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9 June 2016 | 6 replies
If heir(s) assigned their interest(s) to you, you could just cure and take over payments.
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14 July 2016 | 12 replies
That is moisture penetrating the stucco from either not being sealed properly when first painted or the stucco cured to quick when first applied.
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19 September 2012 | 6 replies
And if you can't treat the source, you can't cure the problem.Something to think about when deciding on whether to evict or not.
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7 December 2014 | 3 replies
Here is where the model stands currently:Overall Criterion Weighting-Documents Risk Assessment - 30%-Relationship, Ease Of Funding Draws - 15%-Line Quantity - 15%-LTC/Project - 15%-Compensating Balance Requirements - 10%-Term Of Loan/Extension Handling - 10%-Rates - 5%The "documents risk assessment is further broken down into these parts to make up the 30% weighting:Bank Document Risk Assessment-Nervous Lender Clause - 22.5%-Cross-collateralization, cross-default, and/or dragnet clauses - 22.5%-Guarantees - 22.5%-Grace/cure period - 10%-Deposit relationships for security - 10%-Carve-outs for bad boy provisions - 7.5%-Relationship lending - 2.5%-Fire and casualty insurance - 2.5%The bank's risk assessment has yet to be included in the overall scoring, but J Martin gave us these resources to see whether or not the banks are solid:FFIEC Data - https://cdr.ffiec.gov/public/ManageFacsimiles.aspxFeedback here is valuable since scoring the banks is not my area of expertise.
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27 December 2014 | 3 replies
Aside from proper construction, there isn't really anything you can do to cure it.
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23 August 2013 | 5 replies
They are affordable and help cure much of the heavy lifting for the Mortgagee in administration of the loan.I suppose either way from a borrower credit for payment perspective, always have some type of receipt for payment whether a cancelled check or statement from a bank regarding the draft.
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16 September 2013 | 32 replies
Wow, there is an old joke in the title insurance world about a bank who kicked back a title examination by an attorney who only went back to the Louisiana purchase and the reply given by the attorney educating the banker of the Spanish acquiring the western world, deeded by the Queen who had been given rights by God.Someone owned that land 50 years ago and there have been title deficiencies older than that causing problems and more money to cure than a title policy.
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7 February 2014 | 19 replies
Filters and batteries are not that much plus you could check for unreported water leaks with plumbing and electrical issues.Seems like an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.
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7 April 2014 | 1 reply
Their "briiliant" idea was to use foggers from HD to cure the problem.