(g) “Premises” means a permanent or temporary place of assembly, other than a residence, including, but not limited to, any of the following:
(i) A meeting hall, meeting room, or conference room.
...
(h) “Residence” means a permanent or temporary place of dwelling, including, but not limited to, any of the following:
(i) A house, apartment, condominium, or mobile home.
...
So as I understand it, if something is a premise, then it can't be a residence. Therefore, if something is a residence, it can't also be a premise.
Am I correct?
Can someone help me interpret this language? Forum
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- Leonardo DiCaprio
- Posts: 316
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Re: Can someone help me interpret this language?
are you trying to live out of the library
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Re: Can someone help me interpret this language?
What? No. But can someone just confirm that i'm correct, please? This is really bugging me.Leonardo DiCaprio wrote:are you trying to live out of the library
- AnMzungu
- Posts: 119
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Re: Can someone help me interpret this language?
Correct.
Whatever you're doing this for sounds miserable.
Whatever you're doing this for sounds miserable.
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Re: Can someone help me interpret this language?
In common law jurisdictions it depends upon the facts & circumstances of your case as well as upon how case law has interpreted or interprets the situation under the statutory language.
P.S. It's "premises", not "premise".
P.S. It's "premises", not "premise".
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