Nevada Code § 164.942

Nonjudicial settlement agreements: When effective; providing objections; notice of proposed action; failure to object constitutes acceptance; petitioning court for approval
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1. Except as otherwise provided in this
section, a nonjudicial settlement agreement is effective when the agreement has
been signed by all indispensable parties. A party who is represented by another
person pursuant to NRS 164.038 shall be
deemed to have signed an agreement when the person who represents that party
has signed the agreement.
2. Except as otherwise provided in this
section, if an indispensable party neither signs the agreement nor provides the
trustee with a written objection, the trustee may follow the procedure provided
in NRS 164.725 by giving a notice of
proposed action to all indispensable parties who have not signed the settlement
agreement, where the proposed action is to accept and comply with the
nonjudicial settlement agreement.
3. Failure to object to the notice of
proposed action constitutes acceptance of the settlement agreement. If the
trustee is personally aware that an indispensable party, or a person
representing that indispensable party under NRS
164.038 , has not received the notice of proposed action, the trustee may
not proceed to honor the agreement pursuant to subsection 6 of NRS 164.725 , but may proceed under
subsection 7 of NRS 164.725 as if that
indispensable party had objected. Once all indispensable parties have agreed to
a settlement agreement as provided in subsection 1 or 2, it is irrevocable.
4. Any indispensable party may petition
the court for an order approving a nonjudicial settlement agreement under the
procedure set forth in NRS 164.015 . In
order to approve a nonjudicial settlement, the court must find that the
agreement complies with the requirements of this section and NRS 164.940 .
5. For the purposes of this section,
indispensable parties refers to all interested persons, as defined in NRS 132.185 , whose consent would be
required in order to achieve a binding settlement were the settlement to be
approved by the court.

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