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20 May 2016 | 6 replies
You could laminate a nice copy and attached it via a small chain to the sign.
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25 June 2016 | 16 replies
And thanks for sharing that investments are investments and emotional attachment is what we share with family, not banks.
21 May 2016 | 0 replies
I was wondering if there is a way to search the public records to find a list of properties with tax liens (federal, state, and/or county) attached.
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23 May 2016 | 18 replies
The county, at their discretion, can attach many liens to other properties owned by you when they are the lien holder.
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4 June 2016 | 65 replies
Unlike intrinsic values which may attach to personal property (it may with real property too) intrinsic values are difficult to measure in an open market, thee is no base line, that is not true with real property as value can always be assessed.
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26 May 2016 | 6 replies
Worst case scenario any decent lawyer will attach them to the suit.
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27 May 2016 | 4 replies
If you can attach it that is usually cheapest, as you avoid one whole wall and get to hang structural units from the house.
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28 May 2016 | 2 replies
The asset you're trying to obtain is probably attached, until the court case is complete.
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25 May 2016 | 7 replies
Hi David/AndrewI've attached a screenshot of my calculations.
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27 May 2016 | 7 replies
@James Cannon chances are you going to have to take some money and make it "handicapped accessible", and then you going to change the use of the property, you're knocking to be able to buy something that totally suits your situation To answer your question: the ROFR is just a right of first refusal And it's a separate agreement attached to a leaseIf you have the money, try to get a seller financed deal on a free and clear house, 10% down, 90 percent note, 5 to 7 percent 30 year amortization Now that you own the property with seller financing, you can feel confident of spending $$$ improving the property