
15 March 2011 | 12 replies
I was always picked on in elementary and junior high school because of my size.

18 February 2013 | 21 replies
This can include a reduced commission, only partial pmt.s to junior lien holders, etc.
5 May 2015 | 17 replies
It would be similar to buying at foreclosure sale in junior position.

31 December 2016 | 6 replies
You should have known about any junior liens prior to submitting your offer, so that you could have structured your offer accordingly......$2500 less on purchase price, buyer to contribute $2500 toward.....

26 May 2014 | 29 replies
In the "calling of the sale" opening the auction I also identified specifically the subject lien as well as junior liens or a senior lien to be included.

6 November 2015 | 4 replies
She will be transferring with her associates degree as a Junior so she can skip the dorms.

29 April 2016 | 12 replies
sorry bout last post I was doing one of my p and ls and it somehow got stuck on the post LOL disregard no one makes 31.35% return .9% Is a normal interest rate.. but remember many people buy redemption rights and when you own them and you also buy the property you can clear the title much quicker than 12 months.what these guys do is buy the rights then try to sell them to you so your not hung out for 12 months. its rare that anyone buys redemption rights for the sole purpose of redeeming.. reason is there are usually junior liens that have been wiped out and if you redeem that re attach.talk a good title companies title officer they will explain it.. but if you are a attorney state talk to one of those guys. and disregard my previous post sorry bout that.

8 April 2016 | 2 replies
I'm currently a junior in college in the Human Resource Management program.

1 March 2016 | 4 replies
However, it would seem unlikely to me that either the seller or a HML would hold the junior lien (i.e. the lien that is not in first position), so if you need $15K to close you might want to get on the phone with a lot of people you know to try to make a deal.

30 January 2015 | 16 replies
Just clearing up some stuff.A "loan officer" is in bank or regulated institutional depositories, the "officer" part is from the appointment as a corporate appointed officer having authority to bind the institution in making a loan, usually these folks are Junior V.P.s or higher.