Did you violate other terms of your loan agreement??Insurance coverage?? Read your loan agreement carefully if you have fufilled all the terms then you should sue forbreach of contract.
not without legal cause
If payments are current it would not be advantageous for a creditor to charge off an account nor in some cases legal. If there are arrearages on the account that is a different issue, as the account would be considered in default and property that was used to secure the loan could be seized.
Yes, it is perfectly legal and is quite common. Having fallen delinquent on the note, you would be the party flirting with illegal activity if you were attempting to hide the truck.
I am a little unclear as to what you're asking here. Are you asking if you have any legal recourses to stop your wife from putting your son on medication?
It is legal as long as both accounts belong to the same person/company. If the owner of a company transfers cash from his business account to his business account it is legal. But, if his Personal Assistant does it from her boss's business account to her personal account, it is illegal.
If your boyfriend is a minor he is within the jurisdiction of his parents and therefore they can keep him from interacting with his biological child. There are legal recourses in such matters even though the courts are reluctant to interfere in that type of family matters.
You have two recourses: First, and not always effective, contact the lender and try to make arrangements to pay current with the stipulation that they will put the repossession on hold until you can pay current or break the arrangements. Second, file for bankruptcy. The automatic stay prevents the legal self-help repossession of a vehicle, and any vehicle that is secured by a lender while the stay is in place is in violation of the stay.
The current legal drinking age in Saskatchewan is 19.
no
Yes. The holders of the joint account are equal stake holders in the account and a legal order to receive payment from one of the account holders is enough to withdraw/take funds from a joint account.
yes actually it is legal to do soAdditional: To garnish an account must be done through the courts. If the court can be convinced that the account is liable, the court will issue the order - thereforew it is legal.
Yes. Both the owner/proprietor of a bank account and the person to whom they have given power of attorney can operate a bank account. Actually a person with power of attorney is as good as the person (in legal terms) itself and so they both can operate the bank account without any issue.