Aaron Cheatham
wholesale short contract
21 March 2011 | 5 replies
INSPECTION OF PROPERTY: Buyer shall have until the close of escrow to complete all Buyer investigations of the property, approve all disclosures, and other applicable information, which buyer receives from seller and/or persons hired to inspect property on behalf of Buyer; and approve all matters affecting the property, including but not limited to, the marketability of the property, the elevation, grade, and topography of the Property and to conduct engineering and soil boring tests as the Buyer deems necessary in order to determine the usability of the Property.
Michael Mcguniess
Placing laminate flooring in rentals
13 December 2018 | 33 replies
I also had a dishwasher leak and create a river underneath the floor through the entire dining room and part of the living room.
Mike Nelson
Seller Backing out...How do I cloud the title??
22 July 2019 | 24 replies
They can soil your name on and offline, get the state bulldog (Atty.
Scott J.
Inspection: What do you look for to avoid MAJOR losses?
30 November 2011 | 12 replies
Once I aquired the property we converted to gas and had tank filled with sand soil samples taken and the town signed off on it that it was properly abandoned.It was a biiger tank 1000 gal. that took up good paart ofo fron lawn and then underneath part of the driveway.
Taylor Haywood
How did you make your first mobile home deal?
28 May 2015 | 16 replies
I pulled out my contract and told the seller that I expected "the home to be broom swept and wiped down and the yard and underneath of the mobile home to be free of all debris."
Rob Dowsett
Inherited Tenant Issue ... Please help
12 August 2016 | 3 replies
•Requests that landlord cleans the carpets that have been soiled as a result of spills from his children.
Marilyn A.
Do you make your offer right away?
18 June 2010 | 32 replies
Also, if you don't lock the home up, it can be sold from underneath you.
Dave P.
Question about selling a piece of land
21 June 2016 | 3 replies
and the easiest way to do that is contact a good realtor who works with new home builders.. and then a quick walk into the planning department at the city or county to check on zoning and what other issues one would need to contend with to subdivide it or split it from the current configuration..appraisal is not necessary unless its a feel good and you want to spend money on it.. and surveying I would not spend money doing that unless your moving forward with some type of project.if its a high demand new construction area builders will be clammering for it.. if its in an area were there is NO new construction the lot may have little if any value.. as existing homes or structures sell for far less than replacement value rendering the land underneath them a liability not an asset with zero market value.. we see this all over the larger metro areas in the less desirable sections of town.
Asif M.
Newbie from Los Angeles
28 December 2014 | 10 replies
I am looking Middle to upwards, i have heard in some neighborhoods the potential is high but i don't want to be in that situation from the start may be once i have couple underneath my belt.thank you for the San Bernardino idea, i am going to look into it.
Joseph Gibbons
Cleveland Rehabbing in Winter? Planning on Jan purchase.
21 April 2015 | 12 replies
For the attic I am looking a at the sheathing underneath if there is insulation I am looking and feeling for damp or water stains.