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When I put my old couch out...we worried that I'd have to go to a random stranger's house and move the rest of the furniture.
When I picked up the apparently-nice leather couch my ex-neighbors left behind when they moved out, and subsequently discovered that the brown was coming off the leather and onto my clothing, I didn't run to track down the neighbors wherever they moved to and demand that they pay for cleaning my shirts. No, I went to BB&B and shelled out $90 for a nice slipcover.
JJ's operating under NY law, so in her case individuals can sell their cars "as is" but ... dealers cannot. So it's best to always review the local laws first on something like that. It may be different than what one expects.
Actually, with those TV court shows, the Judges base their "rulings" on the law of the state the people came from (or the state where the transaction occurs.) This is because they get people from all over the USA coming to be on TV and get paid to air their dirty laundry.
You see Judge Milan (? People's Court Lady) will often come back from a recess and talk about how she called or researched the law in the state that the transactions occurred before making her ruling based on that. I've seen JJ do it a few times as well when she REALLY wanted to jam the law down some unsuspecting dummies' throat.
My Writing Blog -Updated 05/06/2013
It's so I can get ideas out of my head, I decided to put it in a blog in case people are bored or are curious as to the (many) things in progress.
That's right, they's what they do. The case is considered as still being in the district that the case was filed in, so those are the laws that apply. The arbitration (judge) shows send their clerks to research the local laws for them.
Customers should always be served . . . to the nearest great white.
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