
17 April 2008 | 6 replies
to answer grandwally- Land acquisition legal definition is the government can acquisition your land for government use such as roads, bridges etc.But what I did is... say You want me to find you 6 acres to build on.

1 June 2008 | 2 replies
There might be some structural issues or something, but I am worried that there is something legal going on.

17 April 2008 | 1 reply
Legally, of course.

24 April 2008 | 1 reply
My question is does the mortgage insurance company even have a legal position to do that?

19 April 2008 | 4 replies
If so, can I legally run a background check on the tenant?

18 April 2008 | 4 replies
In addition to what Ned mentioned, you will also have advertising, entity maintenance, legal fees, evictions, court costs, periods of high vacancy, damage done by tenants (in excess of the security deposit), lawsuits, utilities (at least during vacancies), etc, etc, etc.

22 April 2008 | 2 replies
I understand this is not a legal forum but would like to hear from experience investors.What is the best way to handle finders fees; i.e if you have an associate looking to move a property and you bring her a buyer, how do you receive a fee and protect yourself in the process?

8 May 2008 | 3 replies
It's called networking and it works legally, and wonderfully.Let me know if you have further questions, or would require assistance.Thanks and Best Regards,Scott Cook
8 May 2008 | 5 replies
Thanks, By "yellow letter" I meant a letter that is hand written on a yellow legal pad paper, as a more personal touch (to stand out from the other normal ones they get) and sent in an invitation sized envelope.

25 April 2008 | 5 replies
A common rule of thumb is that all expenses, including taxes, insurance, utilities (at least when its vacant) vacancy, advertising, tenant screening, maintenance, property management, tenant damage, legal fees, etc., all add up to about 50% of the rent.