Of course tell them to rent half of your property if not sue them....its your property you have earned it...Kick them off
Yes. Any property left in the vehicle when it was repossessed is additional property, not part of the repossession. As private property, the repossession company is liable to inventory the porperty and store it so that it may be recovered. State laws vary a bit, but the standard storage limit is thirty days. During this time they may assess a storage fee. You, the property owner must pay this fee to recover your property. Property that is not recovered in the time alloted by law may be discarded as the company sees fit.
A car that is actually YOURS cannot be repossessed, as it's paid off. If you have a vehicle being repossessed, they're able to do this because it's actually the finance company which owns that vehicle and possesses their title. A recovery agent can, on behalf of the lienholder, go onto private property in order to recover the lienholder's property - with limitations. They cannot cross a locked gate, and they cannot enter a locked building.
Because shareholders only invest their money in the business while the company does all the operations and work hard to get the profits.If the company is doing all the operations than they deserve to recover loses first.
The answer you want is in the auction documents involved in your purchase. There is no standard.
A virus or trojan can cause valuable data loss. It can cost thousands for these business to recover the lost data.
The present owner is the only person who can recover.
Repossession companies must give you the opportunity to recover your personal belongings. That being said, they need not do so at the time of repossession. If they store your property for any length of time, the may charge a storage fee. They are not required to hold your property indefinitely either. If you make no attempt to recover you belongings, the repossession company will dispose of it after 30-45 days.
I took time off work to recover from my surgery. The economy will soon recover from its recession. She hired a private detective to recover her stolen documents. Give me a minute to recover my sanity, please.
No you can't recover the property. It was sold to another person and they own it now and unless they put it up for sale they is no way for you to get it back. And regardless of whether or not they put it up for sale there is no way to recover the money you already paid toward the original mortgage note.
It depends on the credit card application and the structure of the company. Most credit cards issued to a small business are guaranteed by the owner. In that case, you must pay. If the card was issued soley to the company, the credit card company could sue your corporation to recover any assets available. If the company was a sole proprietorship or a partnership, you are liable.
Yes. Any business or person that accepts another person's property is legally required to take the needed precautions and reasonable action to insure the safety of the property in question. Unfortunately, in many situations litigation becomes necessary for the owner to recover property damage expenses.
Property finance is the immediate financial help to recover the financial gap that appears because of sudden property investment.