Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel accommodation - What is Lao Lai?

What is Lao Lai?

What is Lao Lai?

Lao lai refers to a person who owes money to others and doesn't pay it back. People who can't take effective measures against them by state law enforcement agencies can't get repayment even if the creditors win the case.

In the legal sense, "Lao Lai" generally refers to a kind of debtor in the civil and commercial field, who has the ability to repay the debts due, but refuses to repay all or part of the debts for some reason. "Lao Lai" subjectively has the malice of deliberately delaying the performance of debts; Objectively refuse to perform due debts. "Lao Lai" also appeared in criminal incidental civil cases.

In a sense, "Lao Lai" refers not only to a social group, but also to a social phenomenon in the stage of social transformation.

Seven Lao Lai were "limited in height" and were not allowed to take the G-prefix train.

It is reported that the Executive Board of Beijing No.3 Intermediate People's Court served a "Order to Restrict High Consumption" on seven executed persons. This is the first time that the Beijing court system has issued a "height limit order" to the executed person according to the newly revised height limit regulations since the "Several Provisions of the Supreme People's Court on Restricting the High Consumption and Related Consumption of the Executed Person" was officially promulgated and implemented on July 22nd.

The seven people who were executed for the first time were Anhui AVIC Co., Ltd., Anhui AVIC Group Co., Ltd., Wuhu Chengdong International Hotel Co., Ltd., Gao, Hangzhou Baoshun, Hangzhou and Xia Xingtou. They will not be allowed to take the second-class and above cabins of aircraft, soft sleeper cars of trains and ships; High consumption in hotels, hotels, nightclubs, golf courses and other places above the star level; Purchase real estate or build, expand or decorate high-grade houses; Rent high-end office buildings, hotels, apartments and other places to work; Purchase non-operating vehicles; Travel, vacation, private schools with high fees for children; Pay high premiums to buy insurance wealth management products; Take all the seats of the G-prefix EMU train and the first-class seats of other EMU trains.