
22 July 2011 | 7 replies
Can I just do an invoice to my company for the above said paid bills and the company then pays me?

15 January 2015 | 14 replies
Also, get your contractors to right repair on the invoices, not improve or renovate.I am not a CPA or tax adviser, you should consult with a professional who is familiar with your situation and these tax laws.

6 October 2016 | 8 replies
Each party should keep all their invoices, receipts, credit cards statements, etc. to substantiate the amount one claims, for reimbursement, when the HUD-1 is drafted, for the backend closing, by the Title Company.

19 January 2018 | 147 replies
Owner's invoices will be auto populated versus manually drafted.

16 September 2015 | 22 replies
If you use the deposit to pay for the vacancy and repairs then make sure you send them an invoice for the cost within 45 days.

21 January 2019 | 58 replies
Now, if that dang EPA would go do something else, I wouldn't have gotten so much rain here that has killed my flowers and it's my constitutional right to have flowers in my yard!!!!

19 July 2016 | 23 replies
Dang I wish I could make it but have a meeting with my realtor Thursday night to review the market out in the Simpsonville / Five Forks area and putting my house up for sale.

18 August 2015 | 40 replies
And every week their sending me those dang coupons...

22 August 2015 | 10 replies
I feel pretty comfortable in that arena...only catch is these guys have never sent invoices, don't offer autopay, and generally let 6 of the tenants to consistently be delinquent for 30+ days with no ramifications.

2 April 2015 | 7 replies
We always recommend if the claim is $2500 or under you should take it out of your pocket, not turn it into a claim, if the claim is $2800 you will pay that amount back plus a few hundred more over a five year period.Not sure what kind of pain the tenant would experience with a small piece of drywall falling on his or her head, Personally I would question it, understand we have the right to refuse to pay a claim, sure the attorney could file lawsuit against State Farm, where would it go, not far, would never go to court because it would be turned over to the fraud department inside State Farm, this would be held against you, not the tenant since you are the policy holder.The tenant is trying to gain some quick cash.You stated you are planning on making the tenant pay for damages, the tenant does NOT have to pay any invoice you send him unless you had it in writing in your lease, which I'm it's in there.