10 February 2007 | 9 replies
:protest: :protest: :protest: :protest: :protest: :
29 July 2010 | 24 replies
:protest: They want this fixed, and that replaced, and the inspection said that was wrong, and the appraisal is going to take 2 weeks, and the closing is going to take 30-45 days, and blah, blah, blah.With an investor its as-is, where-is, how-is with less than two weeks to close with $1000 upfront, no refundable.
28 November 2006 | 6 replies
:protest: :protest:
13 August 2010 | 104 replies
Lemont, Illinois 8) I hate cold weather :protest: no more winter.
11 December 2006 | 5 replies
If you are keeping the property long term, then I would go down to the tax office and protest the tax value as inaccurate.
29 January 2007 | 8 replies
:protest: Where in the world did you come up with that?
28 June 2007 | 2 replies
Dont let your customers leave town :protest: with out a Realtor to talk to.
3 March 2007 | 1 reply
They must be desperate for property tax money.I normally protest all property taxes but since I was renovating extensively and the assessor walked in the front door of my property to take a look...I just let this one pass by.
27 March 2007 | 8 replies
It can be cumbersome sometimes reading through the lawyer jargon, but that's the source.Thankfully in Texas the eviction process is rather quick (3 weeks normally, 4 if they protest it and put up the owed rent as deposit), and sometimes you don't have to go through it to get them out.I just had a house that I bought that I gave the lady a 5 day eviction notice (she hadn't paid rent to the prior owner in 6 months even though its half the market rate).