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Fraudulent Misrepresentation.

At 1008 Grangeway, in Dakota, an eviction is taking place. The occupant was notified by letter in December 2016.  The occupant was not a mortgagor but a tenant.  Even if he was a mortgagor, the mortgagee an owner of the property confirms that the agreement was violated by the occupant.  The issue is that he had a fraudulent co-signer who purported to be someone other than the person who signed.  This was an identity offense.  When the owner of the property found out, he was not obligated to maintain any contract with the occupant. The contract was void due to the occupant's criminal intentions and offense that amounted to  contractual misrepresentation.  No contract was formed.  The contract was void due to the fraudulent misrepresentation.  Having someone purport to be someone other than who they really are in signing the contract meant that an identity and deception offense had taken place.  It was a criminal offense and violated the entire agreement. As such, the occupant had no contract as the owner was not obligated to remain in a contract that  was essentially voided due to the occupant's criminal offense and activity at the time of signing.   The owner entered the premises on several occasions to enforce his right to vacate and took items out of the property within his legal right to vacate the premises.   The owner could let  the occupant reclaim the items on a later date and the occupant would have to pay the owner's reasonable storage costs.

The occupant's son bought three weapons from Dean so that he could shoot the occupant and Dean too since Dean made him watch a video of Uncle D and his girlfriend from England when they were in Morocco; Dean who went to the trade school in Richmond Hill.   The occupant asked the son to impersonate his Uncle D and fraudulently sign Uncle D's name. It ruined his life.   Three years before, the son gave his Uncle's car keys to a foreigner and let him drive it.  Uncle D was not aware of what happened.  The driver said he was borrowing it but he never spoke to Uncle D for that right. All of this activity was covered by munchkins who were running a posh gang called Mil-liken bloods who helped the foreigner insure the vehicle and changed the ownership temporarily at the dmv.  It is because they resented Uncle B for his hard work.
Gabrielle Willinghams from Jamaica is the Crown attorney on the case but she can't spell Liguanea or let go of me.

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