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11 May 2013 | 8 replies
After signing the lease, but before moving in, we amended the lease to have the husband removed due to the fact they were getting divorced.
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6 August 2012 | 1 reply
And yes, amend your offer showing the greater amount.But I doubt it will have much of an impact on the initial consideration of your offer, especially if you have financing contingencies.
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21 September 2012 | 4 replies
B) The contract starts with more than one individual and then an addendum and or amendment (an addendum is provided by either agent and an amendment is provided by the escrow or title company) to remove one or more parties is signed by the seller/bank and buyers/buyer (once the contract is accepted).
8 October 2012 | 9 replies
The list is amended so one mortgagee clause per instrument not a list of past mortgagees since when the instrument sold all rights and interest and claims to said instrument were conveyed as a function of sale.
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10 October 2012 | 14 replies
In some cases, if the attorneys that represent the seller see that you're planning to finance after marking "Cash" on the addendum, they'll require you to submit an amendment to the contract that the seller will need to sign and agree.When dealing with private sellers, this is going to be much less of a concern.
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16 October 2012 | 20 replies
But I read it somewhere that there is a new amendments to the Protecting Tenants At Foreclosure Act that changed the date of notice of default to date of sale.
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27 November 2012 | 10 replies
You will find that if you omit some issue you can always file amendments to the Articles and OA to change things, but you may need an attorney at it will cost something too.
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19 October 2012 | 15 replies
From what you said, it's the escrow company that's requiring an amendment to the contract, not the lender.I can certainly understand why the escrow company would say this.
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26 June 2007 | 15 replies
There are ccrs and amendments/additions, and bylaws, financials (which you probably won't get to see until (if then) you can get then, expecially the rearages, fines and dues owed, and any liens or foreclosures, city and state laws, and then there is what the board does.
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6 August 2007 | 10 replies
The existing contract can just be amended.