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the standard policy says two years
Your question is too broad. There are thousands of federal, state and local laws that apply to property. You need to limit your question to a specific category or spend some time doing research in a state law library.
The plaintiff loses.
Investigations have no statutory time limit. They can take as long as they take. Obviously not years! But in a shooting situation, certainly weeks woul dnot be out of the question. It all hinges on the circumstances.
As long as BOTH the defense and the prosecution agree to the extensions there really is no statutory time limit.
There is no statutory time limit on this period of time. It can take, as long as it takes for the administrative and legal processes necessary to move a prisoner from state.
If they have already been arraigned there is no statutory time limit for the next step except for the "speedy trial" rule, and many (most?) defense attorneys routinely waive this time limit in order to better prepare their cases.
They have until their investigation discloses enough probable cause to make the arrest. There is no statutory time limit on making an arrest.
If they have already been arraigned there is no statutory time limit for the next step except for the "speedy trial" rule, and many (most?) defense attorneys routinely waive this time limit in order to better prepare their cases.
What are you being "held" for? If you are going to be charged and arraigned the time limit is governed by constitutional law. If you are being helf for extradition, then there is no statutory time limit.... as long as the extraditing state is in the process of removing you.
Depending on where you are (I can only speak for the U.S.), there may be no restriction on how long insurance has to act on a claim. Some states to have a statutory limit for responding to a claim (for example, ten working days) and others, like Florida, do not. They allow market forces, such as auto repairers and customers, to force action. In most states, the funny part is, you have a statutory limit on how long you have to FILE a claim. Quaint, isn't it?