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All Forum Posts by: Katharine Chartrand

Katharine Chartrand has started 31 posts and replied 148 times.

Post: $550K house with $70K tax lien

Katharine ChartrandPosted
  • Real Estate Investor
  • Los Alamos, NM
  • Posts 151
  • Votes 52

In this case, the owner absolutely has to approve the sale. He is not.

Thanks for the clarification on the tax bill ... wasn't clear on that risk at a foreclosure auction.

And auction.com is now gangster.com to me now and forever.

Post: $550K house with $70K tax lien

Katharine ChartrandPosted
  • Real Estate Investor
  • Los Alamos, NM
  • Posts 151
  • Votes 52

cute. thank you.

i think the bank is accepting less than the loan amount.

so win win.

Post: $550K house with $70K tax lien

Katharine ChartrandPosted
  • Real Estate Investor
  • Los Alamos, NM
  • Posts 151
  • Votes 52

I am bidding on a "bank approved short sale" through auction.com. I've been offering $400K for a house that is at least worth $550K retai... if it weren't occupied by a cantankerous personality, threatened with foreclosure and burdened with a $70K property tax lien.

I've been putting in my offers through auction.com and a local realtor. auction.com send them through to the bank, which has accepted my offer a couple times. however, the sale has to be approved by the seller. since he has to pay off the $70K property tax lien, he doesn't approve the sale.

My realtor says that the property owner feels it would be better if the bank forecloses because that would wipe out the property lien.

I see that the owner has the house for sale by owner at what i think is a high price ($600K).

I am curious how the bigger pockets community sees this situation resolving itself and is there anything I can do.

>KNC<

Post: subject to's and liens

Katharine ChartrandPosted
  • Real Estate Investor
  • Los Alamos, NM
  • Posts 151
  • Votes 52

I've been reading posts on subject to transactions and their risks. I haven't seen anyone talk about liens. I have to assume that you need to do a title search and get title insurance when the owner signs the deed over to you, otherwise all their property taxes, second mortgages, and IRS liens now become yours.

If I understand correctly, this is a big risk and a big expense of buying a house subject to... it hasn't gone through foreclosure so the liens have not been wiped out.

Post: Flipping an REO - Do I need title insurance?

Katharine ChartrandPosted
  • Real Estate Investor
  • Los Alamos, NM
  • Posts 151
  • Votes 52

Well you guys made that easy.

Title insurance obtained.

>KNC<

Post: Flipping an REO - Do I need title insurance?

Katharine ChartrandPosted
  • Real Estate Investor
  • Los Alamos, NM
  • Posts 151
  • Votes 52

I am closing on a bank owned property this week. The selling bank did a title search and their title company has offered me insurance. I plan to own the property about 4 months... what it will take to repair it and sell it.

My very experience REO realtor is telling me that the title is obviously clear since they did the search and I can get away without buying title insurance if I don't want to.

Her very experienced title company owning husband advised me to get the title insurance because there is a very large discount on the policy when i sell the house if the time between this sale and the next is short.

Does anyone out there every buy houses without title insurance when the risk has been characterized and determined to be negligable? I'd love to save $920.

Has anyone ever gotten this discount when the last insured transfer was recent. Does the same title company have to do both transactions? If the discount is easy to obtain and really big, then I guess I can agree to cover the insurance on the sale of the house for very little out of my pocket.

Post: It's a fixer... beyond that I am not sure.

Katharine ChartrandPosted
  • Real Estate Investor
  • Los Alamos, NM
  • Posts 151
  • Votes 52

I was looking at an REO that I really liked in an improving neighborhood in a great location. I loved the REO but I could not buy it. I would not live on that street with my family because of a creepy house across the street. So I went to the creepy house and I met a really nice guy who eventually accepted a cash offer of $120K. As of two weeks ago, I own the creepy house.

I am not an investor that specializes (fixates?) on a particular type of deal. I enjoy real estate investing because I like solving the puzzle. I've joined bigger pockets to expand my toolkit, have more options, make the puzzle more interesting and hopefully earn more money from my deals by making better decisions.

I like talking through the pro's a cons of a deal. I've enjoyed reading about other people's deals. This creepy house could interesting, so I am going to blog it here. First time posting... please advise me on protocols. Look forward to your comments.

First of all, I realize after lurking on this site for only about a day that I should have done a seller finance deal so I did not have to put the cash out up front. He would have done it. Didn't occur to me. I had never prospected before. Nothing to do about it now.

From where I am now, I could flip it to a contractor, fix and flip it as a residential home or as a rental, or I can fix it up and keep it myself as a rental.

380K is a lower limit for this1600 sq ft 4 br 2 ba in this neighborhood if it were completely rehabed. This house is an anomaly for the neighborhood; all the rest of the houses are either in good shape or really nice. I am going to increase the value of all the homes in the neighbor by addressing this problem.

Electricity is on, gas and water have been shut off. Home inspector and architect found the roof in need of replacement but the walls and foundation structurally sound.

All windows need to be replaced. The interior floor plan needs to be opened up... currently designed is a 1940 rodent maze. It will need all new kitchen and baths windows replaced, porches removed and replaced with some attractive portal.

The first floor is partly below ground, windows do not meet egress requirements. They have to be dug out and lowered. The ceiling is probably 7' 8" and therefor neither legally living space nor NBA ready. However, this is Santa Fe. My architect is experienced and believes that the space can be grandfathered in as living space. However, even if we get a CofO, the ceiling on the first floor is low.

The architect said it was possible to dig out the slab concrete floor to make the celing higher... sounds expensive. Any one try that?

The house has two stories that don't relate to each other... it begs to be split into two units. The zoning is single residential, but you are allowed to have a main house and a guest house. So we could split the house.

The yard is big and you could put a guest house out there. The area is densely built up and the rents are good but the zoning won't allow a third unit if I split the main house. It is frustrating not to be able to capitalize on the yard. Rezoning is possible but far from guaranteed. Architect looking into it. If I can get 3 or 4 units on this property, I am keeping it as a rental.

A realtor I work with a lot referred me to an architect who works with flippers. He says he has done some work for webuyuglyhouses. So far, this architect understand this is an investment and not a personal odyssey to realize my dream home. I haven't had house so distressed it required an architect before, but this one does because there are structural and zoning issues that will inform the design.

I could yust clean it up and sell it to a contractor.This is a major renovation, but not the biggest I have done. Do I go for the guest house in the yard and keep the main house a 1600 sq ft 4br, or do I split the main house into the two units it desperately wants to be.

The architect is drawing up plans for remodeling the house this week, from that I can start estimating the cost of the renovation. I will be pushing him to clarify the zoning issues. These are the main things I need to make a decision here. I'll the post that info when I have it.

I am renting the house back to the owner for two months for $1 per month to allow him time to leave the house he has lived in since he was 12. He had no money to move until I sold him the house. So he is still resident with all of his stuff. He's not moving quickly; I may not have managed that well as I have not purchased an occupied house before. So I'll be blogging that situation as well.

Post: New Member from New Mexico

Katharine ChartrandPosted
  • Real Estate Investor
  • Los Alamos, NM
  • Posts 151
  • Votes 52

I am an active real estate investor from Los Alamos, NM, among many other things (mother of 2 pre-teen girls, executive director of a research organization, partner in local startup VC, humble servant of 2 bengal cats). I have been investing in ABQ, SF as well as Los Alamos. My work takes me across the whole state routinely so I would look at investments anywhere in NM.

I am interested in contributing to foreclosure, wholesaling, subject to sale and note deal discussions as I explore these areas with my own investments.

I 'd be interested in lunch at Flying Star with NM investors. NM is its own planet with its own rules. NM feels about the size of my old high school. I'd like to share NM specific investment experiences as they are not well represented on these sites ... it seems like its all florida and california and NM is different.