The contract can be verbal or written . . . expressed or implied.
If there is an implied contract, even if there was nothing signed, or nothing directly stated, it could be possible for another person to sue you.
2007-09-05 13:50:14
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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In my business law class, I learned that a verbal contract (i.e. you agreed to pay a certain amount for a good or service) is still enforcable. The only thing a written contract does is prevent people from lying about whether or not an agreement was made. To answer your question: Can they sue? Absolutlely. Will they win? If they can prove that there was an agreement (as far as the burden of proof goes in a civil proceeding) then they can win.
2007-09-05 12:57:21
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answer #2
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answered by Trav 4
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Yes.
One, there are theories of lawsuits that involve debts being owed that do not arise under a contract. For example, damage to property caused by something under your control, such as a car, a child, an animal. If your cow jumps the fence and tramples your neighbor's crop, you owe them for the damage, but there was never a contract.
Two, sometimes there are contracts when you might not realize it. If you get into a taxi and say "take me to Grand Central" and the driver says "ok", you've just formed a contract.
2007-09-05 12:55:02
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answer #3
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answered by open4one 7
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Of course. This is what civil court is for, among other things. A good example of a common problem would be a person that agrees to pay half the rent without being on a lease. If you decide to just move out without paying rent for a couple of months, you will most likely lose a civil suit.
2007-09-05 12:56:16
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Yes. You really need to provide more information, but you don't need a contract to do something to someone that makes them want to sue you. This is America, we can, and we do, sue for anything. Whether you win is another story.
2007-09-05 12:57:27
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answer #5
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answered by Hillary 6
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i'm sorry to your soreness. i will enable you already know are laid low with this. I went with the aid of something comparable and it somewhat does harm. returned, very sorry. Being on your shoes it somewhat is what i might do. i might call a 'hard paintings lawyer' or 'employment criminal expert' who supplies unfastened consultations. i might called the dep. of hard paintings on your state and ask for the factors and wages branch. once you get unemployment the employer you worked for has to chip in to pay you. So it would be that someone can "agree" to launch them from that.
2016-11-14 07:22:55
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answer #6
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answered by tito 4
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