Canadian citizen who is presently in litigation with a US-based companyAre companies offering to obtain the EU delay compensation for you, effective?Middle name on ticket and passport but not in system — missed flightMust a Canadian citizen enter Canada on a Canadian passport?Dual US/Canadian citizen with an expired passportDual Citizen with a Canadian PassportCanadian/Iranian Citizen Transiting USA aiportDoes a Canadian citizen who is a US permanent resident need a passport to enter Canada?Does cash over USD 10,000 need to be declared before boarding a domestic flight connecting to an international flight?Canadian/Syrian Dual CitizenBetween 2014 and 2019 - Which countries are known to have charged people with criminal offenses for finding traces of illegal substances upon entry?
One word for 'the thing that attracts me'?
What is the purpose of the yellow wired panels on the IBM 360 Model 20?
If I arrive in the UK, and then head to mainland Europe, does my Schengen visa 90 day limit start when I arrived in the UK, or mainland Europe?
What could be my risk mitigation strategies if my client wants to contract UAT?
Piping the output of comand columns
Did Game of Thrones end the way that George RR Martin intended?
Can a UK national work as a paid shop assistant in the USA?
Are runways booked by airlines to land their planes?
Is a world with one country feeding everyone possible?
What is Orcus doing with Mind Flayers in the art on the last page of Volo's Guide to Monsters?
Flatten not working
Possibility of faking someone's public key
Ribbon Cable Cross Talk - Is there a fix after the fact?
Alexandrov's generalization of Cauchy's rigidity theorem
Unary Enumeration
Is keeping the forking link on a true fork necessary (Github/GPL)?
Why was this character made Grand Maester?
EU rights when flight delayed so much that return is missed
Have any humans orbited the Earth in anything other than a prograde orbit?
Goldfish unresponsive, what should I do?
Why do testers need root cause analysis?
Moons and messages
Why isn't Tyrion mentioned in 'A song of Ice and Fire'?
Comparison of bool data types in C++
Canadian citizen who is presently in litigation with a US-based company
Are companies offering to obtain the EU delay compensation for you, effective?Middle name on ticket and passport but not in system — missed flightMust a Canadian citizen enter Canada on a Canadian passport?Dual US/Canadian citizen with an expired passportDual Citizen with a Canadian PassportCanadian/Iranian Citizen Transiting USA aiportDoes a Canadian citizen who is a US permanent resident need a passport to enter Canada?Does cash over USD 10,000 need to be declared before boarding a domestic flight connecting to an international flight?Canadian/Syrian Dual CitizenBetween 2014 and 2019 - Which countries are known to have charged people with criminal offenses for finding traces of illegal substances upon entry?
.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;
I am presently in a dispute with a US-based computer company over abusive charges they want me to pay for a very basic service. As I am not sure the dispute will be resolved before I travel to the US (no criminal charges have been filed as the amount is quite small, USD 1,200.00). Could this prevent me from traveling by air to a vacation in the US?
usa legal canadian-citizens
New contributor
Marie Helene Jeanson is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
add a comment |
I am presently in a dispute with a US-based computer company over abusive charges they want me to pay for a very basic service. As I am not sure the dispute will be resolved before I travel to the US (no criminal charges have been filed as the amount is quite small, USD 1,200.00). Could this prevent me from traveling by air to a vacation in the US?
usa legal canadian-citizens
New contributor
Marie Helene Jeanson is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
10
It would be quite a pain if people involved in civil suits couldn't enter the country.
– Azor Ahai
May 15 at 19:28
1
A civil dispute is typically not a criminal dispute. "no criminal charges have been filed" sounds like you're confusing the two (as long as you're not being legally pursued by your Canadian CC company or payment processor). It's not like you're Gerry Cotten's widow and QuadrigaCX.
– smci
May 16 at 2:17
add a comment |
I am presently in a dispute with a US-based computer company over abusive charges they want me to pay for a very basic service. As I am not sure the dispute will be resolved before I travel to the US (no criminal charges have been filed as the amount is quite small, USD 1,200.00). Could this prevent me from traveling by air to a vacation in the US?
usa legal canadian-citizens
New contributor
Marie Helene Jeanson is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
I am presently in a dispute with a US-based computer company over abusive charges they want me to pay for a very basic service. As I am not sure the dispute will be resolved before I travel to the US (no criminal charges have been filed as the amount is quite small, USD 1,200.00). Could this prevent me from traveling by air to a vacation in the US?
usa legal canadian-citizens
usa legal canadian-citizens
New contributor
Marie Helene Jeanson is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
New contributor
Marie Helene Jeanson is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
edited May 15 at 17:15
choster
35.1k5101156
35.1k5101156
New contributor
Marie Helene Jeanson is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
asked May 15 at 13:21
Marie Helene JeansonMarie Helene Jeanson
7913
7913
New contributor
Marie Helene Jeanson is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
New contributor
Marie Helene Jeanson is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
10
It would be quite a pain if people involved in civil suits couldn't enter the country.
– Azor Ahai
May 15 at 19:28
1
A civil dispute is typically not a criminal dispute. "no criminal charges have been filed" sounds like you're confusing the two (as long as you're not being legally pursued by your Canadian CC company or payment processor). It's not like you're Gerry Cotten's widow and QuadrigaCX.
– smci
May 16 at 2:17
add a comment |
10
It would be quite a pain if people involved in civil suits couldn't enter the country.
– Azor Ahai
May 15 at 19:28
1
A civil dispute is typically not a criminal dispute. "no criminal charges have been filed" sounds like you're confusing the two (as long as you're not being legally pursued by your Canadian CC company or payment processor). It's not like you're Gerry Cotten's widow and QuadrigaCX.
– smci
May 16 at 2:17
10
10
It would be quite a pain if people involved in civil suits couldn't enter the country.
– Azor Ahai
May 15 at 19:28
It would be quite a pain if people involved in civil suits couldn't enter the country.
– Azor Ahai
May 15 at 19:28
1
1
A civil dispute is typically not a criminal dispute. "no criminal charges have been filed" sounds like you're confusing the two (as long as you're not being legally pursued by your Canadian CC company or payment processor). It's not like you're Gerry Cotten's widow and QuadrigaCX.
– smci
May 16 at 2:17
A civil dispute is typically not a criminal dispute. "no criminal charges have been filed" sounds like you're confusing the two (as long as you're not being legally pursued by your Canadian CC company or payment processor). It's not like you're Gerry Cotten's widow and QuadrigaCX.
– smci
May 16 at 2:17
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
Personal service of court papers could be made while you're in the USA. However, doing so successfully would require the opposing party to know where you'd be at a particular time, and then to physically find you at that place and time, and then to approach you with the documents.
It's a big country. It's not clear that the opposing party would have any of that information, or be able to execute on it.
Further, I've never heard of the US immigration authorities involving themselves in civil law disputes of any kind, or even asking about them. None of their paperwork asks about this sort of thing, and a visitor needn't (and shouldn't) volunteer the info.
Source: I'm a lawyer.
4
While this is excellent and helpful information, it doesn't seem to address the (implied?) question of whether the asker could be denied admission to the US because of this litigation. Also, couldn't personal service of court papers be made in Canada? Presumably they know where the asker lives. Does vacationing in the US actually increase the risk of being served?
– phoog
May 15 at 16:52
3
@phoog I agree, it doesn't. Early in my participation here, I made the same objection to someone else's Answer, and was promptly rebuked on the grounds that the answer expanded the OP's knowledge of the field, and by "furthering the answer" was therefore OK. I think this information is sufficiently related and useful to clear that bar.
– David
May 15 at 16:57
2
Sure, it's okay. I'm just suggesting that you add a sentence saying that there won't be any impediment to entering the US. Then it would be better :-)
– phoog
May 15 at 17:00
1
I thought about that, but while I think and am certain that the US immigration authorities won't know or care about this sort of thing, I can't assert that from any personal knowledge or experience. But sure, in for a penny in for a pound. I'll add it.
– David
May 15 at 18:01
add a comment |
No it will not. US companies do not have the ability to prevent someone from visiting the US just because you are disputing payment or are in a legal dispute with them.
1
Would there be a chance of court papers being served in person?
– o.m.
May 15 at 15:58
1
A chance, yes, but how are you going to find them to serve them?? As mathematicians say a zero probability event is not impossible :)
– chx
May 15 at 18:18
1
@chx A zero probability event might not be impossible. It depends on the event. ;)
– Calchas
May 15 at 18:39
3
What is the probability that a zero probability event is not impossible?
– DJClayworth
May 15 at 18:46
1
@Brilliand What is it with people using "finite" to mean "not zero"? It means "not infinite".
– David Richerby
May 16 at 16:36
|
show 2 more comments
No, because you haven't committed (at least seemingly) any crime in the U.S. They can't just request for you being tracked and sent in court for this thing.
add a comment |
Your Answer
StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "273"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);
StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);
else
createEditor();
);
function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader:
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
,
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);
);
Marie Helene Jeanson is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftravel.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f138637%2fcanadian-citizen-who-is-presently-in-litigation-with-a-us-based-company%23new-answer', 'question_page');
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Personal service of court papers could be made while you're in the USA. However, doing so successfully would require the opposing party to know where you'd be at a particular time, and then to physically find you at that place and time, and then to approach you with the documents.
It's a big country. It's not clear that the opposing party would have any of that information, or be able to execute on it.
Further, I've never heard of the US immigration authorities involving themselves in civil law disputes of any kind, or even asking about them. None of their paperwork asks about this sort of thing, and a visitor needn't (and shouldn't) volunteer the info.
Source: I'm a lawyer.
4
While this is excellent and helpful information, it doesn't seem to address the (implied?) question of whether the asker could be denied admission to the US because of this litigation. Also, couldn't personal service of court papers be made in Canada? Presumably they know where the asker lives. Does vacationing in the US actually increase the risk of being served?
– phoog
May 15 at 16:52
3
@phoog I agree, it doesn't. Early in my participation here, I made the same objection to someone else's Answer, and was promptly rebuked on the grounds that the answer expanded the OP's knowledge of the field, and by "furthering the answer" was therefore OK. I think this information is sufficiently related and useful to clear that bar.
– David
May 15 at 16:57
2
Sure, it's okay. I'm just suggesting that you add a sentence saying that there won't be any impediment to entering the US. Then it would be better :-)
– phoog
May 15 at 17:00
1
I thought about that, but while I think and am certain that the US immigration authorities won't know or care about this sort of thing, I can't assert that from any personal knowledge or experience. But sure, in for a penny in for a pound. I'll add it.
– David
May 15 at 18:01
add a comment |
Personal service of court papers could be made while you're in the USA. However, doing so successfully would require the opposing party to know where you'd be at a particular time, and then to physically find you at that place and time, and then to approach you with the documents.
It's a big country. It's not clear that the opposing party would have any of that information, or be able to execute on it.
Further, I've never heard of the US immigration authorities involving themselves in civil law disputes of any kind, or even asking about them. None of their paperwork asks about this sort of thing, and a visitor needn't (and shouldn't) volunteer the info.
Source: I'm a lawyer.
4
While this is excellent and helpful information, it doesn't seem to address the (implied?) question of whether the asker could be denied admission to the US because of this litigation. Also, couldn't personal service of court papers be made in Canada? Presumably they know where the asker lives. Does vacationing in the US actually increase the risk of being served?
– phoog
May 15 at 16:52
3
@phoog I agree, it doesn't. Early in my participation here, I made the same objection to someone else's Answer, and was promptly rebuked on the grounds that the answer expanded the OP's knowledge of the field, and by "furthering the answer" was therefore OK. I think this information is sufficiently related and useful to clear that bar.
– David
May 15 at 16:57
2
Sure, it's okay. I'm just suggesting that you add a sentence saying that there won't be any impediment to entering the US. Then it would be better :-)
– phoog
May 15 at 17:00
1
I thought about that, but while I think and am certain that the US immigration authorities won't know or care about this sort of thing, I can't assert that from any personal knowledge or experience. But sure, in for a penny in for a pound. I'll add it.
– David
May 15 at 18:01
add a comment |
Personal service of court papers could be made while you're in the USA. However, doing so successfully would require the opposing party to know where you'd be at a particular time, and then to physically find you at that place and time, and then to approach you with the documents.
It's a big country. It's not clear that the opposing party would have any of that information, or be able to execute on it.
Further, I've never heard of the US immigration authorities involving themselves in civil law disputes of any kind, or even asking about them. None of their paperwork asks about this sort of thing, and a visitor needn't (and shouldn't) volunteer the info.
Source: I'm a lawyer.
Personal service of court papers could be made while you're in the USA. However, doing so successfully would require the opposing party to know where you'd be at a particular time, and then to physically find you at that place and time, and then to approach you with the documents.
It's a big country. It's not clear that the opposing party would have any of that information, or be able to execute on it.
Further, I've never heard of the US immigration authorities involving themselves in civil law disputes of any kind, or even asking about them. None of their paperwork asks about this sort of thing, and a visitor needn't (and shouldn't) volunteer the info.
Source: I'm a lawyer.
edited May 15 at 18:04
answered May 15 at 16:06
DavidDavid
3,4502921
3,4502921
4
While this is excellent and helpful information, it doesn't seem to address the (implied?) question of whether the asker could be denied admission to the US because of this litigation. Also, couldn't personal service of court papers be made in Canada? Presumably they know where the asker lives. Does vacationing in the US actually increase the risk of being served?
– phoog
May 15 at 16:52
3
@phoog I agree, it doesn't. Early in my participation here, I made the same objection to someone else's Answer, and was promptly rebuked on the grounds that the answer expanded the OP's knowledge of the field, and by "furthering the answer" was therefore OK. I think this information is sufficiently related and useful to clear that bar.
– David
May 15 at 16:57
2
Sure, it's okay. I'm just suggesting that you add a sentence saying that there won't be any impediment to entering the US. Then it would be better :-)
– phoog
May 15 at 17:00
1
I thought about that, but while I think and am certain that the US immigration authorities won't know or care about this sort of thing, I can't assert that from any personal knowledge or experience. But sure, in for a penny in for a pound. I'll add it.
– David
May 15 at 18:01
add a comment |
4
While this is excellent and helpful information, it doesn't seem to address the (implied?) question of whether the asker could be denied admission to the US because of this litigation. Also, couldn't personal service of court papers be made in Canada? Presumably they know where the asker lives. Does vacationing in the US actually increase the risk of being served?
– phoog
May 15 at 16:52
3
@phoog I agree, it doesn't. Early in my participation here, I made the same objection to someone else's Answer, and was promptly rebuked on the grounds that the answer expanded the OP's knowledge of the field, and by "furthering the answer" was therefore OK. I think this information is sufficiently related and useful to clear that bar.
– David
May 15 at 16:57
2
Sure, it's okay. I'm just suggesting that you add a sentence saying that there won't be any impediment to entering the US. Then it would be better :-)
– phoog
May 15 at 17:00
1
I thought about that, but while I think and am certain that the US immigration authorities won't know or care about this sort of thing, I can't assert that from any personal knowledge or experience. But sure, in for a penny in for a pound. I'll add it.
– David
May 15 at 18:01
4
4
While this is excellent and helpful information, it doesn't seem to address the (implied?) question of whether the asker could be denied admission to the US because of this litigation. Also, couldn't personal service of court papers be made in Canada? Presumably they know where the asker lives. Does vacationing in the US actually increase the risk of being served?
– phoog
May 15 at 16:52
While this is excellent and helpful information, it doesn't seem to address the (implied?) question of whether the asker could be denied admission to the US because of this litigation. Also, couldn't personal service of court papers be made in Canada? Presumably they know where the asker lives. Does vacationing in the US actually increase the risk of being served?
– phoog
May 15 at 16:52
3
3
@phoog I agree, it doesn't. Early in my participation here, I made the same objection to someone else's Answer, and was promptly rebuked on the grounds that the answer expanded the OP's knowledge of the field, and by "furthering the answer" was therefore OK. I think this information is sufficiently related and useful to clear that bar.
– David
May 15 at 16:57
@phoog I agree, it doesn't. Early in my participation here, I made the same objection to someone else's Answer, and was promptly rebuked on the grounds that the answer expanded the OP's knowledge of the field, and by "furthering the answer" was therefore OK. I think this information is sufficiently related and useful to clear that bar.
– David
May 15 at 16:57
2
2
Sure, it's okay. I'm just suggesting that you add a sentence saying that there won't be any impediment to entering the US. Then it would be better :-)
– phoog
May 15 at 17:00
Sure, it's okay. I'm just suggesting that you add a sentence saying that there won't be any impediment to entering the US. Then it would be better :-)
– phoog
May 15 at 17:00
1
1
I thought about that, but while I think and am certain that the US immigration authorities won't know or care about this sort of thing, I can't assert that from any personal knowledge or experience. But sure, in for a penny in for a pound. I'll add it.
– David
May 15 at 18:01
I thought about that, but while I think and am certain that the US immigration authorities won't know or care about this sort of thing, I can't assert that from any personal knowledge or experience. But sure, in for a penny in for a pound. I'll add it.
– David
May 15 at 18:01
add a comment |
No it will not. US companies do not have the ability to prevent someone from visiting the US just because you are disputing payment or are in a legal dispute with them.
1
Would there be a chance of court papers being served in person?
– o.m.
May 15 at 15:58
1
A chance, yes, but how are you going to find them to serve them?? As mathematicians say a zero probability event is not impossible :)
– chx
May 15 at 18:18
1
@chx A zero probability event might not be impossible. It depends on the event. ;)
– Calchas
May 15 at 18:39
3
What is the probability that a zero probability event is not impossible?
– DJClayworth
May 15 at 18:46
1
@Brilliand What is it with people using "finite" to mean "not zero"? It means "not infinite".
– David Richerby
May 16 at 16:36
|
show 2 more comments
No it will not. US companies do not have the ability to prevent someone from visiting the US just because you are disputing payment or are in a legal dispute with them.
1
Would there be a chance of court papers being served in person?
– o.m.
May 15 at 15:58
1
A chance, yes, but how are you going to find them to serve them?? As mathematicians say a zero probability event is not impossible :)
– chx
May 15 at 18:18
1
@chx A zero probability event might not be impossible. It depends on the event. ;)
– Calchas
May 15 at 18:39
3
What is the probability that a zero probability event is not impossible?
– DJClayworth
May 15 at 18:46
1
@Brilliand What is it with people using "finite" to mean "not zero"? It means "not infinite".
– David Richerby
May 16 at 16:36
|
show 2 more comments
No it will not. US companies do not have the ability to prevent someone from visiting the US just because you are disputing payment or are in a legal dispute with them.
No it will not. US companies do not have the ability to prevent someone from visiting the US just because you are disputing payment or are in a legal dispute with them.
answered May 15 at 15:49
DJClayworthDJClayworth
38.2k7105138
38.2k7105138
1
Would there be a chance of court papers being served in person?
– o.m.
May 15 at 15:58
1
A chance, yes, but how are you going to find them to serve them?? As mathematicians say a zero probability event is not impossible :)
– chx
May 15 at 18:18
1
@chx A zero probability event might not be impossible. It depends on the event. ;)
– Calchas
May 15 at 18:39
3
What is the probability that a zero probability event is not impossible?
– DJClayworth
May 15 at 18:46
1
@Brilliand What is it with people using "finite" to mean "not zero"? It means "not infinite".
– David Richerby
May 16 at 16:36
|
show 2 more comments
1
Would there be a chance of court papers being served in person?
– o.m.
May 15 at 15:58
1
A chance, yes, but how are you going to find them to serve them?? As mathematicians say a zero probability event is not impossible :)
– chx
May 15 at 18:18
1
@chx A zero probability event might not be impossible. It depends on the event. ;)
– Calchas
May 15 at 18:39
3
What is the probability that a zero probability event is not impossible?
– DJClayworth
May 15 at 18:46
1
@Brilliand What is it with people using "finite" to mean "not zero"? It means "not infinite".
– David Richerby
May 16 at 16:36
1
1
Would there be a chance of court papers being served in person?
– o.m.
May 15 at 15:58
Would there be a chance of court papers being served in person?
– o.m.
May 15 at 15:58
1
1
A chance, yes, but how are you going to find them to serve them?? As mathematicians say a zero probability event is not impossible :)
– chx
May 15 at 18:18
A chance, yes, but how are you going to find them to serve them?? As mathematicians say a zero probability event is not impossible :)
– chx
May 15 at 18:18
1
1
@chx A zero probability event might not be impossible. It depends on the event. ;)
– Calchas
May 15 at 18:39
@chx A zero probability event might not be impossible. It depends on the event. ;)
– Calchas
May 15 at 18:39
3
3
What is the probability that a zero probability event is not impossible?
– DJClayworth
May 15 at 18:46
What is the probability that a zero probability event is not impossible?
– DJClayworth
May 15 at 18:46
1
1
@Brilliand What is it with people using "finite" to mean "not zero"? It means "not infinite".
– David Richerby
May 16 at 16:36
@Brilliand What is it with people using "finite" to mean "not zero"? It means "not infinite".
– David Richerby
May 16 at 16:36
|
show 2 more comments
No, because you haven't committed (at least seemingly) any crime in the U.S. They can't just request for you being tracked and sent in court for this thing.
add a comment |
No, because you haven't committed (at least seemingly) any crime in the U.S. They can't just request for you being tracked and sent in court for this thing.
add a comment |
No, because you haven't committed (at least seemingly) any crime in the U.S. They can't just request for you being tracked and sent in court for this thing.
No, because you haven't committed (at least seemingly) any crime in the U.S. They can't just request for you being tracked and sent in court for this thing.
answered May 15 at 18:23
user97607
add a comment |
add a comment |
Marie Helene Jeanson is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Marie Helene Jeanson is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Marie Helene Jeanson is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Marie Helene Jeanson is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Thanks for contributing an answer to Travel Stack Exchange!
- Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!
But avoid …
- Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.
- Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.
To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftravel.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f138637%2fcanadian-citizen-who-is-presently-in-litigation-with-a-us-based-company%23new-answer', 'question_page');
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
10
It would be quite a pain if people involved in civil suits couldn't enter the country.
– Azor Ahai
May 15 at 19:28
1
A civil dispute is typically not a criminal dispute. "no criminal charges have been filed" sounds like you're confusing the two (as long as you're not being legally pursued by your Canadian CC company or payment processor). It's not like you're Gerry Cotten's widow and QuadrigaCX.
– smci
May 16 at 2:17