
19 December 2013 | 3 replies
I did not see your above post before the thread slipped from my screen (and mind).You can have a Self-Directed TFSA, just like you can have a Self-Directed RRSP.You can write private notes and mortgages in your self-directed RRSP - there are rules around the percentage of your holdings and the arms-length nature of the mortgage ... then there is the trouble of getting your plan holder to play along.My initial research on Self-directed TFSAs seems to indicate you should be able to do something similar.
8 December 2013 | 8 replies
If paid in full before the time runs out the certificate holder gets cashed in on their lien.

8 December 2013 | 12 replies
You may have fun getting FHA note holder to release that new lot, but good luck, they may (after an appraisal review) to keep the loan compliant, but, they may not.But certainly, the solution is to do a minor subdivision and cut off that new unit.Don't get hung up with % rules, you need to pencil out deals in your market, the 2% rule won't fly here, the 50% may over a long term but it may not as our market has a lower tax and labor rate.

10 December 2013 | 25 replies
I would think as a stock holder in the corporation all a Canadian investor would have to pay taxes on would be dividends paid out.

9 December 2013 | 4 replies
I would love to meet the successful wholesalers, rehabbers, buy &holders, money lenders, etc.

12 December 2013 | 8 replies
However my husband is in the process of renewing his H1B visa for another 3 years and his immigration status is currently expired.

11 September 2014 | 31 replies
A quiet title action takes 4-6 months, and around $2,000 unless there a crazy number of lien/judgment/mortgage holders.

13 November 2013 | 13 replies
Michigan is non-judicial (I believe…)2)Say that I redeem as a junior lien holder, would the original investor who holds the sheriff deed be able to redeem it back?

6 December 2013 | 2 replies
I have not heard of "interested party" sounds unique to your company or NY.But, to be covered under a policy you need to be an insured or additional insured, interested party sounds like it may provide losses as a lien holder, having a financial interest in those having an insurable interest affording coverage.

19 December 2013 | 15 replies
I googled what subject to means and here's what Wikipedia has to say:"A second lien holder can foreclose when a homeowner stops making payments to the second mortgage holder, even if there is no equity in the house.