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22 October 2024 | 4 replies
Plenty of money on the table, but extremely difficult underwriters and less than helpful loan officers in terms of information.
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18 October 2024 | 14 replies
They would make nice accent art pieces here and there.
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21 October 2024 | 2 replies
Each state can be a little different so the details matter. https://www.omglawfirm.com/arkansas-probate-intestate-succes...Here is the pertinent excerpt:If you don’t have a Will, the default order of descent goes like this: (1) full blood and adopted children of the decedent, subject to any dower, curtesy, and homestead interest of a spouse; (2) if no full blood or adopted children, then everything to a spouse of greater than three years or half of everything plus dower, curtesy, and homestead to a spouse of less than three years and the other half of everything to other heirs (per this table); (3) to the decedent’s parents or surviving siblings; (4) to the decedent’s grandparents or surviving aunts, uncles, cousins, etc.; (5) to the decedent’s great-grandparents or surviving great aunts, great uncles, etc.; (6) if none of those intermediate descendents are alive the remaining half can go to the spouse of less than three years or to a predeceased spouse’s heirs; (7) finally, if none of these apply, all the property escheats to the county where the decedent died.
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24 October 2024 | 10 replies
And it's written under the pseudonym of Sean Cook by Paul Kaseburg.Paul’s sat on both sides of the table on over $2 billion of real estate deals.
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20 October 2024 | 2 replies
It would help if you could give more information like which strategies you are using and what do you bring to the table.
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20 October 2024 | 4 replies
@Jason Frink, this page seems to cover it:https://www.omglawfirm.com/arkansas-probate-intestate-succes...Here is a pertinent snippet from that page:If you don’t have a Will, the default order of descent goes like this: (1) full blood and adopted children of the decedent, subject to any dower, curtesy, and homestead interest of a spouse; (2) if no full blood or adopted children, then everything to a spouse of greater than three years or half of everything plus dower, curtesy, and homestead to a spouse of less than three years and the other half of everything to other heirs (per this table); (3) to the decedent’s parents or surviving siblings; (4) to the decedent’s grandparents or surviving aunts, uncles, cousins, etc.; (5) to the decedent’s great-grandparents or surviving great aunts, great uncles, etc.; (6) if none of those intermediate descendents are alive the remaining half can go to the spouse of less than three years or to a predeceased spouse’s heirs; (7) finally, if none of these apply, all the property escheats to the county where the decedent died.A good way to visualize the order is to imagine the following scenario: Alfred dies without a Will.
20 October 2024 | 3 replies
If you are not going to live in it an FHA refinance is probably off the table.
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20 October 2024 | 8 replies
I don't want to leave a lot of money on the table, but I also don't want to still be holding this when Winter rolls around.
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19 October 2024 | 1 reply
However since I built the relationship, he allowed me on the property to fix chipped/peeling paint and waited until OCTOBER, which was when I finally got to the closing table.
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25 October 2024 | 66 replies
This may or may not be helpful, but for the sake of throwing all the info on the table to keep this guy in jail, I thought I would chime back in.