It is true that i can't help you solve this question, that being said, i want to tell you to what a great extant i think that it is significant for you to attend school.
Hotels are generally not allowed to disclose information about guests staying at their establishment unless required by law or with the guest's permission.
TILA. Truth in lending act.
The Lemon Law deals with defected cars that the seller knows about and yet fails to disclose. The law remedies this problem and compensates victims of such fraud.
A license number will validate that they are authorized to practice law. If they don't have one, they can't legally practice law.
If you are not the executor of the estate, it would be trespassing.
Hotels are generally not allowed to disclose guest information to third parties without the guest's consent, unless required by law or for safety reasons.
There are no publicly accessible databases that disclose this information. Best thing to do is to call your local law enforcement agency and simply ask. They may ask you to come in person for this information - for obvious reasons.
HIPPA is a law that protects all health care information Advance directive are documents written while a person is still able to make decisions
No. The home is owned by someone, and that would be illegal.
If a person owns a house they can do what they wish with it (within the law). If they are declared bankrupt and they no longer own it then they have no say in what happens with the house. It is no longer theirs.
There are two nouns in the sentence:sister-in-law, a word for a person, subject of the sentence;home, a word for a thing, direct object of the verb 'will be going'.
If the "something" was in the will of a person who died before your mother did, the "something" becomes part of her estate. If you have no brothers or sisters and your mother died without being married at the time (no other heirs at law), the something is yours. If the "something" was in a will of a person who died after your mother did, it will depend on how the will was worded. If it was left to your mother "or her issue" or similar language, it goes to her estate (you if you are the only heir at law). If the person leaving your mother something in a will has not died, nobody can claim it - yet.