I live in mountain lakes resort Cleveland Ga. We have private home owners. And management for our clubhouse amenities. It is a private resort. We pay maintenance to mountain shadows, to receive car stickers 2020 that allow us to drive in pass security. We pay dues to use clubhouse pool & so on. Well mountain lakes club management has stopped owners telling us are car stickers are no good. Must be a paid member of the clubhouse to get in? No property owners are allowed to bring in any person who does not have a paid clubhouse sticker.. They are dictating, like Marshall law who we can have in our own homes right now. This is a very large place and several owners have called police. They were stopped at the gate and told they could not bring their grandchild in the park. To the owners own home. Many of us are thinking class action? What would it fall under? Another entity within this resort is having guests in w no cards 2020 because they had reservations. They don't want to be sued or return deposits. The only reason mountain lakes allows this is because they have been sued by that entity before. My question who has the right to tell a homeowner whom they can have in their home?
Ultimately, the management company works for the homeowners. If enough homeowners agree, they can control the management company.
An attorney would need to read all the documents associated with your ownership to include your homeowners association by laws, all the agreements that have been made between the various clubs before understanding what your rights are.
During this time of coronavirus it is not at all unusual for property management to take steps for the public good of everyone concerned.
You can certainly spend several thousand dollars suing if you like, but you likely won’t find a very sympathetic judge to your condition (arguing you shouldn’t have to be restrained under coronavirus) especially if the restrictions only last a few days or weeks.
I think this is where I should post this question.
I am from Utah and am the plaintiff and have a small claims court default judgment against the defendant. I am in the process of trying to collect the judgment and have a question.
Is it possible to garnish a pay pal account? If so, how do I go about doing it? I contacted pay pal and they gave me the address to send a subpoena to; however, on the small claims court website I have no idea which form/subpoena I need. Please help.
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Hi. I was recently involved in a car accident at which I was at fault. While his car is being repaired, am I responsible for his car rental? If his car is valued at 25-30 thousand dollars, and he rented a $150/day car, must I cover all of that?