Generally, if the agreement has expired it cannot be enforced.
Generally, if the agreement has expired it cannot be enforced.
Generally, if the agreement has expired it cannot be enforced.
Generally, if the agreement has expired it cannot be enforced.
When one person does not honor a binding agreement, the other person has the right to sue under contract law. The party that breached the agreement may be held liable for damages if the court finds that they failed to fulfill their contractual obligations.
If you threatened them, yes. For harrassment
No. A person Female or male can live with whom and where they like.
If you do not know whom to sue, you should not sue anybody.
yes actually its true!! good asking
Sue whom?
Yes, a guarantor can sue the tenant for defaulting on the lease agreement.
No. A person without legal custody cannot sue the parent for child support. On the other hand, if the caregiver has an agreement with the custodial parent to pay for childcare and the custodial parent has breached that agreement, the caregiver can sue for the amount owed. If there was no agreement to pay then the caregiver has the option to stop providing free childcare but they cannot create a financial obligation where there was none agreed upon in the first place.
Well, the answer is yes, in general. Any company or any person can sue any other company or person for any reason. If what you mean is can a credit card company sue a person for unpaid debt, yes, they can, and they will probably win unless you file bankruptcy or seek some other type of payment agreement.
How can they sue for non-payment if they are not part of the agreement? Why wouldn't the spouse sue?
Its likely that you could sue for anything you wanted to sue him for but that doesn't mean that the legal action that you pay for would be successful.
Yes. And read your loan agreement.