California Accessibility Disclosure. For purposes of Section 1938(a) of the California Civil Code, Landlord hereby discloses to Tenant, and Tenant hereby acknowledges, that the Project has not undergone inspection by a Certified Access Specialist (CASp). In addition, the following notice is hereby provided pursuant to Section 1938(e) of the California Civil Code: A Certified Access Specialist (CASp) can inspect the subject premises and determine whether the subject premises comply with all of the applicable construction-related accessibility standards under state law. Although state law does not require a CASp inspection of the subject premises, the commercial property owner or lessor may not prohibit the lessee or tenant from obtaining a CASp inspection of the subject premises for the occupancy or potential occupancy of the lessee or tenant, if requested by the lessee or tenant. The parties shall mutually agree on the arrangements for the time and manner of the CASp inspection, the payment of the fee for the CASp inspection, and the cost of making any repairs necessary to correct violations of construction-related accessibility standards within the premises. In furtherance of and in connection with such notice: # Tenant, having read such notice and understanding Tenants right to request and obtain a CASp inspection, hereby elects not to obtain such CASp inspection and forever waives its rights to obtain a CASp inspection with respect to the Premises, Building and/or Project to the extent permitted by Legal Requirements; and # if the waiver set forth in clause (i) hereinabove is not enforceable pursuant to Legal Requirements, then Landlord and Tenant hereby agree as follows (which constitutes the mutual agreement of the parties as to the matters described in the last sentence of the foregoing notice): # Tenant shall have the one-time right to request for and obtain a CASp inspection, which request must be made, if at all, In a written notice delivered by Tenant to Landlord; # any CASp inspection timely requested by Tenant shall be conducted # at a time mutually agreed to by Landlord and Tenant, # in a professional manner by a CASp designated by Landlord and without any testing that would damage the Premises, Building or Project in any way, and # at Tenants sole cost and expense, including, without limitation, Tenants payment of the fee for such CASp Inspection, the fee for any reports prepared by the CASp in connection with such CASp inspection (collectively, the CASp Reports) and all other costs and expenses in connection therewith; # the CASp Reports shall be delivered by the CASp simultaneously to Landlord and Tenant; # Tenant, at its sole cost and expense, shall be responsible for making any improvements, alterations, modifications and/or repairs to or within the Premises to correct violations of construction-related accessibility standards including, without limitation, any violations disclosed by such CASp Inspection; and # if such CASp inspection identifies any improvements, alterations, modifications and/or repairs necessary to correct violations of construction-related accessibility standards relating to those items of the Building and Project located outside the Premises that are Landlords obligation to repair as set forth in this Lease, then Landlord shall perform such improvements, alterations, modifications and/or repairs as and to the extent required by Legal Requirements to correct such violations, and Tenant shall reimburse Landlord for the cost of such improvements, alterations, modifications and/or repairs within 10 business days after Tenants receipt of an invoice therefor from Landlord.
California Accessibility Disclosure. For purposes of Section 1938 of the California Civil Code, Landlord hereby discloses to Tenant, and Tenant hereby acknowledges, that the Premises have not undergone inspection by a Certified Access Specialist (CASp). As required by Section 1938(e) of the California Civil Code, Landlord hereby states as follows: A Certified Access Specialist (CASp) can inspect the subject premises and determine whether the subject premises comply with all of the applicable construction-related accessibility standards under state law. Although state law does not require a CASp inspection of the subject premises, the commercial property owner or lessor may not prohibit the lessee or tenant from obtaining a CASp inspection of the subject premises for the occupancy or potential occupancy of the lessee or tenant, if requested by the lessee or tenant. The parties shall mutually agree on the arrangements for the time and manner of the CASp inspection, the payment of the fee for the CASp inspection, and the cost of making any repairs necessary to correct violations of construction-related accessibility standards within the premises. In furtherance of the foregoing, Landlord and Tenant hereby agree as follows: # any CASp inspection requested by Landlord or Tenant shall be conducted, at the requesting partys sole cost and expense, by a CASp approved by Landlord, subject to the non-requesting partys reasonable rules and requirements; and # the cost of making any improvements or repairs within the Premises, the Building or the Project to correct violations of construction-related accessibility standards shall be allocated as provided in [Article 24] of the Office Lease.
California. If Employee resides in California, [Sections 9.2 and 9.3]3] shall not apply to Employee after Employee’s employment with the Company ends, and this Agreement shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of the State of California, without applying its conflicts of law principles.
California. If I am hired to primarily perform services for the Company in California or am a California resident, Section 3(c)(iii) and (iv) of the Agreement do not apply to me after my last day of employment with the Company. Nothing in this Agreement shall be enforceable to the extent doing so would violate California Business & Professions Code § 16600.
This Agreement and its terms shall be governed by and construed under California law without regard for conflict of law.
Section 1542 of the Civil Code of the State of California states as follows:
Disclosure. Notwithstanding the foregoing Section 12(a), each Party may disclose to Third Parties Confidential Information belonging to the other Party to the extent such disclosure is reasonably necessary to:
Disclosure. As of the date hereofRestatement Date, the Borrowers have disclosed (including by filing publicly with the SEC) to the Administrative Agent and the Lenders all agreements, instruments, and corporate or other restrictions to which they or any of their Restricted Subsidiaries is subject, and all other matters known to them, that, individually or in the aggregate, could reasonably be expected to result in a Material Adverse Effect. No report, financial statement, certificate or other written information furnished by or on behalf of any Loan Party to the Administrative Agent or any Lender in connection with the transactions contemplated hereby and the negotiation of this Agreement or delivered hereunder or under any other Loan Document (in each case as modified or supplemented by other information so furnished), when taken as a whole, contains any material misstatement of fact or omits to state any material fact necessary to make the statements therein, in the light of the circumstances under which they were made, not misleading; provided that, with respect to projected financial information, the Borrowers represent only that such information was prepared in good faith based upon assumptions believed to be reasonable at the time.
Disclosure. Seller warrants that it has disclosed to Buyer in this Agreement all material facts related to the transactions contemplated by this Agreement. No representation or warranty of the Seller contained in this Agreement or other agreements and instrument referred to in this Agreement, and no statement contained in any certificate, schedule, list or other writing furnished to Buyer pursuant to the provisions of this Agreement contains any untrue statement of a material fact or omits to state a material fact necessary in order to make the statements herein or therein not misleading.
Disclosure. All factual information furnished by or on behalf of Borrower in writing to Bank (including, without limitation, all factual information contained in the Loan Documents) for purposes of or in connection with this Agreement, the other Loan Documents or any transaction contemplated herein or therein is, and all other such factual information hereafter furnished by or on behalf of Borrower to Bank, will be true and accurate in all material respects on the date as of which such information is dated or certified and not incomplete by omitting to state any fact necessary to make such information not misleading in any material respect at such time in light of the circumstances under which such information was provided.
AllDrafts is a cloud-based editor designed specifically for contracts. With automatic formatting, a massive clause library, smart redaction, and insanely easy templates, it’s a welcome change from Word.
And AllDrafts generates clean Word and PDF files from any draft.