Federal Judge in Mississippi 'Storm Surge' Case Upholds Home Insurance Flood Exclusion
National News April 13, 2006
A federal judge in Mississippi has upheld the water damage exclusion in homeowners insurance policies in a ruling welcomed by insurers.
U.S. District Judge L.T. Senter, Jr. of the Southern ...
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Subject: RE: RE: KUDOs to Roger & Survivor - To Mark
Posted On: April 19, 2006, 1:17 pm CDT
Posted By: Roger Poe
Comment:
4-19-2006
Mark,
You stated:
"Contracts are based on the facts contained within and not on how either party "feels" when performance of the contract provisions is executed."
Huh?
Aren't facts of a contract based on feelings of something fair happening?
If one feels others are suspect of cheating them, then proves it contracturally, couldn't it be said that contracts are based on intelligent / rational "feelings" and expectations?
Contracts-of-adhesion--have a weighted "feel", come commitment time, leaning in the favor of the person who did not write the contract, but who also agreed to it.
Aren't contract term facts, stated or implied, actually based on how all involved feel about said contract context?
rogerpoegc@yahoo.com
Subject: RE: RE: KUDOs to Roger & Survivor - To Mark
Mark,
You stated:
"Contracts are based on the facts contained within and not on how either party "feels" when performance of the contract provisions is executed."
Huh?
Aren't facts of a contract based on feelings of something fair happening?
If one feels others are suspect of cheating them, then proves it contracturally, couldn't it be said that contracts are based on intelligent / rational "feelings" and expectations?
Contracts-of-adhesion--have a weighted "feel", come commitment time, leaning in the favor of the person who did not write the contract, but who also agreed to it.
Aren't contract term facts, stated or implied, actually based on how all involved feel about said contract context?
rogerpoegc@yahoo.com