typical reddit/r/legaladvice post: "person X put their car / house / student loans / business in person Y's name, just as - you know - a <gestures> paperwork thing - but now creditors / the federal government / the DMV / the police / the IRS are acting as if this is Y's thing"
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7/ And that makes perfect sense in 5,000 BC. But I'm curious what happens when someone with that mindset interacts with the law. So, when both you and dad agree that it's your car ... but the TITLE has dad's name ... what does this person think that means?
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8/ I fired an employee once for throwing a stapler across the room in anger. He then tried to get unemployment benefits. I fought. I showed his signature on the employee handbook, including the "workplace violence" clause.
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9/ His rebuttal was "well Travis said that that was just boilerplate". I responded to the mediator "that's absolutely correct; it's a large document that I reuse. That's what 'boilerplate' means." But what did Andy THINK it meant? "Sign this ... you know, for lulz" ?
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10/ This is a mystery. Perhaps some day I'll understand.
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11/ necro-posting to this thread because this is so relevanthttps://twitter.com/k_d_payne/status/1118985719157088256 …
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12/ "that's just as - you know - <gestures> a paperwork thing"
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End of conversation
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reddit legal has tons of these "how do I take my name off the mortgage?" LOLOL WHAT !?!?
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That WORKS too, as long as your dad and you remain on good terms. . . as a late teen/early college student I drove "my car" which belonged to my parents and on which they paid the insurance, ect.
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