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I have an “attestation” letter from a person I’m working for and now she doesn’t want to pay?

Question by LaPetitePrincesse: I have an “attestation” letter from a person I’m working for and now she doesn’t want to pay?
I was hired to play (i’m a musician) in a theatre play. The women gave me an “attestation” (it doesn’t say “contract”) which says the ammount that she is going to pay and it’s signed by her. But now she doesn’t want to pay me this ammount because she says she maid a mistake and she can pay me less. She wants an answer tomorrow. I don’t know if with this paper I can make her pay? I don’t know if it has any legal value. What should I do?

Best answer:

Answer by secretleader33
In “legalese” an attestation is defined thusly: “the act of witnessing a signature for the purpose of declaring that a document (like a will) was properly signed and declared by the signer to be his or her signature.”

If it is written with the amount and signed, it is a contract no matter what it’s called. You have enough proof with that document to force the issue.

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