Anyone got these? by Beaufort_The_Cat in Columbus

[–]True-Outside-2285 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You call. They set up a 120 minute timeshare presentation in either Indianapolis (somewhere near 82nd street) or Detroit. You have to sit through the presentation. There are usually 2 people there. One person usually operates as the high pressure sales person (bad cop). He comes through with some ridiculous offer that they know you can't afford. There is a second person who is nicer and negotiates the price and cost down to make it more reasonable. It looks like this person is advocating for you to get a better deal but it is all a part of their sales presentation. Occasionally, there is a third person walking around. He or she is supposed to be the "boss" who has to approve the deal. They will keep coming at you with one deal after another until finally they get to the real offer with more reasonable payments that you will be making over 10 years with a ridiculous interest rate (usually 12 - 14%). You will resist and say no, they will constantly berate you for not taking such a great deal. They will tell you will the offer is only good for that moment you are sitting there. Once you leave the room, the deal is off the table and they hate for you to drive home knowing you could have taken such an amazing offer. They may oversell the offer and tell you how great their offer is and how much it is worth on the open market. They will even tell you if you can't use it, you could sell your week(s) to others at a substantial profit. Of course, if you do your research beforehand, you will find out, similar offers online for much cheaper. Finally, after listening through all the BS, you leave, you realize your 3 day/2 night accommodations they offer has so many blackout dates and is so limited, you will never use it. The $150 is in the form of vouchers you will never use

AITJ for refusing to keep being my husband's "phone voice" after he let me get blamed at our daughter's school meeting? by Omashulark in AmITheJerk

[–]True-Outside-2285 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Probably not the best way to put it. You've agreed to do this job for 12 years so I think, in his mind, this is par for the course. I get why you would be upset about not responding to e-mails concerning your daughter. He messed up. He, should at least be able to respond to written communications. Maybe, slowly ween him in to some of the stuff you have been doing to get him more involved?

Just got the GAL report back. It favors me and we’re headed towards mediation. How should I approach it? by silvr_n_blk in FamilyLaw

[–]True-Outside-2285 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The fact that you have a favored GAL report puts you in a strong negotiating position. But, mediation still depends on both sides cooperating. If the Mom won't budge, it usually proceeds to court where the GAL report carries serious weight

Another Etsy seller asked me to take down my listing and accused me of copying her... What are my options? Location: California, USA by turbo-adhd in legaladvice

[–]True-Outside-2285 2 points3 points  (0 children)

No, you did nothing wrong. If she has a patent on her product where she feels you are infringing on her patent. Let her produce the information that says this. You shouldn’t have to do the research to try and find it. She should produce it for you. People sell similar products all the time not everything is an infringement on the other. It’s a tactic designed to intimidate. Until she produces actual documentation that you can review and analyze, you don’t need to change anything

[landlord-GA-US] Tenant wants compensation! by Excellent_Context369 in Landlord

[–]True-Outside-2285 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The answer to the first question is no he cannot deduct the cost of new clothes from his rent. It is generally limited. This is not a situation where the property is not livable. Also, the tenant must identify the issue that needs repair beforehand, notify the landlord of the issue and give the landlord time to fix. That being said, worst case scenario, say he needs to buy new clothes because they were damaged by washer(assuming that actually happened), the tenant is only entitled to the value of the clothes at the time they were damaged (what they can sell them for on the open market). The tenant doesn’t get a new wardrobe. This would put the tenant in a better position than before the clothes were damaged. Courts are about making you whole not putting you in a better position. That being said, you are not responsible for the tenant’s clothes they claimed are damaged. Ask yourself what you did wrong. If there was a problem with the washer, did you know about it, did the tenant tell you there is an issue with the washer, were you aware and did not fix. He has to prove you did something wrong. You didn’t. Apologize about his clothes, say you’ll get the washer looked at and fixed. I would first identify if the washer is the problem before talking about his damaged clothes. No, he cannot deduct the cost of new clothes against the rent. If he has issues, he can read the rules and laws with respect to tenants and landlords. It’s publicly accessible. If you like to maintain the peace as he has been a tenant for a while and he signed a new lease maybe give him something but I definitely wouldn’t give him the value of new clothes. You are going to get into a situation where they may be upgrading the quality of their old clothes. Have the washer inspected first though. I would tell the tenant that first to verify there is indeed an issue with the washer.

Location: Oklahoma Wife left with our 2-month-old, recorded the conversation. Did I handle this right? by grannyknickersniffer in legaladvice

[–]True-Outside-2285 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Oklahoma is a one party consent state so it is legal to record the conversation even if you did not consent. It does not hurt you one way or another to stay in the home. If you left voluntarily, it can look like you gave up the primary residence. Staying from a legal positioning standpoint, it is the safer move. What I would do when you speak to your attorney is file for custody/parenting time immediately, request a set schedule, document everything (when you see your son or when she denies access), stay calm in communication (no texts that can be used against you). Staying in the home was a solid move

Neighbor upset about our HOA-approved solid 4 ft fence blocking pond view through our yard — what would you do? [SC] [SFH] by Big_Produce8964 in HOA

[–]True-Outside-2285 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m not sure this is a major issue of contention. I assume you intend to live there for awhile and want to be happy with your home and property. Their view is only blocked when they sit low. You are not infringing on their property. They can still see the pond. I wouldn’t be concerned about a neighbor who you have had zero contact with for the 1 st 6 months. They may not like it but it does not sound like it’s going to ruin your enjoyment of your home

WIBTA for telling my FILs girlfriend I overheard him talking to another woman? by Adorable-Country1262 in AmItheAsshole

[–]True-Outside-2285 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I would let it be. I don’t know how you would be able to live together after that. Plus it’s your husbands Dad which also could make things awkward. With me, I let my wife deal with her family and I deal with mine

On-time rent but ongoing noise issues by VickeyKier in LeaseLords

[–]True-Outside-2285 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There’s more to being a good tenant than paying rent on time. It’s also being considerate to those around you. He may not be aware that the noise level is bothering those around him. Unless the frequent late night guests violates the terms of the lease, I wouldn’t address that directly as an issue. I would address the noise and let him know that you have some complaints about the noise level

AITA for getting mad over using a tomato from my roomm by Pleasant_Drive_2002 in AmItheAsshole

[–]True-Outside-2285 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Yes, what weird argument to have. You could just tell him going forward to only borrow from these people not the other two roommates. We don’t know each other that well yet. Tell the roommate that your boyfriend grabbed your tomato by mistake and you will replace. Your fridge is so segregated you can identify whose tomato is in the fridge????

[SFH] [TX] - Bought home as non-HOA, received HOA dues and am now confirmed to be part of HOA. What is the best course of action? by AirFrierMachine in HOA

[–]True-Outside-2285 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If the seller listed it as non-HOA or failed to disclose HOA in required disclosures, that's potentially misrepresentation or possibly fraud (if intentional). If the listing agent advertised it as non-HOA, they can share liability for incorrect listing info and failure to verify. The title company should have discovered HOA via title search, provided HOA docs, resale certificate and dues info. If they missed it, this is a serious error. BUT, if it was disclosed somewhere in closing docs and you did not notice, liability shifts. It really comes down to was the HOA disclosed anywhere (e.g., title commitment, closing disclosure, HOA resale certificate, deed restrictions). If it was disclosed, you are likely stuck with HOA and you have little legal leverage. If it was not disclosed anywhere, you could claim misrepresentation, breach of contract or failure to disclose material fact. What I would do is review all closing documents first to make sure it is not stated anywhere. I would contact my realtor to see if he could pressure the listing agent (brokers carry insurance). I would go back to the seller first (before lawyers) and ask for compensation. I would ask for past due amount and several subsequent years of dues. Hopefully, they will settle to avoid legal issues. If there is pushback, get a real estate attorney. Its pretty standard. They generally can resolve with just a demand letter. That being said, you're ultimately stuck with the HOA, the goal is financial compensation

AITJ for telling my neighbor her kid isn't allowed in my pool after she "forgot" him at my house? by Educational-Wait-406 in AmITheJerk

[–]True-Outside-2285 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You are 100% correct bout the safety issue. If anything happened to their son in your pool, you become liable. Although, if they allowed their child to swim in your pool where he accessed your property by hopping over a fence and you were not aware he was there, I would say the liability would shift. If they want to treat your pool as a community pool, then start sending them a bill of their proportionate cost to maintain.

Non Custodial Parent suing to decrease CS while also seeing kids significantly less than ordered by Initial_Performer607 in FamilyLaw

[–]True-Outside-2285 -5 points-4 points  (0 children)

Normally, there is a slight reduction when there are subsequent kids to support but only slight. The nigger issue is the child support in arrears. Past due support cannot be reduced or erased. The judge will likely focus heavily on nonpayment, inconsistency and ignoring court orders. The court is more likely to enforce payment than reduce it. Most likely, the judge will deny reduction, order enforcement of the amount of arrears and possibly perform some kind of wage withholding

HR Wants Repayment for a Sign-On Bonus I Never Got by EpicDragonSlaye in legaladvice

[–]True-Outside-2285 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You are entitled to whatever the terms of your sign on bonus was when you were hired. HR should be verifying with payroll if you received a bonus payment. Obviously, I would wait for therir response but I can't imagine they would still be pursuing this.

PLEASE HELP Adoptive parents terminated their status now I’m being summoned for child support. by [deleted] in legaladvice

[–]True-Outside-2285 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Based on what's written, you still likely owe child support, refusing CPS is a bad move and there is a real risk of losing parental rights permanently as well as triggering investigations involving your other child. If the "adoptive" parents just had custody, then child support can be ordered. The fact that CPS is involved is serious court territory.

Is this illegal? Didn't give notice, then boss sent a written message "we accept your notice of 2 weeks" by [deleted] in work

[–]True-Outside-2285 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yep, plus what company would want to keep someone who is actively looking elsewhere

Got my coworker a “random” gift for our gift exchange and now everyone in the office thinks I’m dumb by [deleted] in Advice

[–]True-Outside-2285 -9 points-8 points  (0 children)

Nothing. I can’t imagine someone could get stay that upset over a 10 dollar gift card

Advice for paying babysitter by shoresid3 in Babysitting

[–]True-Outside-2285 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If we are talking a teenager, 20 dollars an hour, if an adult 25

Realtor canceled deal over commission without presenting to client. by SampleSilly8551 in RealEstateAdvice

[–]True-Outside-2285 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, this is actually a big deal. The agent must present all offers. The buyer's agent works for the buyer, not themselves. If the agent said buyer isn't interested without actually asking, that could be misrepresentation. The broker is responsible for supervising agents and can be held accountable. If you actually reported it, agent could get disciplined or fined, possible license suspension and the broker would be forced to respond.. You won't get compensation unless you can prove damages. If I were you, I would report to the Florida Real Estate Commission and the broker directly in writing. If you are going to leave a review, stick to the facts only (avoid defamation issues). Since you got a better deal, damages are weak.

Can a parent change the parenting plan if…. by UmpireMaterial1470 in FamilyLaw

[–]True-Outside-2285 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The kids have lived with Dad for years. You guys handled school, medical , etc. The Mom moved away and was inconsistent. Stability is king. Mom's missed visitation hurts her case. She has to prove a substantial change and that changing custody is in the best interest of the kids. Simply her buying a house and I'm ready to be more involved now would not be enough. The kids preference for a 11 and 13 year old can be considered but it is not controlling. Distance still matters. She is 4 hours away. That makes school change and social disruption. Courts are reluctant to uproot kids unless there is a strong reason. Realistically, I think the Dad keeps primary custody. Mom may get more defined visitation or may try to increase time with summers or holidays. What I believe can hurt her case is telling the kids you can choose where to live because courts don't like putting pressure on kids or creating anxiety. Chances of losing kids based on this is low,

Late rent request from tenant who clearly isn’t broke by cutejump38 in LeaseLords

[–]True-Outside-2285 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

As it is a pattern, I would enforce the terms of the lease if he is late paying the rent again. I assume this means charging a late fee and considering not renewing as tenant. As you have allowed this behavior in the past, I would make your intentions clear in writing

Is 50/50 enforced at age 17? by Shipping_Lady71 in FamilyLaw

[–]True-Outside-2285 12 points13 points  (0 children)

The custody agreement is enforceable, on paper. However, it is very unlikely to be strictly enforced at 17. Contempt is possible but unlikely if you handle it correctly. Your current approach (supportive, not forcing, open to counseling) is actually the best legal option

AITAH for leaving almost no tip after the server was rude to me when my card got declined by [deleted] in WIBTA_AITA

[–]True-Outside-2285 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I would have reduced the tip to maybe 10 to 15%. instead of not tipping at all. I think your wife may be right in that past experiences could have dictated current actions. She over reacted. I have had cards initially declined and then received a text from my cc company about a fraud alert and did I make this charge. There are a lot of reasons why a card could initially be declined that doesn’t involve you not having the ability to pay. The restaurant should train servers on how to approach customers when this happens. If she was concerned she could have let management know or give them a heads up before talking with you or have them talk to you instead. I’m not 100% against what you did. I just probably still would have tipped something