You can file suit for damages in the appropriate civil court. HOWEVER - if the promise was not made in the form a written contract or written guarantee, you're wasting your time.
IF you can prove the error originated with them , and you can disprove the false info. It's a bit tricky. Get a lawyer.
it depends on what your job is, if you are a:detective, yesbuilder nopolice officer, yesplumber, noif it was concerning you, yesif it wasn't concerning you, no
You'd have to prove that giving her the information caused damage to you. If she hasn't used the information for anything, you wouldn't have grounds to sue.
If you think you can prove the claims were false, I'd look into suing the company for false termination. You can talk to almost any lawyer free of charge on an initial consultation. They can offer excellent advice based on the merits of your particular case. sue them for defamed. if nesscary sue them for that they are slander.
Yes.
A promise ring is generally given to promise to get an engagement ring in the future. No, you cannot sue this young man because he broke his promise. You have learned a valuable lesson that you need to be more careful about who promises you what.
You can sue anyone for anything.
The tenses of "sue" are sue, sued, suing. I will sue the company. She sues everyone. (or She sued Tom.) He will be suing the company.
Easy, you go to company and sue it.
yes a jewelry company can sue someone with good cause.
yes. you can sue an at fault driver if his insurance company refuses to pay your claim. it would not be proper to sue the insurance company.
yes...