Thread of legal hubbub

Shyster
Posts: 13186
Joined: Wed Mar 25, 2015 6:08 pm
Location: Nullius in verba

Thread of legal hubbub

Postby Shyster » Fri Aug 12, 2022 10:00 pm

Passed by Congress after the Civil War, § 1983 says you can sue government officials when they violate your rights. The Supreme Court, however, has said that government officials can raise a defense called "qualified immunity" to those suits, and that defense means that in many cases government officials (like police officers) are not held liable even when they engage in egregious civil-rights violations. This article says that the actual text of the statute that Congress passed said that government officials cannot raise defenses like qualified immunity. The phrase of the statute that prohibits defenses was omitted when the statute passed by Congress was compiled into a law book in 1874, and that omission has carried over into all subsequent compilations of the federal statutes.

If the article is correct, then without that scrivener's error, it is quite likely that the Supreme Court would never have held that government officials can raise a defense of qualified immunity, and that would mean that literally tens of thousands of people over decades of time who all had their civil-rights lawsuits against government officials dismissed on the basis of qualified immunity should have won all of those suits.

Shyster
Posts: 13186
Joined: Wed Mar 25, 2015 6:08 pm
Location: Nullius in verba

Thread of legal hubbub

Postby Shyster » Mon Aug 29, 2022 6:05 pm


Shyster
Posts: 13186
Joined: Wed Mar 25, 2015 6:08 pm
Location: Nullius in verba

Thread of legal hubbub

Postby Shyster » Sun Sep 18, 2022 11:32 pm


Shyster
Posts: 13186
Joined: Wed Mar 25, 2015 6:08 pm
Location: Nullius in verba

Thread of legal hubbub

Postby Shyster » Mon Sep 19, 2022 8:35 pm



Red, white, yellow, sweet, green, shallots, or leeks?

Shyster
Posts: 13186
Joined: Wed Mar 25, 2015 6:08 pm
Location: Nullius in verba

Thread of legal hubbub

Postby Shyster » Mon Sep 26, 2022 11:59 am


Shyster
Posts: 13186
Joined: Wed Mar 25, 2015 6:08 pm
Location: Nullius in verba

Thread of legal hubbub

Postby Shyster » Tue Oct 04, 2022 7:19 pm


tifosi77
Posts: 51682
Joined: Wed Mar 25, 2015 1:07 pm
Location: Batuu

Thread of legal hubbub

Postby tifosi77 » Wed Oct 05, 2022 12:29 pm

4.3 trillion daily viewers. And I remember reading the print edition in college. :lol:

tifosi77
Posts: 51682
Joined: Wed Mar 25, 2015 1:07 pm
Location: Batuu

Thread of legal hubbub

Postby tifosi77 » Wed Oct 05, 2022 12:31 pm

Reminded me of one of my favorite comedy sketches


Shyster
Posts: 13186
Joined: Wed Mar 25, 2015 6:08 pm
Location: Nullius in verba

Thread of legal hubbub

Postby Shyster » Wed Nov 30, 2022 11:48 pm


Shyster
Posts: 13186
Joined: Wed Mar 25, 2015 6:08 pm
Location: Nullius in verba

Thread of legal hubbub

Postby Shyster » Tue Dec 06, 2022 3:37 pm


Shyster
Posts: 13186
Joined: Wed Mar 25, 2015 6:08 pm
Location: Nullius in verba

Thread of legal hubbub

Postby Shyster » Wed Dec 21, 2022 1:32 am


MalkinIsMyHomeboy
Posts: 29559
Joined: Wed Mar 25, 2015 1:45 pm
Location: “MIMH is almost always correct” -ulf

Thread of legal hubbub

Postby MalkinIsMyHomeboy » Tue Jan 03, 2023 11:23 pm

alright, I have a situation. In September of last year, I signed a lease for an apartment. Before I did, I asked twice what their break lease fee was, and I was told it was just 60 days notice (so effectively 2 months’ rent)

I am now officially under contract for a house and brought up that I would like to break the lease. I am now told it’s not just 60 days notice, but also 2x month rent as well (so ultimately it’s 4x rent which is ridiculous compared to the other apartment complexes I researched). I admit I should’ve gotten the information back in September in writing, but oh well.


I did some very quick research and I found something:
If you don’t have a legal justification to break your lease, the good news is that you may still be off the hook for paying all the rent due for the remaining lease term. This is because under North Carolina law (Isbey v. Crews, 284 S.E.2d 534 (N.C. Ct. App. 1981)), your landlord must make reasonable efforts to re-rent your unit—no matter what your reason for leaving—rather than charge you for the total remaining rent due under the lease. So you may not have to pay much, if any additional rent, if you break your lease. You need pay only the amount of rent the landlord loses because you moved out early. This is because North Carolina requires landlords to take reasonable steps to keep their losses to a minimum—or to “mitigate damages” in legal terms.
So, if you break your lease and move out without legal justification, your landlord usually can’t just sit back and wait until the end of the lease, and then sue you for the total amount of lost rent. Your landlord must try to rerent the property reasonably quickly.
here’s the case:
https://casetext.com/case/isbey-v-crews


Is this even worth considering for me? it’s an apartment complex in a popular area of Charlotte and I know they would have no issue finding another renter, particularly within a four month timeframe. But also I feel like they’d do everything to **** me over

willeyeam
Posts: 39788
Joined: Wed Mar 25, 2015 12:49 pm
Location: hodgepodge of nothingness

Thread of legal hubbub

Postby willeyeam » Tue Jan 03, 2023 11:28 pm

Your break lease fee is different than that example of charging rent through the rest of the lease term

willeyeam
Posts: 39788
Joined: Wed Mar 25, 2015 12:49 pm
Location: hodgepodge of nothingness

Thread of legal hubbub

Postby willeyeam » Tue Jan 03, 2023 11:29 pm

You're paying a fee. Some places charge a fee and then also rent through the remainder of the lease if it isn't leased out again.

MalkinIsMyHomeboy
Posts: 29559
Joined: Wed Mar 25, 2015 1:45 pm
Location: “MIMH is almost always correct” -ulf

Thread of legal hubbub

Postby MalkinIsMyHomeboy » Tue Jan 03, 2023 11:30 pm

Your break lease fee is different than that example of charging rent through the rest of the lease term
what I’m proposing is I give 60 days notice and just peace out without breaking the lease

MalkinIsMyHomeboy
Posts: 29559
Joined: Wed Mar 25, 2015 1:45 pm
Location: “MIMH is almost always correct” -ulf

Thread of legal hubbub

Postby MalkinIsMyHomeboy » Tue Jan 03, 2023 11:31 pm

also they never included the break lease addendum in the lease itself when I signed it so I never agreed to it technically anyway

Shyster
Posts: 13186
Joined: Wed Mar 25, 2015 6:08 pm
Location: Nullius in verba

Thread of legal hubbub

Postby Shyster » Tue Jan 03, 2023 11:35 pm

Does the lease say anything about early termination?

willeyeam
Posts: 39788
Joined: Wed Mar 25, 2015 12:49 pm
Location: hodgepodge of nothingness

Thread of legal hubbub

Postby willeyeam » Tue Jan 03, 2023 11:43 pm

Are you saying you pay a fee for just straight up not renewing?

MalkinIsMyHomeboy
Posts: 29559
Joined: Wed Mar 25, 2015 1:45 pm
Location: “MIMH is almost always correct” -ulf

Thread of legal hubbub

Postby MalkinIsMyHomeboy » Wed Jan 04, 2023 11:46 am

Does the lease say anything about early termination?
this is all I could find for it
Image
interestingly they mention their responsibility to relet…

Shyster
Posts: 13186
Joined: Wed Mar 25, 2015 6:08 pm
Location: Nullius in verba

Thread of legal hubbub

Postby Shyster » Thu Jan 19, 2023 1:44 am


Shyster
Posts: 13186
Joined: Wed Mar 25, 2015 6:08 pm
Location: Nullius in verba

Thread of legal hubbub

Postby Shyster » Fri Feb 17, 2023 2:20 am


mac5155
Posts: 13996
Joined: Wed Mar 25, 2015 12:47 pm

Thread of legal hubbub

Postby mac5155 » Sun Apr 09, 2023 10:49 pm

Generally speaking. My father in law is likely leaving his house and a his mother's house to my wife. She's an only child. I'd like to tell him let's figure this out ASAP. Is a trust the best option?

Beveridge
Posts: 5407
Joined: Wed Mar 25, 2015 6:17 pm
Location: 8-8-1

Thread of legal hubbub

Postby Beveridge » Sun Apr 09, 2023 11:19 pm

Trust is going to be the way to go. Mainly because the trust will get a stepped up tax basis. Meaning that when the last person of the trust dies, the value of the house becomes the value on date of death. So if the house is sold say within a year or two, probably will have minimum capital gains on the sale. You avoid probate as well, but that's not the big advantage here.

*Not an estate attorney nor an estate expert

My mom was an only child and my grandparents actually put the house in my parents' names before they died. While that made it simple in the end, the capital gains tax is much greater.

mac5155
Posts: 13996
Joined: Wed Mar 25, 2015 12:47 pm

Thread of legal hubbub

Postby mac5155 » Mon Apr 10, 2023 9:08 am

Cool. Yeah wasn't expecting a full blown analysis, just point me down the right road to research and save time.

He is almost 70 and doesn't really take care of himself health wise. So I wanted to approach him about it and see what he says

mikey
Posts: 42704
Joined: Thu Mar 26, 2015 10:58 pm
Location: More of a before-rehab friend...
Contact:

Thread of legal hubbub

Postby mikey » Sat Apr 15, 2023 2:10 pm

International resort (Costa Rica) dropped our reservation within 50 days of our trip. Totally bricks a 10-day international vacation (potentially)...can I take any kind of legal action, regardless of T's & C's...? I mean, anyone can sue anyone, basically, but any decent precedent...? Consumer protection seems to be on the rise, but maybe not in a country that bases its economy on coconut sales...

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: faftorial, Lemon Berry Lobster, LeopardLetang and 346 guests