
29 March 2013 | 18 replies
Were you able to contact the foreclosing trustee on the first and work out a reinstatement and/or stall the trustee's sale?

13 August 2012 | 71 replies
For what it's worth, I'll likely vote for the guy...Mormon beliefs are no crazier than any other religion...Not sure about that, they follow a prophet who was riding a horse west of Missouri where he was kicked out of town for being a con-artist having nothing to do with religion.

20 April 2013 | 17 replies
There was absolutely no habitability issues with the property, all tenants have to do is make the claim and it will stall the process so they can get some more free rent.I'm sure there is an attorney in your area that specializes in evictions, this is the person you need to find.

21 November 2016 | 40 replies
@Grace SunshineWell, there is a bit of the cart before the horse, a catch 22, for a business.

1 December 2013 | 51 replies
I told him to hold his horses.

30 May 2017 | 3 replies
A horse, a cow, and a deer all eat the same stuff – grass.

3 June 2020 | 20 replies
I believe you learn more from failure than success.I’ve taught real estate agent classes & I’ll sum it up with an analogy I use with agents that I call the jockey & race horse story.Who is more powerful in this equation, the jockey or race horse?

27 February 2018 | 7 replies
I would think it would be no fun finding out at rent court that what you really did is lease somebody a horse for $6 per year.

8 March 2020 | 25 replies
For example, a horse or a llama may be rejected from a small studio apartment.Second – if the building has 4 units or less and the landlord lives in one of the buildings.Third – it is a single-family house that was rented without a realtor and the owner owns less than 3 single family homes.Fourth – if the animal in the unit brings an undue financial hardship to the landlord.Fifth – if the animal causes damages or harm to others in the building.Thank You