
10 January 2013 | 30 replies
The seller can always say 'no' to these requests.My confusion is that:1- all properties are sold as-is, unless the seller/buyer both agree otherwise.2- The buyer can typically inspect the property and back out of the deal as the result of that inspection (retaining their earnest money).Including a signed addendum stating that the property is 'as is' would not alter either of these points.Not a lawyer or licensed anything.

22 June 2014 | 8 replies
If you were able to find a contractor who does rehab/alterations/renovation, a property management company, an engineering company that does home inspection, a property maintenance company and there is a place in their organization where you would fit, what you could learn would be beneficial to you as a future real estate investor.

30 December 2013 | 3 replies
I'm looking for a Joint Venture agreement that I might be able to alter some of the language on.

22 July 2018 | 14 replies
Eric, may I suggest you alter your mindset a little and not wonder if a Brokerage would want you, but rather 'which brokerage would you want to associate with' and which one meets your needs regarding both processes, support and personalities.

27 December 2017 | 12 replies
If it's hand written, non-existent, altered, or just questionable in any way, consider evicting now if you can.Talk to your other new neighbors.

2 January 2016 | 8 replies
Alter, Esq.Eagle Premier Title Group, LLC

16 November 2016 | 4 replies
Example: purchase price = 199,000monthly gross rents = 265550% of 2655 = 1327Mortgage payment= 8051327-805 = 522 estimated cash flow monthly Cap rate 7.9%With 50,000 down, that gives me a cash on cash return of 12.5%I realize the 50% rule is a very basic estimate any many things can alter this, but do my numbers seem correct?

9 August 2016 | 6 replies
page=402Looks like what you need is an "interior/exterior alteration permit".

25 May 2017 | 2 replies
If you alter a house too far, it will be difficult to undue should you need/want to sell it as a SFH in the future.Fourth, cost of renovations - with additional bedrooms comes the need for additional bathrooms (we aim for a ratio of 1 bath for every 2-3 rooms) and ventilation {it is almost guaranteed that the house was never designed to be occupied at the density you describe above (turning dining and living rooms into bedrooms) and you will need to add mechanical ventilation.
10 May 2017 | 27 replies
As per our contract - any alterations and changes need to be approved in writing.