Posts tagged contracts
Don’t be Startled When Starting a New Business: What to Know Before You Start a New Business

Starting a business in Colorado? If you’re starting a new business, it is important to know the ins and outs before setting out on your own. Starting a business can have many different implications depending on what kind of business entity it is, how many employees it will have, and what the business does. GLO has extensive experience helping individuals interested in starting new businesses.

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Asset Purchase Agreements: How to Come Out on Top in the Sale or Purchase of Your Company

Do you own a business outside of Colorado and want do business in Colorado? Have you registered as a foreign entity or need to know how? Read this blog to find out what registering your business as a foreign entity means and how to do it.

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But It's Not In Writing! Don't Quarrel Over Your Oral Contract

Are you looking to enforce an oral contract in Denver, Boulder, Adams or Arapahoe County, or anywhere else along the Front Range? Do you have an agreement that you are not sure you should write out? If so, read this blog to ensure that your agreements are enforceable.

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Material Breaches of Contract & Common Remedies

Contracts are everywhere. You and everybody you know engages in contracts multiple times in a single day. When you walk into to your supermarket, you have an implied contract to buy groceries. Despite this, many people don’t know the basics about contracts. This blog discusses basic contract issues such as breach of contract and the typical remedies for such a breach.

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Contracts, COVID-19, and Course of Action: Real Estate Contracts During a Pandemic

Are you a landlord, tenant, or someone involved in real estate that has been affected by COVID-19? If so, you may be wondering how your contract is affected by the pandemic. A party to a contract can be released from performance of that contract due to unforeseeable circumstances if the contract contains a force majeure clause. If the contract does not contain a force majeure clause, you may be able to get out of your obligation through frustration of purpose or impossibility, although these are harder to reach in court.

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