Yes, you may sue anyone who breaks the items stipulated in any written contract signed and agreed upon by both parties in the first place.
Yes, a hospital can sue you for nonpayment. If you fail to pay your hospital bill, the hospital will report your account to a collection agency.
A person cannot sue their spouse for breach of marriage contract. They can however sue them for divorce and end the contract of marriage.
Yes. The contract for services between you and your bail bondsman is an enforceable legal contract.
No. Only intended beneficiaries and contract parties can sue for breach of contract.
Easy, you go to company and sue it.
If there was a contract for services in effect, you can sue them for breach of contract.
You would be in breach of the contract and the other party to the contract would have cause to sue you. It would get more expensive for you in the end.You would be in breach of the contract and the other party to the contract would have cause to sue you. It would get more expensive for you in the end.You would be in breach of the contract and the other party to the contract would have cause to sue you. It would get more expensive for you in the end.You would be in breach of the contract and the other party to the contract would have cause to sue you. It would get more expensive for you in the end.
Not directly. They could sue for your assets, which would include your house though.
No. You do not sue for what you've spent or what you'd like returned. If you entered into a contract with someone where your portion of the bargain was physical labor, and the other person refused to perform their obligations under the contract, you may sue them for breach of contract and ask to be paid for your labor.
Generally, it will sue (or sell the debt to someone who will sue) within the statute of limitations for suing on a credit card debt in your state. This is often 5 years, but it can be less or more.
both parties. by Rayhan
no there must be a contact involved