Gibson v. LaClair, 135 N.H. 129 (1991)
- Citation
- Gibson v. LaClair, 135 N.H. 129 (1991)
- Parent Document
- Gibson v. LaClair, 135 N.H. 129 (1991)
- Jurisdiction
- New Hampshire (state)
- Effective Date
- 1991-12-11
Other Sections in This Document (15)
- Gibson v. LaClair, 135 N.H. 129 (1991)
- Gibson v. LaClair, 135 N.H. 129 (1991)
- Gibson v. LaClair, 135 N.H. 129 (1991)
- Gibson v. LaClair, 135 N.H. 129 (1991)
- Gibson v. LaClair, 135 N.H. 129 (1991)
- Gibson v. LaClair, 135 N.H. 129 (1991)
- Gibson v. LaClair, 135 N.H. 129 (1991)
- Gibson v. LaClair, 135 N.H. 129 (1991)
- Gibson v. LaClair, 135 N.H. 129 (1991)
- Gibson v. LaClair, 135 N.H. 129 (1991)
- Gibson v. LaClair, 135 N.H. 129 (1991)
- Gibson v. LaClair, 135 N.H. 129 (1991)
- Gibson v. LaClair, 135 N.H. 129 (1991)
- Gibson v. LaClair, 135 N.H. 129 (1991)
- Gibson v. LaClair, 135 N.H. 129 (1991)
Full Text
399 charsIn the winter of 1978, Hazel Gibson, pursuant to a power of attorney given by her mother, Ruth R. Berg, approached the defendant to determine whether he would be interested in taking over certain *131property in Unity. The defendant’s understanding of the proposed arrangement was that “[I would] fix the place up and she told me I would have a lifetime lease, I would never have to worry about it.”