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... the amount necessary to rehabilitate the property occupied by the Government in accordance with stan... to toe the fiduciary mark in the future, it would bar the courts from making the Tribe who... the Tribe held only a contingent future interest in the property, insufficient to support even a co...
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In effect, arbitrators reach their decisions not on the basis of applicable law, but according to what they consider to be "fair" and "in good conscience" in the circumstances.5 Dynamic changes in international relations, typified by the growing international investment disputes, have brought the concept of ex aequo et bono back into focus.6 Parties are increasingly faced with little or no law in the applicable field, or a situation where one or both parties mistrust the law or its application to their particular dispute.7 Coupled with this is a growing interest in the expeditious resolution of disputes in emerging areas of law, particularly the law as it relates to the internet, intellectual property, and state-investor disputes. A system which depends on conceptions of fairness may a...
... of ex aequo et bono might evolve in the future, including how it could be constituted to suit mod...
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To avoid future legal and financial problems, servicemembers should incorporate numerous legal and financial disciplines, including tax law, consumer law, landlord-tenant law, real estate finance law, bankruptcy law, family law, and military law, into this analysis. In addition to building wealth, owning a home allows servicemembers to reduce certain expenses by deducting mortgage interest and mortgage interest points,9 mortgage prepayment penalties,10 property taxes,11 and casualty losses.12 These deductions are especially valuable to servicemembers because they receive tax-free quarters allowances to pay interest expenses, which are themselves tax deductible.
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... little or no relation to protecting the interests of owners. Holders of unclaimed property have rais... record of the owner's address exists for future notification. In either scenario, the shortened do...
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.... Further, it is also interesting to note that with the exception of the incumbent o... provisions of the law, they may in the future be amended and extended to cover further aspects o... liable for personal harm or damage to property as a result of the suspension of any service of el...
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[...] one sees inAlternatives Bob's skepticism about governmental intervention -specifically zoning.12 He argued then (and later) that this kind of governmental action is administratively costly; that it is ham-handedly overprotective against nuisances; that it is rife with special interest favoritism; and perhaps most important, that it often has a number of damaging third-party effects, particularly in reducing housing opportunities for families of modest means.13 Along with this skepticism about direct regulation, Alternatives showed another constant in Bob's work: a preference for legal structures that can promote private ordering.14 In that article, and with a half-hearted nod to legal centralism, Bob proposed measures that could streamline private real estate covenants; he also ar...
..., so I thought that the germs of all his future work would be there in his very first publication:...
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... trustee but pursuant to its sovereign interestin the execution of federal law. The reasons for the... to legislate concerning their tribal property"); LoneWolf v. Hitchcock, 187 U. S. 553, 565 ... series of rules togovern all conceivable future questions in this area"). Onthose facts, the fidu...
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It is a common occurrence fer children to inherit property from their parents and the law provides an exemption on reassessment for transfers between parents and children. Thus, with certain exceptions, property transferred to children after the death of their parents doesn't trigger a reassessment. On the other hand, a sudden and rather significant increase in property taxes can occur when siblings inherit real estate from their parents and one sibling buys out aie other sibling(s). Here is what usually happens: when the parents' estate is settled either through probate or administration of a living trust, title to the property is often recorded in the children names' jointly. Then, sometime in the future, one or more of the siblings wants cash in exchange for his or her share of the p...
... is recorded transferring the property interest from one sibling to another, a reassessment is tri...
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... cases and the valuation of animals as property. Yet, lawsuits suggest that some pet owners will c... California, suggest that public interest groups can be successful in altering longstanding ... their owners receive more protection in future federal disaster relief efforts. . Given the legal...
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..., combined with the current low interest rates and asset values, enhance the effectiveness .... GRAT - A GRAT is a technique whereby property is transferred into a trust in exchange for an ann... tool to provide additional wealth for future generations. The death benefits can provide for a ...