
5 October 2024 | 7 replies
"Every Landlord's Legal Guide" by NOLO is a good book for this purpose.

4 October 2024 | 2 replies
From my employer, I have legal insurance through ARAG that covers 100% of attorney fees when buying a primary residence, filing fees are extra.

4 October 2024 | 3 replies
I am fully aware this is not a legal advice forum, but just looking to hear what other landlords have done in this situation.

6 October 2024 | 49 replies
Actually, YES, not only MAY the act of simply showing a property factually create "procuring cause" and be inclusive of a protected list, BUT just the action of having sent an e-mail of the listing, client having opened and seen that listing, not ever setting foot on premises, YES, that alone CAN be "procuring cause" and LEGALLY include such property into a protected list.

3 October 2024 | 3 replies
The company hesitated to proceed with any further legal action and asked me to give them some time.

2 October 2024 | 6 replies
Applying the same criteria consistently helps protect you legally.2.

4 October 2024 | 12 replies
I really think that regulation is ripe for a legal challenge.

4 October 2024 | 33 replies
My First Multifamily Full Cycle Success Story: From Busy Attorney to Real Estate InvestorI’m thrilled to share the complete journey of my first real estate investment—a 44-unit multifamily property in Lawrence, KS—from acquisition to exit.Balancing a full-time legal career and fatherhood, real estate seemed like an impossible dream.

2 October 2024 | 22 replies
Originally posted by @Mei Ling Schulz:If they have their real estate license then yes Please be very careful giving legal advice, especially when you are wrong.

3 October 2024 | 0 replies
If you do research ahead of time, what are some red flags that would cause you to back out of a deal or add a couple thousand to the deal cost for legal battles/ cash for keys?