hitomi Posted November 2, 2005 Share Posted November 2, 2005 The phrase probable cause has quite a technical meaning in law and is not to be taken in its general signification..... .....Aside from the required existence of facts that would lead to probable cause, the arresting officers must have personal knowledge of such facts. Hindi pwede yung narinig lang nila o sinabi lang sa kanila ng isang witness. An exception, as ruled by the Supreme Court recently, is where the time of the arrest and the time of the crime are not so far removed from each other and the witnesses pointed to the suspects as the perpetrators of the crime.<{POST_SNAPBACK}> hi! thanks for the reply, im curious about law and im glad there are a couple of MTC'ers who are well versed in it. they say ignorance of the law does not justify breaking it, but if they just made the law easier to understand, it wouldn't be so bad. may mga tanong pa ko ha sa hinaharap ha, hehehe gling nyo talaga, thanks guys :cool: :mtc: :cool: Quote Link to comment
bill lomita Posted November 2, 2005 Share Posted November 2, 2005 (edited) meron bang may alam na magaling maghandle ng mga petition cases for us immigrant visa?<{POST_SNAPBACK}> Michael Garfinkel pina ka visible dyan dahil mashowbiz. May show sa ANC Sunday mornings.<{POST_SNAPBACK}> Huwag kang pumunta kay Atty. Garfinkel mataas sumingil yan, malakas tumaga yan. Kung ang petitioner mo nasa States dapat siya ang kumuha U.S. immigration lawyer, sabihin mo lang sa petitioner mo magbasa sya ng Pilipino newspaper, free naman ang mga iyon sa mga groceries , maraming advertisement doon o kaya sa mga telephone directory or yellow pages. Kung ikaw ang beneficiary na nasa Pilipinas di mo na kailangan ang immigration lawyer dyan kasi ang lawyer na ng petitioner mo ang lalakad at bahala sa lahat, pati na yun mga papeles para dyan sa Manila U.S. Embassy. Actually magbasa ka lang ang immigration requirements and procedures sa website ng www.USCIS.gov kuha mo na lahat ang kailangan tungkul sa U.S. immigration. Usually kasi mga para-legal personel lang ang nag-a-handle o gumagawa ng documentations nyan at saka lang bibigay sa lawyer kung may problema na mabigat, othewise, madali lang naman yan basta kumpleto ang mga papeles mo at U.S. citizen ang petitioner mo. Edited November 2, 2005 by Bill Lomita Quote Link to comment
lastikboy Posted November 3, 2005 Share Posted November 3, 2005 What do you mean exactly when you say "can't access"? Are the files/folders still there but you get a notification that the files cannot be accessed or are the files/folders missing?<{POST_SNAPBACK}> Yup, the folders are still there, but can't access. Me and my wife are administrator, and both of our old folders are "access denied". Any more suggestions, please. TY Quote Link to comment
Cyber_pinoy Posted November 3, 2005 Share Posted November 3, 2005 I need a copy of the Implementing Rules and Guidelines of the Solo Parents Welfare Act for the area of Makati City. Would anybody have a copy? Let me know, thanks. Quote Link to comment
fauxhead Posted November 3, 2005 Share Posted November 3, 2005 before filing of the suit for unlawful detainer, you need to go to the barangay where the the house being rented is located...yes you need to serve a demand letter upon the person...how does one serve it, then the rules of court apply but personal service must be effected first, before substituted service...once the barangay issues certificate that there was an attempt at conciliation, but no compromise was acceptable... after the issuance of the certification, then file your unlawful detainer case attaching said certification...you need the bgy cert before the court can acquire jurisdiction on the matter... i hope this helps...<{POST_SNAPBACK}> Since you seem bent on being technical about it, you might have forgotten to remind him that he needs to have his complaint verified. Quote Link to comment
il_jr Posted November 3, 2005 Share Posted November 3, 2005 Yup, the folders are still there, but can't access. Me and my wife are administrator, and both of our old folders are "access denied". Any more suggestions, please. TY<{POST_SNAPBACK}> Ok I think you're problem is that you've enabled encrypting file systems on your data and by the looks of it you haven't saved your security key credentials. Another problem is that you have backed up your "data files" only and reformatted your drive. I'm sorry to tell you that it's almost impossible to recover your files due to loss of Encrypting File System (native to NTFS) keys. However you may try to run this tool Advanced EFS Recovery and see if you can still recover your data. Best regards Quote Link to comment
oliverjohnholmes Posted November 3, 2005 Share Posted November 3, 2005 Since you seem bent on being technical about it, you might have forgotten to remind him that he needs to have his complaint verified. <{POST_SNAPBACK}> yeah i did forget that...thanks for the pointer... always for the ends of justice right? Quote Link to comment
fauxhead Posted November 3, 2005 Share Posted November 3, 2005 Question lang po... Pag nagresign ba ang 3 out of 5 incorporators, ano po ba ang magiging effect nito sa company and ano ang pwedeng proceso para mapalitan ito ng hindi maapektuhan ang operation ng company?<{POST_SNAPBACK}> You must have meant directors. The incorporators are only required for registration. They can even sell their interests after incorporation. As incorporators, they cannot resign as such. In fact, the section containing the name of the incorporators is one of the provisions in the registration certificate that cannot be amended. Usually, incorporators are also appointed as the initial directors. In such a case, their resignation should be covered by the provisions of the corporation's by-laws. Quote Link to comment
R@v3n Posted November 3, 2005 Share Posted November 3, 2005 Yup, the folders are still there, but can't access. Me and my wife are administrator, and both of our old folders are "access denied". Any more suggestions, please. TY<{POST_SNAPBACK}> Let me guess...you formatted your computer and said yes to the dialog when you assigned passwords that you would like to keep your documents private... Ok I think you're problem is that you've enabled encrypting file systems on your data and by the looks of it you haven't saved your security key credentials. Another problem is that you have backed up your "data files" only and reformatted your drive. I'm sorry to tell you that it's almost impossible to recover your files due to loss of Encrypting File System (native to NTFS) keys. However you may try to run this tool Advanced EFS Recovery and see if you can still recover your data. Best regards<{POST_SNAPBACK}> I agree...it's next to impossible to recover your data... Quote Link to comment
redax Posted November 3, 2005 Share Posted November 3, 2005 For the information of those who inquired about having problems paying their credit car companies, I heard today in UNTV's Batas Mauricio program that there is a law prohibiting those with credit card obligations from concealing their wheareabouts or evading calls from collectors of these credit card companies. According to them violators could face up to 8 years imprisonment. It would be better for you to suffer the agony of abusive collectors than face prosecution under this law. It could also be the reason why collectors are abusive, to cause you to violate this law without you knowing about it. Easier to collect if debtors know they could face imprisonment. Quote Link to comment
serious Posted November 4, 2005 Share Posted November 4, 2005 Hello To All MTC Lawyers and MTC Under Bar Law Graduates, Good Day! I am looking for (2) Lawyers or Under Bar Law Graduates who want to work as a part time tutor for Law Student. Compensation Package are very competitive. For interested applicants kindly email me your resume at serious_migs@yahoo.com Thank You very much! -serious Quote Link to comment
MODERATOR bonito99 Posted November 4, 2005 MODERATOR Share Posted November 4, 2005 POP QUIZ: what can you say about AD CAUTELAM petitions? Quote Link to comment
lastikboy Posted November 5, 2005 Share Posted November 5, 2005 Maraming Salamat sa lahat nag bigay ng mga tips. Quote Link to comment
genro Posted November 5, 2005 Share Posted November 5, 2005 Hi MTC Lawyers! i have a question.. i have this friend who works in a certain company. he signed a 2-month training contract with the company. after 2 months of training, he continued to work for two months more but still receives training allowances because no contract renewal has been issued yet. when the renewal had been issued, he started receiving the regular pay but all his training allowances from the previous two months have been deducted to his pay. this happened to him and to seven other people on his batch. can they file a law suite? what are the grounds? what are their chances of winning the case? your help will be extremely appreciated. thanks! Quote Link to comment
agentjackbauer Posted November 6, 2005 Share Posted November 6, 2005 POP QUIZ: what can you say about AD CAUTELAM petitions?<{POST_SNAPBACK}> About what in particular panero? People in our firm dont hesitate using the phrase "ad cautelam" when necessary. I personally dont mind using it. Just to be on the safe side. (And that is exactly what it means: ad cautelam= for safety's sake or to be on the safe side or "ex abundanti cautela" = abundant caution). Quote Link to comment
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