Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Can I get out of a hand written contract? -

Hey everyone, I recently sold half of my pizza business to a coworker and had someone hand write a contract for us to sign.Now were having so much problems working together, he refuses to pay half the utilities, maintenance, electricity etc. etc. Sometimes he doesn t come up with the rent! I m more stressed then ever which is the reason to do this in the first place.I want out, because If I don t pay for the entire bill and rent then the **** will hit the fan for me, not him.I m legally the sole owner of the place and the contact has no fine print to it.Thanks all.

Even if its Handwritten you signed it which makes it a binding contract i would talk to a lawyer

I think rather than trying to get out of the contract you should link of how you could remedy the situation. Consider mediation.Oh and to answer your question, if he doesn t keep up with the terms it doesn t matter if it is handwritten or typed he is violation.

Talk to a lawyer.The fact that the contract is handwritten doesn t make it unenforceable. The actual terms of the contract are the issue.

r u lieing???if u arent than thalk to him about itif he says that there is no going back then go to court!!and u shouldnt have signed the cotract until u r sure that it will work out fine!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!:)

If the written contract meets all the essential characteristics of a contract it is valid and enforceable. It is necessary to see the exact wordings of the contract to find a way out for you.1. What exactly is meant by the phrase you sold half of .... 2. What was the consideration for the deal and how was it to be paid.3. How was the profit to be divided?4. Was the contract witnessed and notarized?By the wordings of the problem, it appears that the co worker was supposed to pay half of the operating expenses such as rent, utilities, etc., which he now refuses to pay. That is violation of the terms of the contract, if these terms were incorporated in the hand written contract.

Firstly you want to start some argument with him about what is actually written on the contract, anything that you can think of that will get him to bring out the contract to prove to you what s actually written on it. When he holds out the contract to show you how wrong you are, snatch it from his hands and quickly throw it onto an open flame. If a flame isn t available, swallow it, or run away very fast and find some other way to destroy it. From then on, it s his word against yours. Even if there are witnesses to your antics, the contents of the contract can never be proven. If you re lucky he didn t make a photocopy. If this doesn t work, you can always pay some homeless person or drug dealer a few hundred to jump him in an alley. Good luck!

My camera was stolen at work on Wednesday, in the employee coat room. What avenues should I go through? -

I talked to my manager about it, and he said there s nothing that can be done, but since they don t let us keep our coats with us, and there are no security cameras where they make us leave our coats, does that make them liable? I d accidentally left my camera in my coat that day, and when I got back it wasn t there. I have pictures on there of some really important events, and I haven t had a chance to put it onto my computer back.. I really want my camera back.

You should try talking to your human resources department. Tell them you want to send an office-wide asking asking for the return of your camera no questions asked and give a deadline. Indicate that if no one complies you will take legal action if the company is not willing to reimburse you. Unfortunately unless you can prove you had the camera with you that day it might not work because the burden is on you to prove that someone actually took it. Good luck.

You could post a sign that your camera was lost ask anyone locating it to return it. You can also file a stolen property report with the police.How terrible that the coat room staff may be going through your pockets to take things.Liable? Not really - you know that your coat is in a non secure location, so it is your duty not to leave things in the pockets. Are you sure the camera was there when you left the coat? Seems like it could have fallen out on the bus or been pick pocketed elsewhere. The only way I can think the company would be liable is if the coat attendant they hired had a criminal record for theft they hired them anyhow. Maybe put a loaded mousetrap in the pocket next time :-)

If your business fail do you have to pay for the loan? -

I do not own a business as of yet, I m looking at the consequences of starting my own business, I do not want it to fail, but let s say if I take out a loan, and by some odd chance my business fail, do I have to pay for the loan? It s been a long time but, my teacher said most of the time, you do not have to pay back the loan you ve taken out.. So, I don t know.. Any advice would be appreciated. Thank You.

I do not know what planet your teacher is from , you use some else s money for profit and don t repay it plus interest that is a theft.

no one is going to give you money to start a business, or get a lease for that matter, without you personally backing the loan/lease. Whether you have a corporation or not will not matter. You will be personally liable. Unless you plan on declaring bankruptcy, you will be liable to pay back the loans. Teachers say these things because they have not been in the real world. In theory, 75% are above average.

Always set your business separate from yur personal life. This is not hard to do. If you say I will operate under my personal name and as a sole owner etc. you ve just failed. Learn about incorporating and discover the cash that is available to your business.

Working as a teacher is an authorised post

Another question about E-bay? -

My husband doesn t let me give away our bank info to paypal. How safe is using paypal?

Paypal is extremely safe and it s even more safe than ever. Through paypal, NO ONE ever gets you bank info. You aren t even using your own credit card numbers. You can sign up for Secure Cards, which are super. Anytime you want to pay for something with paypal, it gives you a completely different card# and CCV (the # on the back), and expiration date that lasts for 30 days only. No one sees your actual card # but paypal s computer. They also save every receipt for you and keep a running balance. Your husband has to appreciate these things, which are better than a bank.

I ve had an account with Paypal for over 8 years and never had a problem with security of my personal information. As an alternative, you might get a credit card with a very small limit ($100) and use that for Paypal - that way if your info ever gets stolen, the criminal can only spend $100 (and the credit card company probably wouldn t ding you for it if you reported it right away).

Pay pal is a bank. They are just as secure as any other bank.

or open another checking account with small balance and only use that for paypal

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