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Please give me a legal advice under my situation? |
My uncle is an employee at my university and I am his nephew. He asked the human resources of the university whether I am eligible to receive tuition benefits because I am his nephew. They said, as long as he claimed me as a dependent child in his income tax form, I am eligible to receive free tuition. I am an international student and my authorization to stay in United States was given to me by the U.S immigration because of the university letter saying that I can receive free tuition up to 8 semesters. I only used 2 yet. However, now the university is saying that they can鈥檛 offer me tuition benefits form my uncle鈥檚 employee benefits anymore because they say they made a mistake in the beginning about my eligibility to tuition benefits. So if they can鈥檛 give it anymore as they promised, i will have to leave the country. Can I take any legal actions and reclaim my tuition benefits under this situation? have a letter from the human resources mentioning that eligible to receive tuition benefits up to 8 semesters. I am also about to graduate with in few semesters and if i had to switch universities, I will lose most of my course credits and might even have to redo some, which is years of work. This is the second time you've asked this question tonight. Usually the tuition exemption only applies to immediate family, i.e., children & spouse. You can always take legal action, the question is whether it will be worth it, what you stand to win and what you risk losing. No lawyer will help you w. those most important questions w/out being biased in favour of getting a case, if you are eligible for legal aid go for it regardless. The letter said you COULD get up to 8 semesters, which means they do not have to give it to you. That's complicated, I don't think you'll find your answers here, you'll have to get a lawyer. In America its generally possible to sue for anything, so give it a shot, just make sure the legal fees are worth the expense. I don't see why you can't reasonably work it out to stay until you graduate in a few semesters. Who is threatening to deport you? That same authorization to stay in the U.S. is because (I would THINK) is they are interested in seeing you graduate from a U.S. university. I don't see the problem, unless your ability to stay here hinges on your receiving tuition money. Just stay and finish school and talk to the INS about your situation. Show them the letter. This is not really a forum for legal advice, that would be through an attorney. I don't, in my non-legal opinion, believe you have any course of legal action in suing the university. If you could afford to do that, you wouldn't need the money for tuition in the first place. Good luck with your diploma. If you have in writing any statements that a reasonable person would construe to be a guarantee of free tuition, then they have made a contract, and if you suffer hardship as a result of relying on that promise, then you are entitled to be compensated for that. |
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