10 August 2012 | 2 replies
It's whatever is stipulated in the contract.Generally one company does it only but who pays for it seller/buyer or both and by what percentage each covers if it is both is negotiable.The contract can also stipulate which title company is used.I hope your buyer is having an Phase 1 report,vapor intrusion,site inspection,and cost reserve stable completed on the property as part of the due diligence.All of those items run about 3,500 to 4,000 total and can be completed by the inspector.

16 August 2019 | 5 replies
State laws also sometimes stipulate how large a late can be and so forth.

12 September 2012 | 6 replies
I'm not particularly concerned about the expense, and I will definitely make the contract stipulate that it will require an inspection.

17 September 2012 | 18 replies
I put it on the new lease as a stipulation for being allowed to stay in the unit another year.

29 November 2012 | 36 replies
Somehow, Ark La Tex was able to work around that stipulation.

27 August 2012 | 1 reply
Residential contract included a special stipulation that the appraisal must be completed within 21 days of the binding agreement date.

25 October 2012 | 11 replies
Wow ok I caught all of it thanks for the inputI am a rookie so part of what I am doing is experimentalthe reason the repairs are going to spread out is because I do not have the money I bought two houses at once cash one of the houses has the stipulation that I must occupy it so I had to rent my house that wasnt completed I did the renos on my other property with my GC and my sole tenant stopped paying her rent so I ran out of cash to do everything.

16 November 2012 | 10 replies
They are held accountable by the Heirs, and any stipulations in the will...but their's is the only signature necessary for title work to be done, so long as they've been granted letters Testamentary.

23 November 2012 | 3 replies
The standard Beneficiary Agreement stipulates that any such amount proven to be owed to the defaulting beneficiary is to be paid...in the form of an unsecured promissory note, which note shall be retired only upon disposition of the property at the trust’s termination.Although it may seem to some that the default provision described here is weighted in favor of the investor beneficiary; it actually is not.
15 December 2012 | 16 replies
In the example cases shown above, a deal would fall through if the buyer is unwilling or unable to bring more money to the table and/or the seller making repairs, and no commission is due.The only way that a selling agent is due a commission, without the seller signing, is if the buyer comes with a contract offering you your asking price, and no other terms/stipulations. ie.