Fort Myers Eminent Domain Lawyer, Florida
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1-3 of 3 matches. Page 1 of 1
Louis Chuck Lira
Eminent Domain, State and Local, Employee Rights, Civil Rights
Status: In Good Standing *Status is reviewed annually. For latest information visit here Licensed: 33 Years
2115 Second St, Fort Myers, FL 33901
Profile LAWPOINTS™34/100
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William A Keyes
Eminent Domain, Litigation, Trusts, Elder Law
Status: In Good Standing *Status is reviewed annually. For latest information visit here Licensed: 53 Years
Fort Myers, FL 33902
Profile LAWPOINTS™24/100
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Ellen Tolbert Chadwell
Contract, Eminent Domain, State and Local, Civil Rights
Status: In Good Standing *Status is reviewed annually. For latest information visit here
5675 Strand Ct, Naples, FL 34110
Profile LAWPOINTS™34/100
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LEGAL TERMS
WORK MADE FOR HIRE
A work created by an employee within the scope of employment or a work commissioned an author under contract. With a work for hire, the author and copyright own... (more...)
A work created by an employee within the scope of employment or a work commissioned an author under contract. With a work for hire, the author and copyright owner of a work is the person who pays for it, not the person who creates it. The premise of this principle is that a business that authorizes and pays for a work owns the rights to the work. There are two distinct ways that a work will be classified as 'made for hire.'the work is created by an employee within the scope of employment; or the work is commissioned, is the subject of a written agreement, and falls within a special group of categories (a contribution to a collective work, a part of a motion picture or other audiovisual work, a translation, a supplementary work, a compilation, an atlas, an instructional text, a test, or as answer material for a test). The work made for hire status of a work affects the length of copyright protection and termination rights.
DEVISE
An old legal term that is generally used to refer to real estate left to someone under the terms of a will, or to the act of leaving such real estate. In some s... (more...)
An old legal term that is generally used to refer to real estate left to someone under the terms of a will, or to the act of leaving such real estate. In some states, 'devise' now applies to any kind of property left by will, making it identical to the term bequest. Compare legacy.
REAL ESTATE
Land and the property permanently attached to it, such as buildings, houses, stationary mobile homes, fences and trees. In legalese, real estate is also called ... (more...)
Land and the property permanently attached to it, such as buildings, houses, stationary mobile homes, fences and trees. In legalese, real estate is also called real property.
DIVIDEND
A portion of profits distributed by a corporation to its shareholders based on the type of stock and number of shares owned. Dividends are usually paid in cash,... (more...)
A portion of profits distributed by a corporation to its shareholders based on the type of stock and number of shares owned. Dividends are usually paid in cash, though they may also be paid in the form of additional shares of stock or other property. The amount of a dividend is established by the corporation's board of directors; however, state laws often restrict a corporation's ability to declare dividends by requiring a minimum level of profits or assets before the dividend can be approved.
JUS COGENS
Principles of international law so fundamental that no nation may ignore them or attempt to contract out of them through treaties. For example, genocide and par... (more...)
Principles of international law so fundamental that no nation may ignore them or attempt to contract out of them through treaties. For example, genocide and participating in a slave trade are thought to be jus cogens.
NULLA BONA
Latin for 'no goods.' This is what the sheriff writes when she can find no property to seize in order to pay off a court judgment.
INVITEE
A business guest, or someone who enters property held open to members of the public, such as a visitor to a museum. Property owners must protect invitees from d... (more...)
A business guest, or someone who enters property held open to members of the public, such as a visitor to a museum. Property owners must protect invitees from dangers on the property. In an example of the perversion of legalese, social guests that you invite into your home are called 'licensees.'
PATENT CLAIM
A statement included in a patent application that describes the structure of an invention in precise and exact terms, using a long established formal style and ... (more...)
A statement included in a patent application that describes the structure of an invention in precise and exact terms, using a long established formal style and precise terminology. Patent claims serve as a way for the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (PTO) to determine whether an invention is patentable, and as a way for a court to determine whether a patent has been infringed. In concept, a patent claim marks the boundaries of the patent in the same way as the legal description in a deed specifies the boundaries of the property.
EVIDENCE
The many types of information presented to a judge or jury designed to convince them of the truth or falsity of key facts. Evidence typically includes testimony... (more...)
The many types of information presented to a judge or jury designed to convince them of the truth or falsity of key facts. Evidence typically includes testimony of witnesses, documents, photographs, items of damaged property, government records, videos and laboratory reports. Rules that are as strict as they are quirky and technical govern what types of evidence can be properly admitted as part of a trial. For example, the hearsay rule purports to prevent secondhand testimony of the 'he said, she said' variety, but the existence of dozens of exceptions often means that hairsplitting lawyers can find a way to introduce such testimony into evidence. See also admissible evidence, inadmissible evidence.
SAMPLE LEGAL CASES
Essex Ins. Co. v. Zota
985 So.2d 1036 (2008). ESSEX INSURANCE COMPANY, Appellant, v. Mercedes
ZOTA, et al., Appellees. No. SC06-2031. Supreme Court of Florida. June 26, 2008.
1038 Douglas M. McIntosh and Robert C. Weill of McIntosh ...
Walton County v. Stop Beach Renourishment
... [because] Florida's law is clear that riparian rights cannot be severed from riparian uplands absent
an agreement with the riparian owner, not even by the power of eminent domain. Id. (citing
Belvedere Dev. Corp. v. Dep't of Transp., 476 So.2d 649 (Fla.1985) as controlling). ...
System Components Corp. v. FLORIDA DOT
... See § 74.011, Fla. Stat. (2004) ("In any eminent domain action, properly instituted by
and in the name of ... ... Relevant Eminent-Domain Doctrine and an Overview of Statutory
Business Damages. Eminent Domain and "Full Compensation". ...
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