
19 May 2015 | 42 replies
I am Wealthy with great friends and family, great health, a strong faith, and the freedom to work less than the average American.

6 September 2016 | 10 replies
@Faith Woodward, do you own your own home?

9 March 2016 | 7 replies
If your experience and knowledge level is sufficient to instill faith in the would be investor you should be able to lure some in around the 8% range.That said, we are also taking on the whole of the risk.

27 June 2014 | 6 replies
I just have no faith in em.

1 December 2019 | 37 replies
IM the one who is going to be paying for all of those mortgages and buying all that gas....for the "faithful" entitlement victims of this country.....I guess i will cling to my guns and my religion....

10 July 2018 | 121 replies
I have total faith in my property manager, they get me pictures, and they get me bids.
2 November 2017 | 12 replies
Don't give up, keep faith, and keep moving forward.

15 December 2017 | 3 replies
Seller/Landlord has communicated the option/availability of financing available upon execution of purchase option by tenants, pending a good faith review of financial disclosure information on the part of tenants, upon tenant execution of option to purchase.

9 December 2017 | 22 replies
That’s the one thing they can control to get out of buying the house.No other reason on the application except no cash.... which implies negligence of bad faith since they were stringing me along with no funds to back their contract.... they should never have went under contract unless they had funds.

19 December 2016 | 15 replies
See Section 24.0053, Texas Property Code.The writ of possession shall order the officer executing the writ to:1. post a written warning of at least 8-1/2 by 11 inches on the exterior of the front door of the rental unit notifying the tenant that the writ has been issued and that the writ will be executed on or after a specific date and time stated in the warning not sooner than 24 hours after the warning is posted; and2. when the writ of possession is executed:(A) deliver possession of the premises to the landlord;(B) instruct the tenant and all persons claiming under the tenant to leave the premises immediately, and, if the persons fail to comply, physically remove them;(C) instruct the tenant to remove or to allow the landlord, the landlord's representatives, or other persons acting under the officer's supervision to remove all personal property from the rental unit other than personal property claimed to be owned by the landlord; and(D) place, or have an authorized person place, the removed personal property outside the rental unit at a nearby location, but not blocking a public sidewalk, passageway, or street and not while it is raining, sleeting, or snowing.The writ of possession authorizes the officer, at the officer's discretion, to engage the services of a bonded or insured warehouseman to remove and store, subject to applicable law, part or all of the property at no cost to the landlord or the officer executing the writ.The officer may not require the landlord to store the property.The writ of possession must contain notice to the officer that under Section 7.003, Civil Practice and Remedies Code, the officer is not liable for damages resulting from the execution of the writ if the officer executes the writ in good faith and with reasonable diligence.A sheriff or constable may use reasonable force in executing a writ under this section.See Section 24.0061, Texas Property Code.A writ of possession cannot be issued more than 60 days after a judgment for possession is signed, and a writ of possession cannot be executed after the 90th day after a judgment for possession is signed.