Re: German Shepherds and Home Insurance Providers
Posted: Tue Nov 13, 2018 9:24 pm
Didn't even know it changes your insurance premium... I will keep this one to myself. lol
Come and meet with Florida's finest shooters.
https://www.floridashootersnetwork.com/
Moral of the story, control your dog.Slartibartfast wrote: ↑Tue Nov 13, 2018 9:08 pm
that works great until something happens like the dog biting
someone. had a neighbor that did that for years claiming his
pitbull was some kind of mix and one day it attacked some kid
handing out flyers door to door.
the cops and animal control came out and later the kids family
sued him. his home owners sent out an investigator who spoke
to all his neighbors and confirmed it was indeed a pitbull. they
denied coverage and the guy lost everything including his house
in the lawsuit !
I can understand losing alot. But if his home was homesteaded how did he lose it. His home would have been protected from forced sale to satisfy a judgement under Florida's homestead law.Slartibartfast wrote: ↑Tue Nov 13, 2018 9:08 pm
that works great until something happens like the dog biting
someone. had a neighbor that did that for years claiming his
pitbull was some kind of mix and one day it attacked some kid
handing out flyers door to door.
the cops and animal control came out and later the kids family
sued him. his home owners sent out an investigator who spoke
to all his neighbors and confirmed it was indeed a pitbull. they
denied coverage and the guy lost everything including his house
in the lawsuit !
Now here is where people can screwup. Parents say put their child on the deed of their home. But the child does not actually live on the homesteaded property. Then child get's sued. Guess what....parent's just got screwed.The Florida homestead exemption is a provision in Article X, Section 4 of the Florida Constitution that provides Florida residents valuable legal benefits and protection.
In asset protection planning, the Florida homestead exemption protects a Florida resident’s primary home from levy and execution by their judgment creditors. A judgment creditor cannot force the sale of your homestead to satisfy a money judgment. A recorded judgment does not attach to a debtor’s homestead. For the Florida homestead exemption, Courts have liberally expanded definitions of homestead property to include more than just a single family house. Condominiums, manufactured homes, and mobile homes are also afforded homestead protection in Florida.
The Florida Constitution defines homestead as one’s principal place of residence up to one-half acre within a municipality and up to 160 contiguous acres outside a municipality. Contiguous property may include lots with separate legal descriptions and separate tax numbers.
Dogs can be tricky also. It really does not matter what kind of dog you have. Even if it's not on their restricted list. If the insurance company comes out to assess your homes value and you have any kind of aggressive dog. Does not matter what kind. They can use it against you to deny coverage.Co-ownership of a homestead can jeopardize the homestead exemption when one of the co-owners does not reside on the property. A judgment creditor of the non-resident co-owner can force the property to be sold.
For example, assume a married couple puts their child on the title to their homestead for “estate planning†purposes so that the child is a co-owner. If the child resides elsewhere, he is not entitled to homestead protection of the parents’ residence. A judgment creditor of the child in that situation can levy upon the child’s ownership share of the parents’ house and force the house to be sold at auction. The auction proceeds would be allocated between the child’s creditor and the parents
Firemedic2000 wrote: ↑Tue Dec 11, 2018 6:57 pm
I can understand losing alot. But if his home was homesteaded how did he lose it. His home would have been protected from forced sale to satisfy a judgement under Florida's homestead law.
That really sucks that you can be sued into pretty much povertySlartibartfast wrote: ↑Tue Dec 11, 2018 8:34 pmFiremedic2000 wrote: ↑Tue Dec 11, 2018 6:57 pm
I can understand losing alot. But if his home was homesteaded how did he lose it. His home would have been protected from forced sale to satisfy a judgement under Florida's homestead law.
he didn't lose the house in the courts, he lost it because
after the judgement he couldn't pay for it and it went into
foreclosure.