
16 July 2018 | 2 replies
Is there a "special"way to price out rent for an in-law suite attached to our home?

16 July 2018 | 5 replies
I want to protect my current and future rental properties as well as other assets from suits or other life happenings, what is the most affective way you use or have found.

30 July 2018 | 58 replies
He's old, angry and selling soon@Steve Vaughan sounds like I would be angry too if I had you as a neighbor :-) It's only a couple of hundred dollars to file a suit.

2 August 2018 | 7 replies
I did manage to dig a bit deeper and found out that the municipality of Edmonton has an advisory body still active which offers a full suite of forms which have been legally reviewed by their own real estate lawyers and by the dispute resolution courts.
22 July 2018 | 2 replies
I put a snapshot of the long term buy and hold spreadsheet I stole off the internet and modified to suit my needs(I hope you can read it, it is kinda small).

23 July 2018 | 12 replies
I text them (suited houses mainly).

25 July 2018 | 8 replies
Maybe I am wrong, but my understanding is that you can not be compelled to list all your asset until after you have lost the law suit.

25 July 2018 | 5 replies
It has a 3 bd, 1 ba on the main floor and a 1bd, 1ba in-law suite up top that I plan on living in.
2 August 2018 | 11 replies
If they file suit then you fight it. 2) Sue them for unlawfully keeping your deposit.

2 August 2018 | 12 replies
find someone to sell it to that understand tax deeds and quiet title with a quit claim or a owner finance. the person that you sell it to need to keep it as a renter or live in it and have to understand if they want to flip it or sell it on the MLS list they going to need to do a quiet title action suit . you can rent out a tax deed property with out a quiet title. someone will buy it.