Review the documents you signed when you purchased the property to confirm that you **did not sign** any association-based documents, such as CC&Rs, a Public Offering Statement containing such, or a receipt indicating that you received a copy of the CC&Rs, and read them.
The CC&Rs and other governing documents, give the board of directors the power to levy assessments on members of the association, in your case, apparently, to cover maintenance, preservation and perhaps security involved with the road.
Generally, when you purchase a property covered by an association, you agree at time of purchase by signing -- as above -- and thereby give your agreement to pay assessments levied on your property.
If the judge was shown a death certificate for another holder, a change of name perhaps, a signed agreement from the involved parties. Sometimes the property disappears. This is what judges do. A signed agreement IS a signed agreement. No one can be thrown off a signed agreement unless another agreement exists (by those parties), a law has been violated that abrogates the agreement, or the conditions specified in the agreement have changed.
AnswerPre-Nuptial agreement. Sometimes a post-nuptial agreement is done which means the agreement was signed after marriage instead of before.
Absolutely not! Not without your written/signed consent. If Property Management did so, it seems you would have had to sign a Property Management Agreement with them that gave them that authority. You would read over the agreement you signed when you signed on with the management services.
Any agreement that affects the property must be signed by all the owners or it is not enforceable. It would need to be signed by all of the joint tenants.
If the agreement (contract) was signed in the presence of a Notary Public, no.
NOT IF THE LANDLORD IS ONE & THE SAME AS THE CURRENT OWNER & PROVIDED ALL OWNERS' OF SAID PROPERTY SIGNED THE PURCHASE AGREEMENT.
It depends on what you mean by condominiums. It's possible that the condominium project developer who originally owns the land was required to sign an easement agreement. Your local county clerk's office has a copy of the original deed filing for the land which will contain an easement if one was signed and/or required. If you are asking about an individual unit owner's requirement to sign an easement agreement, your association's attorney can give you an opinion.
purchase agreement
A pre-nuptual agreement is a type of contract. The parties have set obligations and limitations on their sharing of property.
No. You can enter into any agreement whether you understand it or not. No law protects the stupid from a bad contract. It is up to the buyer to have their own legal representation when purchasing real property. The buyer's attorney should be on hand to review any P&S Agreement before it's signed binding the buyer to the terms of the contract.
That depends which peace agreement your talking about. The peace agreement with Egypt was signed by Menachem Begin. The peace agreement with Jordan was signed by Yitzchak Rabin.
The owner of the land is responsible for maintaining the property unless you signed some sort of an agreement to maintain your own landscaping. If they are allowing the property to get run down try complaining to the local board of health or building code department.The owner of the land is responsible for maintaining the property unless you signed some sort of an agreement to maintain your own landscaping. If they are allowing the property to get run down try complaining to the local board of health or building code department.The owner of the land is responsible for maintaining the property unless you signed some sort of an agreement to maintain your own landscaping. If they are allowing the property to get run down try complaining to the local board of health or building code department.The owner of the land is responsible for maintaining the property unless you signed some sort of an agreement to maintain your own landscaping. If they are allowing the property to get run down try complaining to the local board of health or building code department.