I recommend you acquire a copy of your wife's hospital file ASAP. Your attorney will need it and you should have a copy as well. There should be an incident report in the file explaining what they think happened.
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Dad could send a certified letter giving the executor a set date to pick up the items or Dad will consider them abandoned and his property to dispose of as he wishes. Make the deadline reasonable.
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The process server will file a document with the court stating that you answered the door but refused to accept service, then a warrant will probably be issued. All this can be avoided if you go the court and turn yourself in .
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No. Treble damages are not available in breach of contract cases in Arizona. You can request compensatory damages (the amount she owes under the contract); fees and costs (money you've had to spend to get her into court); and consequential damages (money you lost as a result of her breach, such as other sales or wasted product).
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If it is his first offense, the result is generally probation, community service and alcohol classes. But it could also include a fine up to $500. If it is not his first offense, then he could find himself on intensive probation, or worse - in juvenile detention or prison.
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You are not the father unless your name appears on the birth certificate or a paternity test indicates you are the father. So right now, you have no parental rights. You could file a motion with the court asking the adoption proceedings to be stayed pending the result of your paternity test.
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You are not required to respond. If you choose to - send him a copy of your return air line ticket showing when you left FL.
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They could require that the patient not have a car on their property due to liability. I do not see how they could prevent the resident from owning a car, however.
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A crime victim cannot "file charges." The investigating law enforcement agency would have sent the police report to the Pinal County Attorney's Office and they decided whether to file charges or not. You can get a copy of the report from the police/Sheriff Office who took the report. The report should state at the end if it was referred for prosecution. If it wasn't referred, ask them to refer it. But understand that the prosecutor may decide not to prosecute for many reasons. Also, if you...
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Short answer: he is correct.
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