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New York County Legal Guides (7 found)Narrow your search
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Written by Brian Gerard Reddy
If you were attacked by a pet dog in New York, you may be entitled to payment from the dog’s owners or insurance company. 2 of 5 users found this helpful. Posted about 1 year ago in Personal Injury. Jurisdiction: New York, NY
Written by Brian Gerard Reddy
If you have been injured in a New York truck accident, you may be able to get payment from the truck owners/operators to cover injury-related expenses. Posted about 1 year ago in Trucking Accident. Jurisdiction: New York, NY
Written by Aaron Cohen
NYC re-assesses properties and assigns a new assessment every year. There are strict filing deadlines in order to protest / challenge your tax assessment. For the 5 boroughs of NYC, the deadline to challenge the tax assessment with the NYC Tax Commission (for most commercial property) is March 1st. 18 of 20 users found this helpful. Posted 5 months ago in Tax. Jurisdiction: New York, NY
Written by Ronald Anthony Sarno
An introduction to NYC Division of Housing and Community Renewal --what apartments it controls and how its rules and regulations affect property owners. Comments on the Rent Guidelines Board and Housing Court. How Landlords can legally evict tenants or charge them with a false continuity of tenancy Posted 5 months ago in Landlord / Tenant. Jurisdiction: New York, NY
Written by Ronald Anthony Sarno
What is an Expediter? Why use one? What does HUD do? DHCR? Who manages rent control and stabilization? FDNY? NYPD? What about Evironmental Protection? What does the Department of Transportation and the Department of Parks and Recreation do that affects buildings? Posted about 1 month ago in Real Estate. Jurisdiction: New York, NY
Written by Ronald Anthony Sarno
This is a continuation of Part One: Further overview of NY agencies includes DOHMH--the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene; DSNY, the Department of Sanitation, New York and Department of City Planning for Zoning and Land Use; CPC- City Planning Commission; BSA Bureau of Standards and Appeal Posted about 1 month ago in Real Estate. Jurisdiction: New York, NY
Written by William Chuang
A summary eviction proceeding is the quickest way to legally evict a tenant, squatter, or roommate. You can petition for nonpayment or holdover, but you cannot evict the person by yourself by changing the lock. A summary eviction proceeding requires strict adherence to the rules in order to succeed. 3 of 3 users found this helpful. Posted 3 months ago in Landlord / Tenant. Jurisdiction: New York, NY |