Wendell Real Estate Other Lawyer, North Carolina


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

F. Timothy Nicholls

Corporate, Business Successions, Business Organization, Commercial Leasing
Status:  In Good Standing           

Angela L. Dement

Litigation, Slip & Fall Accident, Premises Liability, Car Accident
Status:  Suspended           

Eric Spence

Conveyancing, Shipping, Merger & Acquisition, Business
Status:  In Good Standing           

Daniel Robert Tilly

Commercial Real Estate, Wills, Personal Injury, Accident & Injury
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  19 Years

Jaye E. Bingham

Other, Premises Liability, Federal Appellate Practice, Medical Malpractice
Status:  In Good Standing           

Matthew Schweizer

Commercial Leasing, Wills & Probate, Residential Real Estate, Business Organization
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  27 Years

Greg L. Hinshaw

Estate Planning, Residential Real Estate, Commercial Real Estate
Status:  In Good Standing           

Daniel T. Coleman

Residential Real Estate, Commercial Real Estate, Real Estate, Divorce & Family Law, Consumer Bankruptcy
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  36 Years

James L. Stuart

Commercial Real Estate, Business, Credit & Debt, Bankruptcy
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  49 Years

William H. Weatherspoon

Commercial Real Estate, Commercial Leasing, Corporate, Business Organization
Status:  In Good Standing           

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Free Help: Use This Form or Call 800-943-8690

Member Representative

Call me for fastest results!
800-943-8690

Free Help: Use This Form or Call 800-943-8690

By submitting this lawyer request, I confirm I have read and agree to the Consent to Receive Messages from all messaging and voice technologies including Email, Text, Phone, Terms of Use, and Privacy Policy. Information provided is not privileged or confidential.

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LEGAL TERMS

ADVERSE POSSESSION

A means by which one can legally take another's property without paying for it. The requirements for adversely possessing property vary between states, but usua... (more...)
A means by which one can legally take another's property without paying for it. The requirements for adversely possessing property vary between states, but usually include continuous and open use for a period of five or more years and paying taxes on the property in question.

SEVERANCE PAY

Funds, usually amounting to one or two months' salary, frequently offered by employers to workers who are laid off. No law compels employers to provide severanc... (more...)
Funds, usually amounting to one or two months' salary, frequently offered by employers to workers who are laid off. No law compels employers to provide severance pay, although the employer may be legally obligated to do so if it was promised in a contract or employees' handbook.

INHERITORS

Persons or organizations who receive property from someone who dies.

INTANGIBLE PROPERTY

Personal property that has no physical existence, such as stocks, bonds, bank notes, trade secrets, patents, copyrights and trademarks. Such 'untouchable' items... (more...)
Personal property that has no physical existence, such as stocks, bonds, bank notes, trade secrets, patents, copyrights and trademarks. Such 'untouchable' items may be represented by a certificate or license that fixes or approximates the value, but others (such as the goodwill or reputation of a business) are not easily valued or embodied in any instrument. Compare tangible property.

GOODS & CHATTELS

See personal property.

ENCROACHMENT

The building of a structure entirely or partly on a neighbor's property. Encroachment may occur due to faulty surveying or sheer obstreperousness on the part of... (more...)
The building of a structure entirely or partly on a neighbor's property. Encroachment may occur due to faulty surveying or sheer obstreperousness on the part of the builder. Solutions range from paying the rightful property owner for the use of the property to the court-ordered removal of the structure.

NULLA BONA

Latin for 'no goods.' This is what the sheriff writes when she can find no property to seize in order to pay off a court judgment.

MEMORANDUM

(1) An informal written document. A memorandum may be used in any number of circumstances, but most lawyers are best acquainted with the interoffice memorandum-... (more...)
(1) An informal written document. A memorandum may be used in any number of circumstances, but most lawyers are best acquainted with the interoffice memorandum--a document prepared by a junior associate in a law office or a judge's law clerk outlining the facts, procedural elements and legal arguments involved in a particular legal matter. These memos are reviewed by senior lawyers and judges who use them to decide how to proceed with the case. (2) Any written record, including a letter or note, that proves that a contract exists between two parties. This type of memo may be enough to validate an oral (spoken) contract that would otherwise be unenforceable because of the statute of frauds. (Under the statute of frauds, an oral contract is invalid if it can't be completed within one year from the date the contract is made.)

INURE

To take effect, or to benefit someone. In property law, the term means 'to vest.' For example, Jim buys a beach house that includes the right to travel across t... (more...)
To take effect, or to benefit someone. In property law, the term means 'to vest.' For example, Jim buys a beach house that includes the right to travel across the neighbor's property to get to the water. That right of way is said, cryptically, 'to inure to the benefit of Jim.'