WHAT IF I INHERITED MY PROPERTY? Sample Clauses

WHAT IF I INHERITED MY PROPERTY?. If you can demonstrate that you owned the property during the period May 17, 2010 through October 1, 2014 then you will be eligible to receive a payment.
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WHAT IF I INHERITED MY PROPERTY?. If you inherited your property, along with any property-based claims that were owned by your deceased relative, you will be able to count any period of ownership by your deceased relative.

Related to WHAT IF I INHERITED MY PROPERTY?

  • Employer Property Employees must return to the Employer all Employer property in their possession at the time of termination of employment. The Employer shall take such action as required to recover the value of articles which are not returned.

  • B8 Property B8.1 Where the Client issues Property free of charge to the Contractor such Property shall be and remain the property of the Client and the Contractor irrevocably licences the Client and its agents to enter upon any premises of the Contractor during normal business hours on reasonable notice to recover any such Property. The Contractor shall not in any circumstances have a lien or any other interest on the Property and the Contractor shall at all times possess the Property as fiduciary agent and bailee of the Client. The Contractor shall take all reasonable steps to ensure that the title of the Client to the Property and the exclusion of any such lien or other interest are brought to the notice of all sub-contractors and other appropriate persons and shall, at the Client’s request, store the Property separately and ensure that it is clearly identifiable as belonging to the Client.

  • What if I Make a Contribution for Which I Am Ineligible or Change My Mind About the Type of IRA to Which I Wish to Contribute? Prior to the due date (including extensions) for filing your tax return, you may elect to “recharacterize” amounts that you contributed to an IRA during the year by making a recharacterization of the contributed amount and earnings. Thus, for example, if you contribute amounts to a Xxxx XXX and later determine that you are ineligible to make a Xxxx XXX contribution for the year, you may at any time prior to the tax return due date for the year (including extensions) make a recharacterization of the contributions and earnings to a Traditional IRA.

  • Access to Property, Property’s Management, Property Lender, and Property Tenants Potential Investor agrees to not seek to gain access to any non-public areas of the Property or communicate with Property’s management employees, the holder of any financing encumbering the Property, the Property’s tenants, and the Owner’s partners in the ownership of the Property, without the prior consent of Owner or HFF, which consent may be withheld in the Owner’s sole discretion.

  • Personal Property Loss An employee's personal property loss or damage by the action of a client shall be replaced or repaired at the expense of the Employer to a maximum of seven hundred and fifty ($750.00) dollars, subject to integration with one hundred (100%) per cent coverage by Workers' Compensation Board, provided that reasonable proof of the cause of such damage is submitted by the employee concerned within reasonable time of such loss or damage.

  • What if a Prohibited Transaction Occurs If a “prohibited transaction”, as defined in Section 4975 of the Internal Revenue Code, occurs, the Xxxxxxxxx Education Savings Account could be disqualified. Rules similar to those that apply to Traditional IRAs will apply.

  • Qualified Property Applicant’s Qualified Property is described in Schedule 2.3, which is incorporated herein by reference. The Parties expressly agree that the location of the Qualified Property shall be within the Reinvestment Zone as set out in Schedule 2.1.

  • INCOME FROM IMMOVABLE PROPERTY 1. Income derived by a resident of a Contracting State from immovable property (including income from agriculture or forestry) situated in the other Contracting State may be taxed in that other State.

  • LOSS OF PERSONAL PROPERTY The board will not be responsible for any employee’s loss of personal property brought to a school or work site; however, in the event an employee’s personal property is lost or damaged as a direct result of a disaster, such as hurricane, fire, flood, etc., the board will reimburse the employee’s loss or damage in an amount not to exceed $500 per occurrence. In order for an employee to be eligible for such reimbursement, the personal property for which the employee makes a claim must have been pre-approved for use by the employee in connection with the employee’s duties, as evidenced by a written approval form signed by the employee’s principal or site supervisor and by the employee. In addition to the approval form, the employee must attach to the form proof of the property’s value, i.e. receipt, etc. The employee will be responsible for presenting a copy of the approval form in order to secure payment for loss. Payment will not be made unless the form is presented. The maximum amount an employee may receive for loss in any single occurrence is a total of $500, regardless of the amount or number of items approved for use in connection with the employee’s duties.

  • Removal of Personal Property All articles of personal property owned by Tenant or installed by Tenant at its expense in the Premises (including business and trade fixtures, furniture and movable partitions) shall be, and remain, the property of Tenant, and shall be removed by Tenant from the Premises, at Tenant's sole cost and expense, on or before the expiration or sooner termination of this Lease. Tenant shall repair any damage caused by such removal.

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