No presents for holiday (too cheap) but don't mind a big
sue pay day!
Not exact matches
c) if i were sick with something i wouldn't know the origin thereof (ergo, e.g. i couldn't
sue anyone for reimbursement of health care costs and eventually also for
pay for sick
days) and i wouldn't have health insurance (where health facilities and workers are available) and barely any or no money, what else would there left for me to do than relying on «online advice», a «witch doctor», and / or praying?
They note that Leonhardt
sued the University of St. Andrews in 2013 over
pay for vacation
days he never took.
You want to contact the creditor who is
suing you every week or two throughout the process just letting them know that your consolidation is going through and the loans will be
paid off any
day now — keeping them updated.
The following
day, West and Zampella
sue Activision, filing a $ 36 million lawsuit that claims «Orwellian» moves as part of a «pre-ordained» investigation designed to «manufacture a basis to fire» them in order to avoid
paying out bonuses.
Personally, I'd rather keep the life insurance, use the cash values to supplement my investments and / or use the cash value to
pay my income in the years the stock market goes down (like 2001, 2008, etc) so that I don't end up worse off than when I began because at the end of the
day that account can't lose its value, I can't be
sued for the value of it, I don't need to report it on my son's FAFSA form for college, AND if I pull money out of it for my son's school, the dividend still
pays the same amount as if I hadn't drawn the money out in the first place (fun fact: that last point isn't something that a northwestern policy does, but new york life and massmutual's contracts do).
The lawsuit says Futuris is
suing Faraday Future specifically for breach of contract — FF agreed that it would
pay all of its bills within 30
days of the invoice, and many of those bills have run on past that period.
This is important because it prevents your Seller from
suing you after closing and claiming that you verbally promised to
pay him an extra $ 10,000 within 60
days after closing and that that agreement was part of the agreement you signed.
Bear in mind this is in CT though and NOT NJ, the seller wanted to back out a
day before closing, her attorney politely informed her that if she haulted the sale she could and would be
sued for the commissions of agents and brokers, the closing attorneys, and compensating the buyers (who became «homeless» two
days before closing)
paying their movers and
paying to put them back into an apartment.