Ok, then perhaps my wording was wrong and I should have said, "How strong do my facts look, should we end up in court?" :P
Do you think I should send him a letter or email first summarizing...
Type: Posts; User: Sintoku; Keyword(s):
Ok, then perhaps my wording was wrong and I should have said, "How strong do my facts look, should we end up in court?" :P
Do you think I should send him a letter or email first summarizing...
This is for the state of Florida.
I, my boyfriend, and two of our friends had planned for months to get a place together as soon as our (my boyfriend and I) apartment lease was over. We found the...
This is in Florida.
The most information I've found on how many people can live in a place is two people per bedroom. I've been looking all over the internet for clarification on what the law is....
Two questions, in the states of Florida and Georgia
Florida: A friend working at a retail/food service job has worked several hours of overtime the past few weeks. The general manager of the...
additional question-ish: I'm having a hard time finding out if small claims can take care of replevin in Florida, but finding out what replevin covers so far looks hopeful.
Thanks again.
Unfortunately as far as evidence goes, (Forgive me for continuing to use the shorthand IDs) A has proof that B had stolen a different item previously, but had recovered it legally (Confronted, item...
I've never heard of that before. Checking wikipedia. Thank you for the insight.
Sounds complicated and expensive. It's amazing how easy it is for a thief to rob friends, and so complicated to set things right if the thief doesn't want to cooperate. :(
What would be a legal alternative for A to get his/her property back? (I'm assuming you mean Person A is in trouble?)
My question involves criminal law for the state of: Florida
Hypothetical situation, I'm curious about the legal handling of the ethical situation.
Person A finds that Person B has stolen an...