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30 September 2016 | 6 replies
@Braden Hobbs You know how you get a policy and it has the declarations pages that are 2-3 pages that are about you, and those are the ones that you read carefully, but then there are 40-100 other pages of legal mumbo jumbo underneath, those are the forms.
1 October 2016 | 4 replies
I am going to assume you don't declare that income to the IRS on your tax return and pay the proper amount of taxes on it.If it is not on your last two years of tax returns,you will get no credit for it from the traditional banks and lenders which means you ability to borrow money will be based solely on what little you do declare and have taxed properly.Your savings and checking account s and stock holdings are irrelevant,only your verifiable monthly and yearly income.Your only choice would be a hard money lender at an enormous interest rate.
25 November 2016 | 8 replies
The first contact I heard back from declared the amount was non-refundable.
7 October 2016 | 4 replies
The Estoppel will allow the exiting tenants to declare their personal property, current rent and the deposit on hold with the sell.
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15 August 2016 | 9 replies
My sister does not declare depreciation on her rental because she is "as good or better at filling out the taxes as most CPAs" and "the government always gets paid."
23 August 2016 | 1 reply
However, tenants who would otherwise have protected status may be evicted if the unit is a single-family home or is the only rental unit owned by the landlord in the building, or if the landlord's qualified relative who will move in is 60 years of age or older and each rental unit owned by the landlord in the same building (except the unit occupied by the landlord) is occupied by a tenant with protected status.Any tenant who claims to have protected status must notify the owner of the tenant's protected status within 30 days of receiving either a notice to vacate or a written request from the owner to declare the tenant's protected status.
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20 August 2016 | 9 replies
I am self-employed and I didn't declare a lot of tax.
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12 December 2017 | 62 replies
Both eventually declared BK and I was out the loan and attorney fees which were substantial.
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27 August 2016 | 12 replies
Step away from this nonsense.Unless she has a source of income to actually buy this, that she hasn't declared to the local housing authority, I will bet that she wants to use her Section 8 deposits to you to purchase the house. and if she hasn't declared her extra income to section 8, then she's just defrauding the system.You can either say "no" directly to her, or just say that you still have a mortgage and you can't enter into a lease purchase agreement for at least another 12 years.