
9 September 2014 | 2 replies
Btw, we are absentee owners living outside of the country.After much back and forth with their lawyers; we decided not to put up a defense and just pay with they are asking about $8500( $2200 hoa and the rest being legal fees).

10 September 2014 | 5 replies
Get a realtor or lawyer to present the contract and at settlement the lawyer will basically take the check minus the lien (send to the gas company) and the rest goes to the owner --- so if you pay 20k she'll end up with $3000Now how are you planning on purchasing?
15 November 2014 | 9 replies
A good real estate lawyer could answer that for you in less than an hour.

9 September 2014 | 1 reply
It's not recognized in New York state but the right lawyer can guide you.

13 September 2014 | 14 replies
Talk to your lawyer about your specific situation but generally the jurisdiction of your fund will be a natural result of the structure you choose and where you and your investors are located (in some industries it might be focused on a global hot spot for the industry).

11 September 2014 | 1 reply
It might also have an application for a land trust format that might be useful.What ever you do, run it by a lawyer.

21 September 2014 | 4 replies
Auctioning of REOs and other owned properties you may be allowed 30 days to setup the financing.Things to check:Liens, back taxes, unpaid utilities, if the property is occupied you need to have a strategy for that (not sure if you want a tenet, if not you need a lawyer for the eviction or try a cash for keys), you won't have it in Seattle but on the east side of WA you have irrigation assessments.

12 September 2014 | 9 replies
Again, that is a might because I don't know exactly what will happen or if it's worth it for the accuser if you ever get sued.Bottom line, if this is really important to you, I'd get a lawyer's opinion.

11 September 2014 | 7 replies
Again, talk with your accountant (maybe a lawyer too) but...One of the biggest challenges I think a lot of 'full time conversion' REIers face is 'how to pay myself in a way that isn't self-employment' ... it becomes a huge deal when you're doing silly little things like, say, getting a cell phone, or a car loan, or a mortgage, or lines of credit... or a credit card...This is where it pays to spend the time and money to set up your LLC/C-Corp/S-Corp correctly so that you can pay yourself on a W2 or through an S-Corp and not have the problems/taxes associated with a 1099.

12 September 2014 | 14 replies
If that doesn't work, maybe her receiving a Cure or Quit from your lawyer will scare her into following the rules.