Not exact matches
It's here where you struggle to find your value because you are up
against clients who
always want things at a cheaper rate.
But it
always bothers me when someone who is supposed to have the best interests of his
clients — writers — at heart continues to support a system that actively works
against those interests.
I would advise
clients to
always obtain their own inspection report as I believe there was an Ontario court ruling some years ago that a buyer can not rely on an inspection report prepared for a seller and therefore there is no recourse
against the inspector and no fiduciary duty required from the sellers inspector.
Advisors who are
ALWAYS against one thing or another don't have the range of strategies available to offer the best possible service to their
clients.
Other factors are under an investor's control, but are not
always controlled: discipline; consistency; remaining within your circle of competence; matched duration of
client capital with underlying investments; prudent diversification; reacting rationally to news or market developments; and of course, not overpaying» I want to add a few thoughts on how investors can hedge
against the risks that Klarman lists.
In order to ensure ClimateCare can
always deliver
against the required carbon and environmental / development outcomes of our
clients» programmes, the Portfolio team must
always have access to new projects and programmes.
I
always fight for the best interests of my
clients and I have the experience and legal dexterity needed to successfully fight back
against even the most powerful trucking companies, both at the settlement table and during trial.
Counsel's goal is to make sure that instructions are given with complete confidence that only the
client's best interests are being served, and served in accordance with what really matters to the
client — there are
always options and they can be tailored to the
client's advantage, from agreements to have charges
against a c - accused withdrawn, to the return of seized property, to the terms of a probation order and countless other examples.
Counsel's goal is to make sure that instructions are given with complete confidence that only the
client's best interests are being served, and served in accordance with what really matters to the
client — there are
always options and they can be tailored to the
client's advantage, from agreements to have charges
against a co-accused withdrawn, to the return of seized property, to the terms of a probation order and countless other examples.
The attorneys at Jacobs Law
always strongly advise
clients against providing these statements because it is never in a
client's interest to do so!
as a profession, we
always put our
client's interest
against our own.
And whether it's Brexiteers picketing the firm's fancy new London office (Mishcon led the high profile challenge
against the invoking of Article 50), or celebrity
clients getting papped as they stop by for a bit of high value legal advice, this clever little practice
always manages to find itself in the limelight.
Clients, authorities and we IP professionals,
always learn a lot from cooperation and cases we handle and fight for, or fight
against.
The so - called «
client» — usually a woman, and
always writing from some far - away country (typically Japan, China, Taiwan, or Korea)-- details how she has obtained a sizeable divorce judgment
against her ex-husband but has succeeded in collecting only a portion of it from him.
I
always advise
against a
client lying about a situation; I've had
clients ask about using different job titles, etc. and
always tell them to be as honest as possible in reflecting oneself.
Dr. Doherty... as I have dealt with my own (unwanted) divorce some 30 years ago, the divorce of friends, the marriage issues of my children's marriages, and the marriages of my
clients, I have
always felt that I was «doing something wrong» (
against my training) when I would ask the question «What would be right for others in your life?»
The general public also doesn't
always understand the industry in the same way we do; there are times when a
client feels they know better and they choose to go
against our advice... yet when things don't turn out the way they expected... they are quick to put the blame on their REALTOR ®.
I would advise
clients to
always obtain their own inspection report as I believe there was an Ontario court ruling some years ago that a buyer can not rely on an inspection report prepared for a seller and therefore there is no recourse
against the inspector and no fiduciary duty required from the sellers inspector.