
16 September 2013 | 14 replies
Many investors use a property for the ease of transferring the property that is in the land trust, because the beneficial interest in a trust can easily be transferred with only a signature and the assignment does not even have to be notarized to be legal.

14 September 2013 | 18 replies
Or if you wanted to go the nice guy route, rent to him at what you intend to rent the property for, with a signed (notarized or witnessed) contract, that he will be fully moved out by said date.

27 January 2013 | 20 replies
You or another party can execute a recorded deed of trust against the property, but your wife would need to participate as her notarized signature is required on a recorded document.

24 January 2013 | 7 replies
I just drafted my own custom estoppel certificate which I am requiring the seller and her business partner (i.e. the "tenant") sign and have notarized which will stipulate:-------------------------------------------------------------------1.

28 February 2013 | 13 replies
A RE Investor lawyer; have the contracts drawn, signed and notarized. you can explain to your investors that as with any start-up there is going to be a lot of red before black; do your homework, know your markets
15 March 2013 | 2 replies
Are there notarized, certified documents you can ask for?

16 March 2013 | 4 replies
They get them notarized and they send them back.

22 March 2013 | 16 replies
After property taxes, insurance, water/sewer, and PM, that comes out to be just over $6000 per year and that does not include any additional repairs that may come up (and little things always do).I would think that buying an investment property would be challenging for closing; I've only done such a thing once and had to get documents notarized.

18 March 2013 | 11 replies
If they are not, are they being billed to the tenants currently?

15 July 2014 | 10 replies
This can be for things like: fed funds wires, notarizing documents, document storage, account setup fees, statement fees, transfer fees, account termination fees, servicing fees such as writing a check, processing documents, etc5) Service: This is one of the most overlooked areas in the research process.