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Results (6,804+)
N/A N/A Turning Primary Residence into Rental
14 December 2007 | 5 replies
You will need to make sure you have all i's dotted and t's crossed to effect an actual sale.This may be viewed as aggressive by some and just normal by others but depending on how it is set up and how the transaction is handled will determine the substance over form issue with the IRS.
Tony Schober Denying prospective tenants access
9 February 2009 | 21 replies
If this is really a bad person, they could do you some physical harm, or worse!
John M. Where to invest -- Good areas/Bad areas
17 November 2018 | 88 replies
Bad and good areas can be radically different in different countries, too (and with today's technology and ease of business transactions, the world's your oyster) - a bad neighbourhood in Japan means factory and shift workers, blue collar folk who, aside from potentially being a few weeks late in payment, would never trash or harm a property, or even cause their neighbours to complain about anything.In the US - different story altogether.
Brian Gibbons Using a CYA Sellers' Acknowledgement
8 June 2014 | 3 replies
NOT UNDER THE INFLUENCE: I am not now under the influence of alcohol or any other mind-altering substance, nor am I taking medication that would cloud my judgment or make me unable to think clearly. ________ 20.
Karen M. Tell me what you hate about land lording
27 August 2014 | 34 replies
I tell our tenants at the onset that I value open and honest communication and if they choose to lie to me at anytime about anything, it would seriously harm our relationship.
Antonio McGuire My First Rental.... should i rent to felons
28 July 2015 | 46 replies
If so, what was the controlled substance?
Davido Davido Seeking to use abandoned Tax Delinquent properties for privacy & tax avoidance
30 January 2017 | 41 replies
You have no rights at all from the position of holding any tax lien to possession or in taking the fruits of ownership.Seems you mentioned the business model offering "privacy" most thieves usually don't want to make known their escapades, perhaps a money laundering scheme might keep the rents paid under wraps too, but I don't see anything addressing the privacy side nor can it be to the point that this method can't be discovered.Well, again, I spent time addressing guru type matters keeping newbies out of harm's way.
Kyle Bigger Seasoned investor wanting to walk away from it all
27 December 2015 | 78 replies
People doing jobs they wonder about inside....You are probably doing less social harm than some of these professions above btw in some views...You do have a willing buyer and seller, so the economist says there is a net gain here, you gave them the cash they needed for a property they could not fix or might even lose.
Ben Smith Dangers of a lowball
5 February 2016 | 15 replies
No harm no foul
DAVID GAGE WOULD YOU RENT TO THESE PEOPLE?
28 May 2010 | 36 replies
In addition people like this are usually substance abusers and they will inevitably attack or otherwise molest some of the other guests.