February is going pretty much right now. It doesn't mean a lot of things are going on, it just simply means I got a lot to do.
I read about an article from a magazine in school, saying about how to attain happiness. It states that happiness can actually be trained in individual. And once you get used to it, you can't help to not feel happy. How to achieve it? Simple, be happy every moment in your life, and be happy on every single simple thing in your life. For instance, you are eating instance noodle because you are broke and has no single money left, try to feel happy and relief that you still got instance noodle for meal.
It is a hard one, and I don't really plan to apply it into my life. But I do want to apply on my dear's life.
PS: Dear don't forget to come back on time tomorrow! I can't wait to show you.
I am a devil, every law student is devil. You see, we are bound to settle arguments within parties. And whenever we tried to settle one, we ended up hurting the other side. Well, instead of choosing to look at I hurt 50% of the people, I choose to think I make 50% of the people happy.
However I don't choose to play with the rule all the time, sometimes I like to tweak a little. And sometimes I did make my lecturer pissed. Well, fair enough, he pissed me off all the time as well.
So actually the purpose to write this post is to record something down for my assignment. Since I has no create a document of anything for this assignment, and I don't want to use pencil to write it down (technology has caught up guys), I choose to record it down here.
This is not the first time I did something like this anyway.
Set-off
(A) It is an reduction in an amount owed by a party since the adverse party also owes money to that party. For example, a set-off is used in a counterclaim to reduce the amount that may be owed by a defendant to a plaintiff since the defendant shows that the plaintiff also owes the defendant money. The judgement to the plaintiff is reduced by the set-off owed to the plaintiff.
(B) Contracts, practice. Defalcation; a demand which a defendant makes against the plaintiff in the suit for the purpose of liquidating the whole or a part of his claim.