
14 December 2022 | 5 replies
They might keep your letter(s) for 6 months before calling, but if you can be the one they call first, the ball is in your court!

30 December 2022 | 16 replies
Where the boat is stored on your property that could raise your stake in the "who is liable game" liability waivers are a joke and do not hold up in court.

21 December 2022 | 7 replies
If they are you will still be able to inherit the properties but it's going to take longer to get things properly thought the court system and such.Next get with your attorney and see what vehicle will be best to move the assets into for you to make money, share ownerships, attain loans etc.
29 December 2022 | 19 replies
What if the owner declares bankruptcy?

5 January 2023 | 10 replies
After waiting for a month and a half of no rent, I started the eviction process and the tenant didn't show up at the court either so I got the decision of eviction by default and got my property back in posession.

1 January 2023 | 23 replies
Probate court recognizes an auction as a valid way to sell a property for the maximum value available at the time.
4 January 2023 | 19 replies
If the protest is unsuccessful, the taxpayer may have the option to appeal the decision to a higher authority or court.

10 October 2019 | 5 replies
Legally appointed Financial Power of Attorney or Court appointed Guardian?
13 October 2019 | 3 replies
BrianNothing prevents tenant from running the water, kicking holes in walls and door, or other vandalism.However, these things seldom happen as retribution.More likely, a tenant fills up an inflatable pool every other day in the summer, or fails to report that the kitchen drain is leaking, or that the boyfriend beats her up every weekend and busting up the place, or that tenant lets a dog do his business on the carpet, or overflows the tub because they fell asleep.While a good tenant will agree to a fair water policy; the court will typically throw out the policy in an eviction.Keep in mind that you can get a leak notification from water department via “clear-reads” through the mycleveland water website.Usually bad tenants are multi-dimensional... they tend to follow a pattern... low credit score, extension criminal background hits such as driving with suspended license, expired plates, drugs, panning the rent late, refusing to pay the water, violating trash pickup guidelines, police calls by the neighbors, no-show for service calls, removing smoke retractor batteries for the kids toys, not replacing burned out lightbulbs, not taking care of the yard (in a single family”, busting blinds and screens, etc.

7 November 2019 | 2 replies
Additionally, in compliance with local data retention policies, originally signed documents must be held for three years in the event evidence is requested again from the court.