What If You Want To File Your Own Lawsuit Sample Clauses

What If You Want To File Your Own Lawsuit. To facilitate the settlement process, the Court has issued an order enjoining all members of the Settlement Collective and Settlement Class (including you) from initiating any “Duplica t ive Lawsuits” while the Settlement is being administered. Duplicative Lawsuits include all suits, actions, causes of action, claims, or demands in any federal, state, or local jurisdiction, other than the Lawsuit, asserting any of the Released Claims. This injunction will remain in effect through the Effective Date of the Settlement or, for any individual Settlement Class Member, through the date he or she files a valid and timely Request for Exclusion as described above.
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What If You Want To File Your Own Lawsuit. To facilitate the settlement process, the Court has issued an order enjoining all members of the Settlement Collective (including you) and the Settlement Class from initiating any “Duplica t ive Lawsuits” while the Settlement is being administered. Duplicative Lawsuits include all suits, actions, causes of action, claims, or demands in any federal, state, or local jurisdiction, other than the Lawsuit, asserting any of the Released Claims. This injunction will remain in effect through the Effective Date of the Settlement.

Related to What If You Want To File Your Own Lawsuit

  • What To Do If You Find A Mistake On Your Statement If you think there is an error on your statement, write to us at the address(es) listed on your statement. In your letter, give us the following information:

  • HOW WE MAY USE YOUR PERSONAL INFORMATION 8.1 We will use the personal information You provide to Us to:

  • Your Rights If You Are Dissatisfied With Your Credit Card Purchases If you are dissatisfied with the goods or services that you have purchased with your credit card, and you have tried in good faith to correct the problem with the merchant, you may have the right not to pay the remaining amount due on the purchase. To use this right, all of the following must be true:

  • Information About You and Your Visits to the Website All information we collect on this Website is subject to our Privacy Policy. By using the Website, you consent to all actions taken by us with respect to your information in compliance with the Privacy Policy.

  • How to File an Appeal of a Prescription Drug Denial For denials of a prescription drug claim based on our determination that the service was not medically necessary or appropriate, or that the service was experimental or investigational, you may request an appeal without first submitting a request for reconsideration. You or your physician may file a written or verbal prescription drug appeal with our pharmacy benefits manager (PBM). The prescription drug appeal must be submitted to us within one hundred and eighty (180) calendar days of the initial determination letter. You will receive written notification of our determination within thirty (30) calendar days from the receipt of your appeal. How to File an Expedited Appeal Your appeal may require immediate action if a delay in treatment could seriously jeopardize your health or your ability to regain maximum function, or would cause you severe pain. To request an expedited appeal of a denial related to services that have not yet been rendered (a preauthorization review) or for on-going services (a concurrent review), you or your healthcare provider should call: • our Grievance and Appeals Unit; or • our pharmacy benefits manager for a prescription drug appeal. Please see Section 9 for contact information. You will be notified of our decision no later than seventy-two (72) hours after our receipt of the request. You may not request an expedited review of covered healthcare services already received.

  • What Will Happen After We Receive Your Letter When we receive your letter, we must do two things:

  • Protecting Your Personal Information In addition to protecting your access codes, you should also take precautions to protect your personal identification information, such as your driver’s license, Social Security number, or tax identification number. This information by itself or together with account information may allow unauthorized access to your accounts. You should treat personal information with the same level of care that you would for your account information. You should also protect and secure all information and data stored in any personal computer or other equipment you use to access our Online Banking service.

  • Protect Yourself I will ensure that the information, images, and materials I post online will not put me at risk. I will not publish my personal details, contact details, or a schedule of my activities. I will report any attacks or inappropriate behavior directed at me while online. I will protect passwords, accounts, and resources. I will not meet anyone in real life that I have met online without parental permission.

  • Removal Before Your Tax Filing Deadline An excess contribution may be corrected by withdrawing the excess amount, along with the earnings attributable to the excess, before your tax filing deadline, including extensions, for the year for which the excess contribution was made. An excess withdrawn under this method is not taxable to you, but you must include the earnings attributable to the excess in your taxable income in the year in which the contribution was made. The six percent excess contribution penalty tax will be avoided.

  • Removal After Your Tax Filing Deadline If you are correcting an excess contribution after your tax filing deadline, including extensions, remove only the amount of the excess contribution. The six percent excess contribution penalty tax will be imposed on the excess contribution for each year it remains in the IRA. An excess withdrawal under this method will only be taxable to you if the total contributions made in the year of the excess exceed the annual applicable contribution limit.

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