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A Useful Guide to Editing The Lease Purchase Agreement

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  • Push the“Get Form” Button below . Here you would be taken into a dashboard that enables you to carry out edits on the document.
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A Simple Manual to Edit Lease Purchase Agreement Online

Are you seeking to edit forms online? CocoDoc is ready to give a helping hand with its comprehensive PDF toolset. You can get it simply by opening any web brower. The whole process is easy and quick. Check below to find out

  • go to the CocoDoc's online PDF editing page.
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Steps in Editing Lease Purchase Agreement on Windows

It's to find a default application capable of making edits to a PDF document. Fortunately CocoDoc has come to your rescue. Take a look at the Manual below to form some basic understanding about how to edit PDF on your Windows system.

  • Begin by adding CocoDoc application into your PC.
  • Drag or drop your PDF in the dashboard and make edits on it with the toolbar listed above
  • After double checking, download or save the document.
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A Useful Manual in Editing a Lease Purchase Agreement on Mac

Thinking about how to edit PDF documents with your Mac? CocoDoc has the perfect solution for you. It empowers you to edit documents in multiple ways. Get started now

  • Install CocoDoc onto your Mac device or go to the CocoDoc website with a Mac browser.
  • Select PDF paper from your Mac device. You can do so by hitting the tab Choose File, or by dropping or dragging. Edit the PDF document in the new dashboard which provides a full set of PDF tools. Save the paper by downloading.

A Complete Instructions in Editing Lease Purchase Agreement on G Suite

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Editing PDF on G Suite is as easy as it can be

  • Visit Google WorkPlace Marketplace and get CocoDoc
  • set up the CocoDoc add-on into your Google account. Now you are ready to edit documents.
  • Select a file desired by clicking the tab Choose File and start editing.
  • After making all necessary edits, download it into your device.

PDF Editor FAQ

How true is the report saying many truck drivers in USA are treated like indentured servants?

Yes, it absolutely is true. I was a lease purchase driver for Werner (via their subsidiary, Pegasus) from late 2006-early 2010. There were plenty of weeks I made far less than minimum wage. Weeks where I actually owed them money for the privilege of having worked for them. Tallying it all up, I made about 30% less than I would've made had I been a company driver.I tried politely to get out of my contract, they didn't care. So in early February I simply brought the truck to the main terminal in Nebraska, parked it there, gave the keys to the shop, and took a Greyhound bus over to another company's main terminal and started orientation there. Never looked back. Couple weeks later I got a call from someone at Pegasus wanting to know where their truck was, I explained what happened, and that was the last I ever heard of it.Technically they could've sued me for about $40,000 and won, right up until the statute of limitations on collections ran out four years later. Thankfully they didn't.I still lost pretty much everything, it's taken me the last seven years to rebuild my credit (had my car repossessed, got evicted from my house, several credit cards charged off, my fiancee left me, even my bank closed my checking account and sent it to collections because it had been overdrawn for so long) and get back to some semblance of stability.Having said all that, it's a small subset of drivers who are subject to this crap. Company drivers as well as actual owner-operators are basically immune to it; only drivers in a lease purchase agreement seem to have this problem. I know I'll never lease another truck again.

What is a guaranteed lease purchase agreement?

You may be referring to a lease that contains a "guaranteed" option to purchase, usually at a specified price, as opposed to a "right of refusal" or other purchase option structures contained in some leases.

What is the strangest case you've had as a lawyer?

About 20 years ago, I was representing an electric utility that many years earlier maintained its headquarters in a rural area that subsequently became a very busy part of the city. In the early 80s, the headquarters building and several acres of property had grown in value so the utility decided to sell the property and relocate to an area with less traffic and more room. The property was sold to an auto dealership pursuant to a lease-purchase agreement, with the understanding that after the ten-year term of lease expired, the car dealership would pay the balance due and take title to the property.When the ten-year deadline arrived, the dealership began the process of obtaining the necessary financing required to pay off the balance. To no surprise, the lender conditioned its loan to the dealership on receipt of a clean environmental Phase I site assessment. I knew that was bad.In the years that the utility had owned the property and maintained its headquarters on the site, it was a common practice to bury trash and other objects on the property, many of which are now considered toxic. That was in the years before the PCBs found in numerous components of an electrical system, including capacitors and transformers, were understood to be carcinogens. When the results of the Phase I Site Assessment came in, it was ugly. Numerous indicators of the presence of contaminants dictated that a Phase II assessment and site cleanup would be required. Ground-penetrating radar revealed the existence of several buried dump sites and the utility was faced with bearing the cost of a site cleanup or a breach of the lease-purchase agreement and millions of dollars in damages.The site cleanup process began. The “burial sites” were excavated, the contaminants and contaminated soil were removed and the excavation sites were back-filled with “clean” dirt. As the process went forward and the cost of the cleanup and remediation escalated, it occurred to me to check the utility’s old liability insurance policies to see if there might be coverage for some of the cleanup expenses. I was able to locate policies for 1967–1975 (the utility entered into the lease-purchase agreement in 1975). To no surprise, the policies had environmental contamination exclusions (and specifically, coverage exclusions for environmental contamination of the insured’s property caused by the insured), except, that is, the liability policy from 1969. For some reason which I was never able to determine, the policy in effect in 1969 had no environmental exclusion for contamination caused by the insured, whether such contamination was of property of a third party or property of the insured.After finding that the 1969 policy did not contain the environmental contamination exclusion, and satisfying myself that coverage under the policy was provided on an “occurrence” basis (coverage was provided for incidents which occurred during the policy period, without regard to the passage of time between the incident, discovery of the incident and the date of the claim), I decided to contact the utility’s CEO to propose making a claim under the 1969 policy.I learned that the utility’s CEO was at the site, checking on the progress of the cleanup, so I drove to the site to tell him about my discovery. I found the man standing near the back of the property, looking at the many excavation holes and all the excavated materials rapidly piling up, with a forlorn look on his face. Obviously, the cleanup was becoming an expensive proposition. I told the CEO about the 1969 policy and pitched to him my theory of recovery, suggesting that we should make a claim for the cleanup cost against the liability insurance carrier who wrote the 1969 policy. I reasoned that under a worse-case scenario (and most likely), the insurance carrier would deny coverage. I also pointed out the possibility that we might be able to recover some portion of the cleanup cost. Given my young age and relative inexperience, he gave me a rather dubious look and asked whether I really thought an insurance company would provide coverage for damages to the utility’s property that was caused by its own actions that were undertaken over 20 years earlier. With unwarranted confidence, I told him that there was a reason that the other policies I had found and reviewed contained an environmental contamination exclusion and thus, there must be a reason why the 1969 policy did not contain the exclusion. I further explained that the insurance policy was written by the carrier and would be construed against the carrier. As he thought about what I was proposing, an employee of the utility overseeing the cleanup walked over to where we were standing and said, “Look what I found at the bottom of the hole we are digging.” He handed the CEO a rusty license plate dated 1969.With the license plate as evidence (and a sign from God), I sent a demand letter to the insurance company seeking indemnity under the 1969 policy for the cost of the cleanup which was quickly approaching $1.5 million. To no surprise, the carrier did not respond. I then consulted with the CEO (who didn’t like being ignored anymore than I did) and secured his consent to file suit against the carrier, seeking indemnity, bad faith damages and attorneys fees. That got the attention of the carrier and generated a response. The carrier’s answer to my suit was an incredulous denial, together with a suggestion that my demand and subsequent suit were frivolous.I no longer recall the exact sequence of events but after several months and the exchange of various pleadings, by which time the cleanup had been completed at a cost of $2.1 million, one day I received a phone call from the carrier’s general counsel, along with a vice president. After the customary exchange of pleasantries, the carrier’s vice president stated emphatically that the company would never pay such a ridiculous claim and that they were not in the business of paying their insureds to contaminate their own property. Before the words, “Well, why the hell are you calling me?” could formulate in my mind, the V.P. continued, “While we will never pay a claim such as this one, we find the risk of being haled into court every time an issue arises which implicates our coverage obligations for actions your client took in 1969 to be unacceptable (because such claims are so frequently asserted, no doubt). We are no longer willing to accept exposure to such risk. Accordingly, we propose to buy out of all of our risk and liability under the 1969 policy by paying your client the sum of $2.1 million.” After making sure I fully understood his offer (I did), I calmly told him that I would discuss the offer with my client. I silently prayed I could reach the CEO and obtain his approval before the insurance execs changed their minds.I called the CEO and explained the phone call and offer. Three times. The insurance company would not pay the utility’s claim, but it was willing to pay the utility $2.1 million (the cost of the cleanup), in return for which, the utility would sign a Release of Liability, agreeing that the utility could never again assert a claim against, or seeking coverage from, the insurance carrier for any liability attributable to any act of the utility occurring in 1969 (25 years earlier). We both agreed that the offer was immensely fair. His only words to me following his grant of consent to the settlement was, “Hurry!” It was the craziest suit in which I was ever involved.

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