Stan C.
Can I sue state government for damages by moratorium on eviction
29 July 2020 | 34 replies
When he next takes your refrigerator and the outside doors, no court is needed to make you move.Thats how it was before contracts were used in Real Estate.One remedy of the government would be to pay down your mortgage, the amount you are minus rent.So, the suits must be filed, and proper remedies returned to the injured owners/investors.
Raj Kannan
should i create LLC for safety for rental properties?
10 April 2019 | 5 replies
That lawsuit is a claim for fraud, and that’s what fraud typically is...a misunderstanding and someone being “injured” and wanting to hold the other responsible for it.
Susan Fromm
Tenant rent past due, no one living in home
4 May 2013 | 6 replies
See if law enforcement can find info on him e.g whether he got injured somewhere.
Kara Johnson
Pro and Cons of using primary residence equity for getting started
16 February 2013 | 12 replies
You get significantly injured and can't do the things you used to?
N/A N/A
HELP IM NEW REI MIGHT BE IN OVER MY HEAD, HELP!!!!
22 June 2007 | 10 replies
I would get it insured immediately - it's not so much the $20k investment in the property I'd be concerned about but the liability if someone injures themselves on the property.2.
Carrie Herrmann
New rental for us, same tenants who wouldn't sign a lease are now not paying.
9 September 2013 | 14 replies
There are many things that can happen that can cause the tenant to not be able to pay rent, losing a job, getting injured, getting their paycheck garnished, or even reduced hours at work because of lack of work.
Curtis H.
Got the Deed Sub2, Now what?
18 September 2014 | 27 replies
Doesn't include the workers (as they should have their OWN worker's comp) but includes others getting injured, etc.
Andrew S.
What is this hole in the ground? An old water well?
7 September 2018 | 13 replies
Having this open is a big liability - if someone falls in & gets stuck or injured, you will most likely be held at fault.
Justin Silverio
Not the typical LLC question
11 August 2008 | 6 replies
Then assume a tenant falls and is injured on your property and let's assume the successfully sue and the damage amount exceeds the insurance in the trusts' name.
Edwin Lau
offsetting rent with trade skill
2 January 2015 | 11 replies
They injure themselves and sue me.Now, that said, if I were to rent to a licensed contractor, I might be willing to trade work within the licensed trade for a break in rent.