master fee protection agreement
Buying an existing franchise has many benefits. However, there are many things you must consider before accepting the purchase. Some franchises require that the franchisee pays a transfer fee, which is often about $10,000 or more, but this can vary. In most cases, the current franchisor pays the transfer fee. However, this is something that must be negotiated before signing any final legal documents. While franchisors don't charge you to pay a new franchise fee, they most likely will charge you a transfer fee to either you as a new franchisee or to the selling franchisee. Make sure you have this clear in the franchise agreement with both parties. Sometimes, the selling franchisee will include the cost of this transfer fee within the sale price of the franchise. In any case, look for negotiation tactics, and if the fee is non-negotiable due to the prior franchise agreement, make sure you understand who is responsible for paying such fee.
Iniotial fee is 35,000
no
it looks like Colorado fee is the cheapest at 50.00 Dtizzle
Listing agreements usually call for seller to pay broker commissions in a sale transaction. And if there is also a buyer's broker, for a "cooperative" fee, also paid by the seller. If there is no listing agreement the parties may be free to negotiate anything they want, but custom in the locality may dictate the outcome.
Anybody has idea what is "Fee Protection Agreement" and how is it protecting the interest of the intermediary? Is there a way not to be honored by the seller?
Irrevocable Master Fee Protection Agreementwhere you as buyer's or seller's mandatatry, who signs this IMFPA with either the seller or the buyer for claiming your commission.
By attaching an IMPFA to the actual sell-buy contract. An IMPFA is an "Irrevocable Master fee protection Agreement'. Seach for these wording on a search engine like Google or Bing, and you will find many templates and examples.
The attorney's fee for the drawing of an irrevocable trust will depend on how complicated the situation is. Fees also vary greatly by location; the cost in New York City is far more than having the same thing done in Kalispell, Montana. For most situations, a reasonable fee for an irrevocable trust is somewhere between $400 and $1,200 dollars.
How much is the fee of master program prone year
there is no entry fee
There usually is no fee, just signatures from all parties.
You can find your answer in your lease agreement. The fee is legal and payable if you signed a rental agreement that specified this amount as a late fee and you paid your rent late.
See this link for California Bar link to their sample agreements... http://www.calbar.ca.gov/calbar/pdfs/MFA/Sample-Fee-Agreement-Forms.pdf
You may be charged one of two fees: - An insufficient funds (NSF) fee, if you do not have overdraft protection - An overdraft protection (ODP) fee, if you have overdraft protection and money is transferred from your overdraft account to cover the check
It should be whatever the trustee's fee schedule is. It can be challenged if it is not reasonable. True - it vaires from zero to legal maximums...usually its defined in the trust or in law.
This is a type of agreement used by lawyers in the UK for No Win No Fee type cases. If you have an accident and the lawyer believes you will win, then the agreement, allows for an insurance company to pay legal costs in the event of loosing, and if you win the defendent pays. You can learn more on www.helpwithyourclaim.com