Orangefield Real Estate Other Lawyer, Texas, page 2

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Includes: Commercial Leasing, Commercial Real Estate, Condominiums, Conveyancing, Housing & Urban Development, Premises Liability, Residential Real Estate, Title Insurance

Nathan Lee Reynolds

Commercial Real Estate, Family Law, Criminal, Business & Trade
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  29 Years

William R. Price

Commercial Real Estate, Wills, Elder Law, Administrative Law
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  54 Years

Kathryn Elizabeth Mains

Commercial Real Estate, Oil & Gas, Wills, Business & Trade
Status:  In Good Standing           

Daniel Wayne Boyd

Criminal, Commercial Real Estate, Wills
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  12 Years

Charles W. Goehringer

Commercial Real Estate, Litigation, Intellectual Property, Administrative Law
Status:  In Good Standing           

Larry De-Wayne Layfield

Commercial Real Estate, Consumer Protection, Personal Injury, Litigation
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  34 Years

Joseph E. Broussard

Commercial Real Estate, Oil & Gas, Wills, Business & Trade
Status:  In Good Standing           

C. Scott Mann

Commercial Real Estate, Health Care Other, Family Law, Business & Trade
Status:  In Good Standing           

John Creighton

Commercial Real Estate, International Tax, Employee Rights, Business & Trade
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  52 Years

Phil Dunlap

Commercial Real Estate, Real Estate, Bankruptcy, Household Mold
Status:  In Good Standing           

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LEGAL TERMS

TESTAMENTARY DISPOSITION

Leaving property in a will.

TANGIBLE PERSONAL PROPERTY

Personal property that can be felt or touched. Examples include furniture, cars, jewelry and artwork. However, cash and checking accounts are not tangible perso... (more...)
Personal property that can be felt or touched. Examples include furniture, cars, jewelry and artwork. However, cash and checking accounts are not tangible personal property. The law is unsettled as to whether computer data is tangible personal property. Compare intangible property.

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An outdated legal word meaning personal property left by a will.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.

BORDER PATROL

The historical term for what is now called the Bureau of Customs and Border Protection ('BCBP'), a branch of the Department of Homeland Security. The primary fu... (more...)
The historical term for what is now called the Bureau of Customs and Border Protection ('BCBP'), a branch of the Department of Homeland Security. The primary functions of the BCBP/border patrol are to guard the borders from illegal entrants and to meet and question immigrants and visitors arriving at airports and other border stops.

INDISPENSABLE PARTY

A person or entity (such as a corporation) that must be included in a lawsuit in order for the court to render a final judgment that will be just to everyone co... (more...)
A person or entity (such as a corporation) that must be included in a lawsuit in order for the court to render a final judgment that will be just to everyone concerned. For example, if a person sues his neighbors to force them to prune a tree that poses a danger to his house, he must name all owners of the neighboring property in the suit.

USE TAX

A tax imposed by a state to compensate for the sales tax lost when an item is purchased outside of the state, but is used within the state. For example, you buy... (more...)
A tax imposed by a state to compensate for the sales tax lost when an item is purchased outside of the state, but is used within the state. For example, you buy your car in a state that has no sales tax, but you live across the border in a state that does have a sales tax. When you bring your car home and register it in your state, the state taxing authority will bill you for the sales tax it would have collected had you bought the car within the state.

SEVERABILITY CLAUSE

A provision in a contract that preserves the rest of the contract if a portion of it is invalidated by a court. Without a severability clause, a decision by the... (more...)
A provision in a contract that preserves the rest of the contract if a portion of it is invalidated by a court. Without a severability clause, a decision by the court finding one part of the contract unenforceable would invalidate the entire document.

HOMESTEAD

(1) The house in which a family lives, plus any adjoining land and other buildings on that land. (2) Real estate which is not subject to the claims of creditors... (more...)
(1) The house in which a family lives, plus any adjoining land and other buildings on that land. (2) Real estate which is not subject to the claims of creditors as long as it is occupied as a home by the head of the household. After the head of the family dies, homestead laws often allow the surviving spouse or minor children to live on the property for as long as they choose. (3) Land acquired out of the public lands of the United States. The term 'homesteaders' refers to people who got their land by settling it and making it productive, rather than purchasing it outright.

PRECEDENT

A legal principle or rule created by one or more decisions of a state or federal appellate court. These rules provide a point of reference or authority for judg... (more...)
A legal principle or rule created by one or more decisions of a state or federal appellate court. These rules provide a point of reference or authority for judges deciding similar issues in later cases. Lower courts must apply these rules when faced with similar legal issues. For example, if the Montana Supreme Court decides that a certain type of employment contract overly restricts the right of the employee to quit and get another job, all other Montana courts must apply this same rule.