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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]I just think it's so funny that so many nannies complain about not getting paid extra to wash a dish or fold a shirt but then they go and tell someone else to work for free... Nice guys. I'm a nanny and personally it doesn't matter if a contract/agreement is legally binding or not. If I accept the job and agree with all of the terms then I hold my end of it. Simple as that. [/quote] Where was anyone told to go work for free?[/quote] here [quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]We would be glad to answer you, PP, if you would like to pay our fees to provide you with this advice. I do not know about the other lawyers on this thread, but at my billable rate and leverage factor, you would be looking at a bill of about $10,000 for me to have some fo the attorneys I supervise prepare a memo for you on the point, assuming of course that you are willing to take such a memo based on one of the three jurisdictions in which I am licensed to practice (although I would prefer to write on New York law since I have been barred there the longest and it has one of the most well developed bodies of countract law in the U.S.). Do you nanny for free? No? Then don't ask usto give you legal advice for free.[/quote] In typical shyster fashion, encourage the unsuspecting public to line your pockets as you pretend to do useful work. In answer to your question, some professional nannies do offer pro bono services on occasion, just as some attorneys do. Again, if there have ever been any nannies held liable for breach of contract, to pay damages for not completing the term of her agreement, surely someone on this forum would have heard of it. How ridiculous of you to request a tidy little sum of $10,000. to confirm common knowledge. You are an utter embarrassment to your profession, and a prime example of why so few of you can be trusted. [/quote][/quote]
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