
4 December 2013 | 11 replies
Am I able to remove their stuff and change the locks or do I still need to go through formal proceedings to go through the court and get an eviction order?

2 December 2013 | 3 replies
Formal underwriting, after you agree to the loan will be where the rubber meets the road.

13 December 2013 | 19 replies
Tell her that the notice is for formality only, but in fact this is the only way she can not keep pushing out the date further.
8 December 2013 | 12 replies
In your scenario, like it's mentioned above, the land is really only valuable to neighbor's whose properties border it.

9 December 2013 | 9 replies
Since it was not formally mapped the FEMA assumption was that the flood zone was 50 feet laterally in both directions from the banks.

10 December 2013 | 25 replies
You could retain the net earnings in the U.S.A. entity to be reused for a new investment.Again ... you should sit down with your team of advisors (accountant & solicitor who are well versed in cross-border real estate investing) and determine what entity structures and organisation work best for your objectives.

8 December 2013 | 3 replies
Hi, I live in New Richmond, WI so I'm just over the border from Minneapolis/St.

12 February 2014 | 11 replies
find a mexican contractor. they will know friends or have kids that can make some extra money by acting as your translator.we are nowhere near the border but i seem to have 5 mexican contractors' numbers in my phone.

8 December 2014 | 73 replies
Another example. 10 Miles north of the Detroit city limit ( 8 mile is the line for the city border) is a city called Birmingham.

18 December 2013 | 73 replies
So, the opinions seem to be that the professionals, licensed and certified and formally trained in the analysis of comparable properties and who do so for a living and have probably done at least 10 times more such analytical evaluations than anyone commenting, is that these appraisers can't analyze comps as well as Realtors or investors can do it.