
8 September 2014 | 6 replies
Closing Costs [ ] Recording fees [ ] Note stamps[ ] Intangible tax [ ] Credit reports [ ] Loan transfer and assumption charges [ ] VA funding fee B. [ ] Loan origination fee [ ] Loan insurance premium [ ] Loan discount not to exceed_____ [ ] Transfer Tax [ ] Wood Destroying OrganismReportC. [ ] Appraisal [ ]Survey [ ]Title Insurance Policy __________ [ ]Other_____Seller Will PayA.
8 December 2013 | 7 replies
I sold an apartment building one time and made over 30k from a .34 stamp which landed me the listing !

3 November 2013 | 25 replies
He shows up immediately when my tenant leaves according to the time stamps on the camera and the one time he did get in a winfmdow and triooed the alarm.The house is almost fort knox now.

12 July 2013 | 5 replies
Emails are time stamped written forms of communication.Of Note: Some may consider changing the locks.

27 September 2015 | 19 replies
@John ThedfordNot an opinion as to whether it's the best use for your money, but.....I interpreted the proposal as substituting collateral only with your approval, obviously a mortgage would have to be done on each property, releases done as released, DOC stamps for the mortgage (.035%), and I would assume you'd require title insurance on each new collateral.

20 May 2015 | 4 replies
No way I could write, stuff, stamp, and handle the leads.
2 December 2014 | 13 replies
Chicago Title will do it that way, as long as you pay the City/County/State Stamps due on sale.Let me know if you need help with this next time and I will send you the info of the guy I work with at Chicago Title.

17 October 2014 | 4 replies
This site offers a 100% handwritten letter, mail to and return address, and hand-places stamps inside a #10 envelope.

17 April 2014 | 25 replies
Of course we receive many pieces of stamped mail that have never been postmarked, so that is another complication.

24 May 2014 | 4 replies
The reason some banks "disclose" their maximum bids is to discourage bidders running the bids up, if they're not going to reach the bank's "disclosed" maximum bid, because if they take the property back with the "high bid" they have to pay auction fees/doc stamps of 2.2% on the final bid price.