
26 November 2017 | 21 replies
Someone's dog had chewed the bottom cabinets in the kitchen requiring an entire replacement of these.

24 November 2017 | 2 replies
Might be possible if the seller doesn't need the cash right away, the property is a dog and the seller wants to be rid of it ASAP.Do you have a lender who will give you a loan and you want the sellers to provide the remaining financing?

4 December 2017 | 27 replies
I would give them a notice to comply, to remove the dog or provide the needed documentation.

27 November 2017 | 23 replies
About half my units allow dogs and I have about a third of my units with dogs.

28 November 2017 | 6 replies
I have also had them where I stopped over before every showing and grabbed the dog, put it in my car and then followed the potential buyers and their agent through the house like a hawk (That's what the client wanted).

29 November 2017 | 22 replies
A lot depends on whether this is ingrained behavior or just an adjustment to apartment living.
8 December 2017 | 10 replies
Even though I've worked within many parts of the industry, there's still so many areas I haven't touched so not sure I could speak to them.That being said, speaking from experience as someone who worked their way up the SFR route with fix and flips, buy and holds, and other creative financing strategies, here's who you might want to know: - Wholesaler/bird-dogs (or somebody who finds deals for you)- Investor Friendly Mortgage Lenders (for financing)- Investors in the areas you want to buy in.

28 November 2017 | 18 replies
When you need to evict for "cause" it most often requires giving the tenant the chance to correct their behavior and come back into compliance with the rental agreement.6.

10 December 2017 | 15 replies
Dog pee will remain on subfloor for as long as one owns the home.