LRHF said:
"Come And Take it"
The state of New York may very well.
LRHF said:
"Come And Take it"
eric76 said:I don't hate the country, but do consider extremists of any persuasion to be cancer cells.El Gallo Blanco said:
I hate this country. Leftists are cancer cells.
fc2112 said:LRHF said:
"Come And Take it"
The state of New York may very well.
He has to have the bond in place by then.fc2112 said:
Interesting, but Trump still has to pay by March 15th.
eric76 said:I don't hate the country, but do consider extremists of any persuasion to be cancer cells.El Gallo Blanco said:
I hate this country. Leftists are cancer cells.
And have it valued at $350 million...not $18 million.pacecar02 said:it would be funny to limit the bond to just Mar-a-lagoaggiehawg said:Quote:
A New York appeal bond serves a very special purposeto pause the execution of a judgment while the defendant appeals the court's ruling and the award of damages to the plaintiff. Defendants who have lost a case in a New York court cannot appeal that decision until they have purchased an appeal bond to show the court that they are not merely trying to delay paying a judgment, but have reasonable grounds for a successful appeal.
A New York appeal bond also serves as the defendant's guarantee to make good on the judgment if the appeal turns out to be unsuccessful. In New York, appeal bonds must be in an amount that will cover the judgment. Most sureties require these bonds to be fully collateralized to provide funds for immediate payment to the plaintiff if the appellate court rules against the defendant and upholds the judgment.Letter of credit? Like from a lender? LOL.Quote:
Anyone appealing a New York court's ruling in a civil matter is required to purchase an appeal bond in an amount that is equal toor in some cases more thanthe amount of the judgment under appeal. Be aware that only court-ordered judgments, not negotiated settlements, can be appealed.
The defendant will be unable to complete the process of filing an appeal until the necessary New York appeal bond has been purchased and submitted to the Clerk of the Court in which the case was originally decided. The bond must be fully collateralized, typically in the form of a cashier's check or irrevocable letter of credit.LINKQuote:
Collateralization of a New York appeal bond means that the defendant's personal credit history is not a big factor in the surety bond's determination of the premium rate the defendant will pay for the bond. In most cases, that premium rate will be 2% or less on a fully collateralized basis. For bonds that are able to be obtained with partial or no collateral, the premium may range from 1.5% to 3%.
What if they seize and take ownership of those assets - like property - and then Trump wins the appeal?Antoninus said:Depends what you mean by "deadline." (Bill Clinton reference)fc2112 said:
When does Trump have to pay $355 MM?
There has to be a deadline, eight? If appealing, he still has to put up?
Does he have $355 MM liquid? How do the finances work on this?
I've not researched New York law, but as a general rule the successful plaintiff cannot commence efforts to COLLECT a judgment until the appellate deadline has passed. In most places, that is 30 days. So, Trump and his stuff are safe for that long, anyway.
If Trump decides to appeal and wants to protect his assets in the process, he must post a bond. In New York, that can be a cash bond (approx. $400mm paid into the court registry) or a surety bond (some reputable financial institution guaranteeing that they will pay the judgment if Trump loses on appeal and then fails to pay the judgment). The chances of any financial institution providing him with a surety bond of this magnitude are IMO ... slim, at best. So he will need to deposit a cash bond.
If he appeals but fails to submit a bond (if that is even possible in NY, it is not in some jurisdictions), the successful Plaintiff (here, the state of New York) can proceed with collection efforts ... seizing assets and such ... while the appeal is ongoing.
I THINK that addresses all potential aspects of your question.
aggiehawg said:
Collateralization of a New York appeal bond means that the defendant's personal credit history is not a big factor in the surety bond's determination of the premium rate the defendant will pay for the bond. In most cases, that premium rate will be 2% or less on a fully collateralized basis. For bonds that are able to be obtained with partial or no collateral, the premium may range from 1.5% to 3%.
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— Pro Swing Trading 📈😎🇺🇸 (@Pro__Trading) February 16, 2024
The leftists trying to bankrupt Trump are in shambles. pic.twitter.com/3VB1xNjjAY
This is our country now. It doesn't deserve the name America anymore. Whatever country it is, sucks. It's only a matter of time until it completely collapses.eric76 said:I don't hate the country, but do consider extremists of any persuasion to be cancer cells.El Gallo Blanco said:
I hate this country. Leftists are cancer cells.
Do you not know what a banana republic is?El Gallo Blanco said:eric76 said:I don't hate the country, but do consider extremists of any persuasion to be cancer cells.El Gallo Blanco said:
I hate this country. Leftists are cancer cells.
We are no better than Russia. Our weaponized federal agencies collude with the private sector to rig/influence the elections. That is a FACT. Then there's disgusting banana republic crap like this.
We live in one. We're all becoming quite familiar.eric76 said:Do you not know what a banana republic is?El Gallo Blanco said:eric76 said:I don't hate the country, but do consider extremists of any persuasion to be cancer cells.El Gallo Blanco said:
I hate this country. Leftists are cancer cells.
We are no better than Russia. Our weaponized federal agencies collude with the private sector to rig/influence the elections. That is a FACT. Then there's disgusting banana republic crap like this.
do you know what a metaphor is?eric76 said:Do you not know what a banana republic is?El Gallo Blanco said:eric76 said:I don't hate the country, but do consider extremists of any persuasion to be cancer cells.El Gallo Blanco said:
I hate this country. Leftists are cancer cells.
We are no better than Russia. Our weaponized federal agencies collude with the private sector to rig/influence the elections. That is a FACT. Then there's disgusting banana republic crap like this.
No idea. Never seen that happen. In fact, I've never seen a case in which an appellate bond was not posted, though I understand that it is possible in some places.Ag with kids said:
What if they seize and take ownership of those assets - like property - and then Trump wins the appeal?
Return them with interest?
Trump is an extremist and so he is one of those cancer cells.Maroon Dawn said:eric76 said:I don't hate the country, but do consider extremists of any persuasion to be cancer cells.El Gallo Blanco said:
I hate this country. Leftists are cancer cells.
Let's test that: was this judgement fair or a political attack that was the result of judge and jury shopping to get a verdict
I think that I saw reporting to that effect re this case, but I will be real honest here. I don't trust reporters to EVER "get it right" when reporting on the effect of legal matters. They just don't have the background to understand what they are reporting, so they usually garble it.aggiehawg said:
No bond, no appeal is how I read the NY law.
So then we could justifiably refer to Trump as a banana republic by using it as some kind of metaphor?John Armfield said:do you know what a metaphor is?eric76 said:Do you not know what a banana republic is?El Gallo Blanco said:eric76 said:I don't hate the country, but do consider extremists of any persuasion to be cancer cells.El Gallo Blanco said:
I hate this country. Leftists are cancer cells.
We are no better than Russia. Our weaponized federal agencies collude with the private sector to rig/influence the elections. That is a FACT. Then there's disgusting banana republic crap like this.
LINKQuote:
A New York appeal bond serves a very special purposeto pause the execution of a judgment while the defendant appeals the court's ruling and the award of damages to the plaintiff. Defendants who have lost a case in a New York court cannot appeal that decision until they have purchased an appeal bond to show the court that they are not merely trying to delay paying a judgment, but have reasonable grounds for a successful appeal.
That may well be correct. I am just not accepting it at face value without reviewing the New York equivalent of the Rules of Appellate Procedure, and I am not going to do that because (frankly) I do not care enough.aggiehawg said:
I was referring what the New York Surety company said.LINKQuote:
A New York appeal bond serves a very special purposeto pause the execution of a judgment while the defendant appeals the court's ruling and the award of damages to the plaintiff. Defendants who have lost a case in a New York court cannot appeal that decision until they have purchased an appeal bond to show the court that they are not merely trying to delay paying a judgment, but have reasonable grounds for a successful appeal.
I wonder on what specific grounds it might it be successfully appealed.annie88 said:
Never.
This won't survive appeals.
No one will answer.eric76 said:I wonder on what specific grounds it might it be successfully appealed.annie88 said:
Never.
This won't survive appeals.
Antoninus said:No one will answer.eric76 said:I wonder on what specific grounds it might it be successfully appealed.annie88 said:
Never.
This won't survive appeals.
It is like the typical hoodrat criminal defendant, chanting the mantra of "I'm gonna appeal!"
On what basis, my friend? Where is the reversible error?
"I don't like this result" is not a legally-sound appellate point.
Quote:
Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted.