Lawyers Lake Bluff IL

This page provides useful content and local businesses that give access to Lawyers in Lake Bluff, IL. You will find helpful, informative articles about Lawyers, including "Legal Insight: Know Laws that Affect Your Business". You will also find local businesses that provide the products or services that you are looking for. Please scroll down to find the local resources in Lake Bluff, IL that will answer all of your questions about Lawyers.

Harold Carl Jenkins III
847-234-7500
10 E. Scranton Ave., Suite 201
Lake Bluff, IL
Corey Lynn Minnihan
847-295-9980
101 Waukegan Road Suite 600
Lake Bluff, IL
Mary N. Belgrade
847-735-9858
310 Belle Foret Drive
Lake Bluff, IL
John A. Scribner
847-604-5750
900 Armour Drive
Lake Bluff, IL
Caitlin K. Roth
850 Carlyle Circle
Lake Bluff, IL
Daniel J. Boddicker
847-234-9584
221 Forest View Drive
Lake Bluff, IL
Christopher Alan White
847-234-6680
21 North Skokie Highway
Lake Bluff, IL
Stephen Joseph Cassin
847-990-7482
One Energy Plaza
Lake Bluff, IL
Richard Offutt Wood
847-234-7500
10 E Scranton Ave Suite 201
Lake Bluff, IL
Thomas Frederick Meyer
847-295-0070
33 N. Waukegan Rd. #105
Lake Bluff, IL
Data Provided by:
 

Legal Insight: Know Laws that Affect Your Business

As a body shop owner, you have a lot to worry and think about. If you're successful, though, you probably make the time to check the quality of the paint work leaving your shop - even though you employ painters.

By Paul Rice
4/1/1997

Why, then, do many shop owners feel comfortable ignoring the "legal stuff" simply because they employ a lawyer?

As a shop owner, you need to at least have a general knowledge of the laws that affect your business. For the sake of brevity, we've chosen to highlight eight topics - out of the many - that are important legal issues for the '90s and beyond.

Salvaged Vehicles

Body shops frequently are presented with the opportunity to obtain "totaled" vehicles at minimal cost. A potential exists to turn a profit on these vehicles by rebuilding them during slow times, often with used or rebuilt parts. Body shop owners should be aware, though, that many states have some form of Salvage Title Act, which requires the issuing of a new title that states the vehicle is salvaged.

These vehicles may be sold at an auction, traded in or sold to dealers, or advertised in the newspaper. An unwitting purchaser, particularly one who suffers bodily injuries due to safety defects, may turn around and sue the body shop, the prior owner and the insurance company for failing to comply with the state's Salvage Title Act - and any profit made on the vehicle will be quickly eaten up in legal fees. Further, your general-liability insurance ...

Click here to read the rest of the article at BodyShop Business

BodyShop Business is
a Babcox publication
3550 Embassy Parkway
Akron, OH 44333
330-670-1234 • (FAX) 330-670-0874
Advertise      Contact Us      Subscribe      Article Index      Privacy/Terms of Use