Joke Collection Website - Mood Talk - My brother-in-law had no money to do the project, so I lent him 53W with my house. I didn't write a receipt and an iou at that time. Can I get my money back?

My brother-in-law had no money to do the project, so I lent him 53W with my house. I didn't write a receipt and an iou at that time. Can I get my money back?

1. Is it recorded in your loan contract that the purpose of the loan is to do the project? If there is a record, the time is similar to your brother-in-law's project, which can be used as evidence.

2. Your project payment record: It can only prove that you paid a sum of money to your brother-in-law. Even if the amount is similar to your loan amount, it can't directly prove that you gave your brother-in-law the project money. Just like the loan contract, it can only be used as evidence that your brother-in-law borrowed money from you. If there is no other evidence to prove the fact of borrowing, it still cannot be considered as borrowing.

It's better to record your brother-in-law admitting to lending you 530,000 when negotiating with him now. Just record the phone.

Besides, it's impossible for your sister not to know about you, right? Can your sister testify for you? She knows the fact that your brother-in-law borrowed money from you. It would be better if your sister could prove at the same time that your sister and brother-in-law didn't have 53W property at all when they borrowed money from you.

Also, do your family, friends or others know or have heard of this? Anyone who knows can testify. Although the probative force of witness testimony is weak, if there are multiple witnesses, especially those who have no interest, plus the loan contract and payment records, it is possible to prove the fact of borrowing.

5. "Now he is going to breach the contract, can he sue the court and provide something to the court?" :

(1) You can bring a lawsuit to the court, but if you can't prove that your brother-in-law did borrow 530,000 from you, the lawsuit will be hard to win.

(2) You need to provide the court with: the indictment, your ID card and evidence. The most important thing is that you have proof that your brother-in-law did lend you 530 thousand. If there are IOUs or IOUs, you can win the lawsuit now, but if there is no evidence, no one can help you defend your rights in court.