or will not be subjugated to pay the fees.
It depends on the context. If it is used in an order from the court, it means that the attorney has asked that their fees be included as part of the judgement (i.e.: loser pays them) but that issue hasn't yet been decided by the court.
The only thing you would have to pay is the same amount that everyone else (including attornies) pays to file papers or process their case through the court system. There are no extra court fees for representing yourself. Check with your local Clerk of Court's office for this information.
Losing party will pay some, but not all, costs. Each side is responsible for their own attorneys fees unless there is an attorneys fees provision in the contract.
Only if the court says you are. Ordinarily, each side pays its own attorney's fees.
Buyer pays the notary and fees.
It all depends on how the court settlement is worded and/or what kind of agreement existed between client and attorney.
Short answer - "No".Added: "Somebody" pays their fee - in this case YOU. You don't really think they work for free do you?
If you live in a state that does not regulate the fees/premiums, then a title agency may be willing to negotiate the costs of the premiums. Or, they may be able to negotiate some of the fees, like searches/abstracts, copy fees, etc. If you live in a regulated states, all fees or some fees may be overseen by that State's Department of Insurance and whatever are the state-regulated fees MUST be charged. It would be illegal to over-charge or under-charge the fees. A Buyer and Seller can negotiate freely as to who pays what fees of the title insurance costs. In some states, tradionally a seller pays for the Owner's Policy and the Buyer pays for the loan policy covering their mortgage. In other states the seller pays for all fees and in others, the buyer pays. However, there are no laws as to who pays for what, therefore, between the buyer and seller, it is always open to negotiation.