No. If you catch someone with the wallet you left on the table it would be considered "unlawful possesion", which is a summary offence and only punishable with a MAX of 6 months in jail.
Abandond property is free for the taking, so you can just take it. Double check with your local sherriffs dept or police dept just to be sure, but i am 99.99 percent positive that abandond property can be claimed by whomever comes across it. go to the dmv and file a lien on the car
the person that put the accident in motion.......whomever if found ''at fault'' for the accident.....not necessarily whomever knocked over the sign
Collision protects you and your car if you are in an accident, liability protects whomever you may hit.
No, he is entitled to leave his property to whomever he chooses. You should respect his choice.
Whomever caused the accident is generally considered the at fault party. It does not matter whether or not your in a parking lot.
Whomever the lien holder has hired for that purpose. Providing you have defaulted on the payment terms of your contract.
You can leave your property to whomever you wish. As long as your spouse and children are provided for, the rest doesn't matter.
Whomever files to be the executor. The estate can be opened by any heir or beneficiary, or even a debtor.
You will have to transfer the title, but, the lien that is on your property -if it has a personal guarantor, will not be tranferable, most likely, to a business entity unless you or whomever the owner happens to be, is willing to remain the personal guarantor.
If you have a receipt showing you are the legal owner of the property and that you have paid for the property, you will need to show that to either the police, or the judge.... whomever you choose to contact regarding the matter.
to use whomever in a scentance you have to be speaking of a person eg. whomever wrote this is in big trouble!
I don't know what country you're talking about but there is no such law in the US. When a person dies, his or her property will be left to whomever is named to receive the property in the will. if there is no will, the property will go to the spouse. If there is no spouse, the property will be inherited equally by all children of the deceased. If there are no children, no spouse, and no will, then I'm not sure.