
15 August 2019 | 7 replies
@Arnold Finkelstein, the ONLY time a CMRRR letter is REQUIRED is when you are sending notice letters to lienholders about the tax sale, to run out their one year to redeem (or three years administrative, whichever is longer.)
15 August 2019 | 2 replies
Limited professional experience could make it difficult for you to get a salaried position within the industry - i.e. administrative asst.

23 August 2019 | 76 replies
It goes towards the risk pool and insurance company profit/administration costs.My point is a permanent policy has a term component.

17 August 2019 | 9 replies
The only cost right now to recoup was the legal administrative cost last year getting the heirs to divide and fight along the way.

28 August 2019 | 7 replies
To double check though, head over to the Daley Center and you can view the court docs to find out what was going on with demo court and ensure the case is closed.The typical flow is 311 Complaint -> Conservation Inspection / Violations -> Administrative Hearing -> Building Court.
3 May 2019 | 13 replies
I was also told that under the new presidential administration the tax law has changed regarding capital gains on real estate.

9 May 2019 | 46 replies
The city/county plans to tax the asset for perpetuity, usually to pay for infrastructure, OR to pay inflated salaries of administrators and city officials and further grow a usually inefficient bureaucracy.

1 May 2019 | 4 replies
If a tenant of real estate shall give notice of his intention to quit the premises by him held at a time specified in such notice, and shall not deliver up the possession of such real estate at the time specified in the notice, such tenant, his executors or administrators, shall, from such time, pay to his landlord or lessor, his heirs or assigns, double the rent which he should otherwise have paid, to be levied, sued for and recovered at the same times and in the same manner as the single rent before the giving of such notice could be levied, sued for and recovered.

4 May 2019 | 3 replies
Yes it can @Kenny CharlesAs long as probate has started and it's during the administration process that negotiations can begin.

6 May 2019 | 5 replies
You charge the tenant the leasing fee and get it rented to qualified tenants.Throughout this process, there is a fee for your time, typically a lease administration fee or a re-leasing fee which should be in your lease.Hopefully one of these options work for you.