Paragking331

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  • in reply to: Mandatory audio before making a call #1877
    Paragking331
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      Paragking331
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      May 5, 2025 at 9:29 pm
      Press #

      in reply to: Can I Stop My Father from Selling Inherited Property? #2242
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        May 5, 2025 at 11:36 am
        Yes, inheritance comes only after death, and it would go to wife (mother) > son > daughter – in order. There’s a lot of legal circus behind the scenes. You’ve to fit / identify your definition first, is it “ancestral”, “self acquired” or “inherited”.

        For ancestral, it has to be undivided share passed on for 4 paternal generations. Ancestral property can’t be sold without everyone’s consent.

        If it’s inherited from the mother to the successors & partitioned among the brothers, it gets a status of “self acquired”. Or to be specific “self acquired that passed as inheritance”. Here, father has the full rights to the land & he can choose to do anything with it. OP can’t do anything.

        In such cases, you try to get the property either by
        1. scaring away the buyers till father passes away and mother inherits it (easiest)
        2. Or apply for divorce & claim the share (messy & exhausting but quicker)
        3. or prove that the land isn’t self acquired but bought with mothers money / dowry etc (again exhausting & mostly leads to divorce).
        4. Or prove it’s ancestral so you can leverage the ancestral property laws (very difficult but it works out in some cases when it’s coming down from 2-3 generations)

        in reply to: Can I Stop My Father from Selling Inherited Property? #2233
        Paragking331
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          May 5, 2025 at 7:28 am
          Now that the land has been partitioned in his name, it’s not considered his self acquired property, not ancestral. That means, you as a dependant don’t have co-ownership / legal rights, unless you can prove that it is ancestral ( documents to prove it came from grand father, to father, to son ).

          In such cases, it’s almost impossible to acquire those documents of undivided land, so wives usually claim that it was bought with stridhan (dowry, gold etc) which usually has no documents or proofs. Threatening to self harm or emotional manipulation falls under domestic violence, so that’s another way, however while doing all of that, wives considered divorce to claim the share. But this gets messy and stretches for years.

          Alternatively, if you can prove that he’s selling it under the influence or mental instability then that’s another way. Or the simplest way is to scare off the buyers is the only route most people end up taking.

          in reply to: I feel to get a licensed gun #5862
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            Paragking331
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            April 29, 2025 at 11:17 pm
            Getting it takes a few months, shooting it cancels it immediately and a few months to prove it was self defence. Not worth the hassle, I’d suggest alternatives

            Paragking331
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              Paragking331
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              April 26, 2025 at 11:52 pm
              In short, yes. You can “renounce” your inheritance officially. You’re not liable for your father’s debts unless you accept the inheritance. Debts can only be recovered from his assets not from you.

              File a Renunciation/Disclaimer of Inheritance via Registered Relinquishment Deed in a sub-registrar office or an Affidavit. Also publish a Public Notice in 2 newspapers (1 English, 1 local language) declaring that you’re not taking up the inheritance.

              About the bank loan, bank will simply repossess and auction the house to recover its dues. Unless you’re living in it you’re good, you don’t need to pay anything, probably the guarantors / nominees of the debt will have an issue

              Be smart, lots of folks will try 10 different things to you to make you liable for the debt. Don’t sign any bank forms, loan closures or succession applications. Get the renunciation done & keep the records handy.

              Paragking331
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                April 23, 2025 at 1:42 pm
                Yeah, you’re probably going to work on a tool or some closed source technology which is bought from some company & requires mandatory training.

                Company has to pay 3L for your training. And they don’t want you to leave (after spend 3L) without the company recouping that value out of you – hence the bond

                Paragking331
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                  Paragking331
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                  April 23, 2025 at 10:51 am
                  1. Are they giving you any training where they’re spending 3 lakhs on you? Bonds usually come only in that case
                  2. Usually, they don’t force you to sign a bond, you can deny.
                  3. If they say sign it or no job, start looking for a new job – especially because you’ve got plans to go abroad anyway

                  in reply to: Male Doctor Groped #11407
                  Paragking331
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                    Paragking331
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                    April 20, 2025 at 3:12 pm
                    Lab technicians can be anyone, you can request for a female technician before hand – before reaching the lab.

                    But legally, this won’t be illegal

                    in reply to: Data deleted by employee #11982
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                      April 19, 2025 at 1:28 pm
                      1. Your “friend” is doomed if your “friends” org has the audit logs which prove he did it.

                      2. Your “friends” company should suffer all of this mess if they’ve given RWS access on production data with no backups.

                      Ik someone who was in cisco who did this in US. Hes in jail now, FBI got involved in his case, he got a 2 year prison sentence, 1 year under surveillance after that. https://threatpost.com/cisco-employee-convicted-deleting-webex-accounts/162246/

                      Fortunately your “friend” is in India so may be it’ll take a few years before he actually gets jailed, but it’s inevitable.

                      in reply to: Wife threatening me for false Dowry and DV case #15257
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                        April 14, 2025 at 6:37 pm
                        Sometimes private discussions aren’t allowed to be considered as evidence, so people leak it on social media hoping it’ll work out as public information from there. Tricky stuff

                        in reply to: Wife threatening me for false Dowry and DV case #15244
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                          Paragking331
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                          April 14, 2025 at 10:17 am
                          NAL

                          1. Get a lawyer and file for anticipatory bail if you think she’ll put fake cases.
                          2. File a harassment & fraud complaint along with the evidence. However the evidence may be insufficient as it wasn’t recorded with consent. Something more on chat will be better.

                          This may bring the settlement amount down

                          Paragking331
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                            April 13, 2025 at 11:12 pm
                            police usually initiate a freeze on the fraudster’s account, not yours. But looks like you received or sent money linked to a fraud, & they flagged it for investigation.

                            The Investigating Officer (IO) from the police or cyber cell who froze the account has to issue a NOC to the bank to unfreeze your acc. You need to submit a written application or affidavit to the police or bank. Then bank takes 7 days at max.

                            To fast track:

                            Visit your local Cyber Crime Cell (where you filed the complaint). Meet the IO, request case progress, and specifically ask when they will issue the unfreeze letter to the bank.

                            If there’s no response, file an RTI asking for the status of your case, date of freeze order, and estimated timeline. Or you can approach the DCP/ACP or Cybercrime Nodal Officer

                            If it’s urgent or a large sum, you can consult a lawyer and file a writ petition in the High Court under Article 226 to get your account unfrozen faster.

                            Get a written acknowledgment at every step, don’t just come back after hearing “we will do it”

                            in reply to: Ex colleague threatens me with FIR #15885
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                              April 13, 2025 at 4:14 pm
                              Well, you can still mention it in the letter. The idea is to pressurise them to act, not get them out of their jobs. The allegation alone will trigger investigations for any sort of bribes, that will make them work harder for you asking you to withdraw the complaint.

                              Anyway – informing the company won’t be problematic. It makes them liable. If they find it out from a separate source, they can let you go under other reasons “performance etc”. But if you send an official email to them and then they try to remove you, they’re liable & can hold them accountable.

                              in reply to: Ex colleague threatens me with FIR #15874
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                                April 13, 2025 at 3:38 pm
                                He’s lying, what he’s saying will be a complaint, not FIR without any evidence. Even if he manages to do that, it has to be against the company, not you. And even if he manages to do that against you, police won’t do anything to you, you can just ask them to send a legal notice.

                                File a complaint for harassment & threat to assault. Inform your company about this incident. He’ll call you, record it next time there’s tons of apps. If you have enough to register the FIR then you’re safer but I don’t think that would happen at this point.

                                This should be enough for now. He has no grounds to do anything to you at this point. But he can assault you so better keep things moving at your end for immediate reaction.

                                in reply to: Society charging 5k everytime I renew rent agreement. #16100
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                                  April 13, 2025 at 10:38 am
                                  Why is the broker still involved?

                                  Talk to the owner, you know him well at this point. Tell him either bear / split these costs or keep it between him & you. No broker, no society. Or atleast remove the broker. You can get your agreement for 500-800 on nobroker.com – they get it attested & registered as well.

                                  If he disagrees, look for another apartment within the society. It will be easier than pursuing this legally.

                                  Also if all of this is mentioned in the society bylaws, then you’ll need to challenge the society bylaws in court. Most likely if the bylaws are already registered with the municipality then their chances of winning is high. They’ll just say it’s the fees for mygate + amenities.

                                  But as far as I know – mygate charges for total number of user accounts. Which has already been created when you originally came here.

                                  Alternative to all this – register just 1 person from the house. Use the same mygate app for everyone. Everyone in the house can log in with your phone number. I’m doing that rn. 1 account can have 3 people. And also, don’t update mygate app, if they release an update which doesn’t allow multiple logins then you won’t be able to use this

                                Viewing 15 posts - 1 through 15 (of 100 total)