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12 May 2014 | 4 replies
So what would you do in my shoes??
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12 May 2014 | 19 replies
If I were in your shoes, I will offer $740K.
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15 May 2014 | 26 replies
I've been in your shoes in the past and what seems like the best approach is to accommodate the tenant and keep that rent coming in.
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26 January 2018 | 79 replies
The Seller steps into the shoes of the banker and is directly compensated by the performance of the obligation.
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27 May 2014 | 14 replies
I don't think someone can just step into his shoes after a revocation.
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20 May 2014 | 5 replies
If you are going to buy an existing note (i.e. stepping into the shoes of a prior lender) you'll have to research the property, the borrower, the HML, and the associated documents.
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17 May 2014 | 3 replies
A excellent honest landlord would want to have a check in list and have the tenant present and also on the checkout so everyone is on the same page, and it is best to show the tenant the check in list and go over everything and have it in hand on check out this way the tenant cannot say the landlord over charge on anything, and an excellent landlord doesn't need 30 days to see if there is any damage and most landlords like to hold the deposit, as long as they can because they could be running their business on a shoe string and need the extra money.Joe Gore
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23 May 2014 | 3 replies
Well it depends on how you sold it to them...I would do a vendor vendee transfer meaning your buyer would slip into your shoes and assume the original contract assuming you receive compensation for it...You can hold a note for what you want to sell the property above what you paid Does that cause any problems?
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27 May 2014 | 3 replies
And, do you think stepping into the shoes of a lender will put you into ownership of the collateral to sell it at a profit or lease it out?
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30 May 2014 | 22 replies
I plan on being in your shoes in the near future.