Clay Springs Construction Lawyer, Arizona
Includes: Construction Contracts, Construction Liens, Housing & Construction Defects
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1-4 of 4 matches. Page 1 of 1
Joseph E Holland
Commercial Real Estate, Real Estate, Litigation, Collection
Status: In Good Standing
970 S Main St, Snowflake, AZ 85937
Profile LAWPOINTS™34/100
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Joseph E Holland
Real Estate, Traffic, Divorce & Family Law, Criminal, Collection
Status: In Good Standing Licensed: 18 Years
970 S Main St, Snowflake, AZ 85937
Profile LAWPOINTS™26/100
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F Morgan Brown
Commercial Real Estate, Real Estate, Public Law, Trusts
Status: In Good Standing Licensed: 28 Years
180 N 9Th St, Show Low, AZ 85901
Profile LAWPOINTS™19/100
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F Morgan Brown
Commercial Real Estate, Trusts, Estate, Wills
Status: In Good Standing Licensed: 28 Years
180 N 9Th St, Show Low, AZ 85901
Profile LAWPOINTS™19/100
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LEGAL TERMS
TENANT
Anyone, including a corporation, who rents real property, with or without a house or structure, from the owner (called the landlord). The tenant may also be cal... (more...)
Anyone, including a corporation, who rents real property, with or without a house or structure, from the owner (called the landlord). The tenant may also be called the 'lessee.'
LEGACY
An outdated legal word meaning personal property left by a will. The more common term for this type of property is bequest. Compare devise.
BASIS
For income and capital gains tax purposes, the value that is used to determine profit or loss when property is sold. Often the basis is what you paid for the pr... (more...)
For income and capital gains tax purposes, the value that is used to determine profit or loss when property is sold. Often the basis is what you paid for the property, 'adjusted' to reflect improvements made or damage incurred while you own the property. See stepped-up basis, carryover basis.
ANNUAL MEETING
A term commonly used to refer to annual meetings of shareholders or directors of a corporation. Shareholders normally meet to elect directors or to consider maj... (more...)
A term commonly used to refer to annual meetings of shareholders or directors of a corporation. Shareholders normally meet to elect directors or to consider major structural changes to the corporation, such as amending the articles of incorporation or merging or dissolving the corporation. Directors meet to consider or ratify important business decisions, such as borrowing money, buying real property or hiring key employees.
FORECLOSURE
The forced sale of real estate to pay off a loan on which the owner of the property has defaulted.
RUNNING WITH THE LAND
A phrase used in property law to describe a right or duty that remains with a piece of property no matter who owns it. For example, the duty to allow a public b... (more...)
A phrase used in property law to describe a right or duty that remains with a piece of property no matter who owns it. For example, the duty to allow a public beach access path across waterfront property would most likely pass from one owner of the property to the next.
OFFENSIVE COLLATERAL ESTOPPEL
A doctrine that prevents a defendant from re-litigating an issue after it has been lost. For example, if your neighbor sues you for putting up a fence on his la... (more...)
A doctrine that prevents a defendant from re-litigating an issue after it has been lost. For example, if your neighbor sues you for putting up a fence on his land and the court rules that your fence extends beyond your property line, you can't later file your own lawsuit seeking a declaration that the property line is incorrectly drawn.
COMMUNITY PROPERTY WITH RIGHT OF SURVIVORSHIP
A way for married couples to hold title to property, available in Arizona, California, Nevada, Texas and Wisconsin. It allows one spouse's half-interest in comm... (more...)
A way for married couples to hold title to property, available in Arizona, California, Nevada, Texas and Wisconsin. It allows one spouse's half-interest in community property to pass to the surviving spouse without probate.
ESTOPPEL
(1) A legal principle that prevents a person from asserting or denying something in court that contradicts what has already been established as the truth. equit... (more...)
(1) A legal principle that prevents a person from asserting or denying something in court that contradicts what has already been established as the truth. equitable estoppelA type of estoppel that bars a person from adopting a position in court that contradicts his or her past statements or actions when that contradictory stance would be unfair to another person who relied on the original position. For example, if a landlord agrees to allow a tenant to pay the rent ten days late for six months, it would be unfair to allow the landlord to bring a court action in the fourth month to evict the tenant for being a week late with the rent. The landlord would be estopped from asserting his right to evict the tenant for late payment of rent. Also known as estoppel in pais.estoppel by deedA type of estoppel that prevents a person from denying the truth of anything that he or she stated in a deed, especially regarding who has valid ownership of the property. For example, someone who grants a deed to real estate before he actually owns the property can't later go back and undo the sale for that reason if, say, the new owner strikes oil in the backyard.estoppel by silenceA type of estoppel that prevents a person from asserting something when she had both the duty and the opportunity to speak up earlier, and her silence put another person at a disadvantage. For example, Edwards' Roofing Company has the wrong address and begins ripping the roof from Betty's house by mistake. If Betty sees this but remains silent, she cannot wait until the new roof is installed and then refuse to pay, asserting that the work was done without her agreement.estoppel in paisSee equitable estoppel.promissory estoppelA type of estoppel that prevents a person who made a promise from reneging when someone else has reasonably relied on the promise and will suffer a loss if the promise is broken. For example, Forrest tells Antonio to go ahead and buy a boat without a motor, because he will sell Antonio an old boat motor at a very reasonable price. If Antonio relies on Forrest's promise and buys the motorless boat, Forrest cannot then deny his promise to sell John the motor at the agreed-upon price.(2) A legal doctrine that prevents the relitigation of facts or issues that were previously resolved in court. For example, Alvin loses control of his car and accidentally sideswipes several parked cars. When the first car owner sues Alvin for damages, the court determines that Alvin was legally drunk at the time of the accident. Alvin will not be able to deny this fact in subsequent lawsuits against him. This type of estoppel is most commonly called collateral estoppel.
SAMPLE LEGAL CASES
Lofts at Fillmore Condominium Association v. Reliance Commercial Construction, Inc.
Thorsnes Bartolotta McGuire by John F. McGuire, Jr., San Diego, CA, and Ekmark & Ekmark,
LLC by Curtis S. Ekmark, Quentin T. Phillips, Scottsdale, Attorneys for The Lofts at Fillmore Condominium
Association. ... Bremer, Whyte, Brown & O'Meara, LLP by Jeffrey D. Holland, John J. ...
FLAGSTAFF HOUSING v. Design Alliance
... Today we apply the doctrine in a construction defect case and hold that a property owner
is limited to its contractual remedies when an architect's negligent design causes economic
loss but no physical injury to persons or other property. I. ...
Backus v. State
... Our interpretation of the statute at issue, then, must be consistent with both the general intent
of the claims statutes and the intent of the specific statute involved. ¶ 11 "When analyzing statutes,
we apply `fundamental principles of statutory construction, the cornerstone of which is ...
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