
21 May 2015 | 13 replies
AND the judgement lists both the husband and wife's name as defendants.

8 December 2014 | 8 replies
Let me start be looking at what you mean by ‘heading into foreclosure’Foreclosure proceedings begin with the filing of a civil action complaint, the recording of a Lis Pendens in the public records and the issuance of a summons to each defendant in the case, including the homeowner.

17 July 2023 | 87 replies
I also wanted to add if that you bought your Investment with your Personal Name and used a Personal Mortgage, then transferred the title to an LLC but left the Mortgage exactly the way it is where you are personally liable for the Mortgage, it would seem that any competent Lawyer will pierce the LLC by claiming that the Investment property is just an Alter Ego of the Actual Owners because it pays an Mortgage that has been personally guaranteed by the actual Owner.Not only that, it can even be seen as Comingling funds as Company Funds pays a personal debt.I don't know the statistics, but I would love to see if there is any cases in which a Lawsuit of this nature was successfully defended in this way.To me, that's the only way I would rely on an LLC for Liability protection if I hold the Mortgage in my Personal name.Whatever way you think, the Business Owners Policy is your shield, NOT the LLC.

22 February 2021 | 33 replies
The first instance I saw negative reviews about the company I have built my company on the back of, of course, I will jump to defend them.

18 May 2018 | 6 replies
You might be liable, depending on how you advertise the property, what you disclosed and how, your contract and state law, and for sure you can get sued and you'll have to defend yourself ($$$).

12 March 2019 | 24 replies
John, please know this: you don't have to defend what you did or didn't do.

4 February 2023 | 80 replies
I have to defend and praise @Sean Terry.

24 March 2023 | 6 replies
If I contact a rep on this I'd have to say "good job, keep defending small business".

14 March 2018 | 6 replies
Even "tax attorneys" are typically attorneys that defend you against IRS audits and lawsuits, not typically people you want to go to for specific tax advice.As @Logan Allec said, you want an attorney for forming business entities like LLCs for asset protection, or for drafting any contracts or agreements necessary for your flip business (partnership agreements, etc).

14 July 2021 | 31 replies
That's for you to defend later.