Regardless of how you paid for your condominium, what you purchased includes the exterior of the building and all the other common elements and limited common elements of the community that all owners own in common.
Your board of directors and the management company for your community, if you have one, can help you understand your liability as to satisfying this lien.
As with the BP oil spill the contractor is responsible for the subcontractor actions.
My brother had solar installed on his new roof and the company subcontractor destroyed his new roof. Can he sue the subcontractor?This happened in Missouri.
pork and beans
The company who bided on the job is who determines if they are hiring outside their company. If they do this is generally called sub contracting.
No. A subcontractor is an organization contracting with another company to perform tasks related to the design, construction, installation, or maintenance of products. A subcontractor is a person who performs work that is contracted out to a third party. A supplier is a person who supplies material, equipment, or services to another firm.
All sorts of companies do business for other companies. But maybe you mean "subcontractor"?
nearly nil, you are a subcontractor, i.e. not actually working for the co that contracted your services
Is a form that a company must fill with the state for their subcontractorts if the subcontractor does not carry workers' compensation insurance.
A company is required to carry workman's compensation insurance on subcontractors. This is regardless of the number of employees a subcontractor employs.
There are many mechanics and procedures when buying out in finance. These buyouts are when a company purchases another company's assets and they uses those assets against them.
This has a lot of senerios. The first of which is, "what state do you live in?" In Minnesota we call them Mechanics Liens. The catch with them is that they MUST have sent a Pre-lien Notice to the homebuyer/builder prior to or within 10 days of work being started at the property. This is all assuming the "private company" you are refering to is a subcontractor or worker that did work on this new home. Look to your state for help on this one. Hope this helps.
Depends on the Contract. Alot of subcontractor contracts prevent this. If the Prime contractor has received an estimate from a subcontractor and the subcontractor is working at the site or project under a estimate or purchase order then yes, the Prime contractor can be held liable for all monies under the contract if the subcontractor can prove that the employees were on their payroll and during this project the Prime contractor solicited Sub employees to become independent contractors.