
9 November 2010 | 9 replies
That will tell whether there are leaks in hidden areas?

15 November 2010 | 2 replies
Also, if you are dealing with an old house with a stone foundation, I always dry-lock the foundation walls on those properties, because they all leak to some extent if you don't.

16 November 2010 | 24 replies
Then sign all misc. docs.

17 November 2010 | 1 reply
Copy of the sale contract and closing docs (HUD-1), copy of the note and security agreement, name, address and amounts with terms of other financing involved, at least pictures of the property, appraisal if there was one, tax statement and title check.

6 October 2011 | 42 replies
They make it easy, just email them a word doc for the letter and spreadsheet for the list.

14 December 2010 | 15 replies
There is a leak at the water inlet.

29 November 2010 | 8 replies
when i bought the property from the old owners, their bills were about 80 bucks an apartment...spend the money to have a plumber fix all leaks--it pays for itself very quick

4 August 2011 | 28 replies
Also, you can choose to archive rather than leaving in your inbox, and your labels will sort your mail just as if you'd put them in a folder.Best is with your google account, you can make use of google voice, docs, sites, etc.

23 February 2017 | 25 replies
Jimmy...Do you have a scanner that will convert the paper docs to .pdfs?

25 June 2011 | 10 replies
Here's what goes to the top of your list: houses with vinyl siding, simple gable roofs (go asphalt shingles if you can), no trees overhanging the house and only one story.Simple gable roofs are the easiest and cheapest to repair and the least likely to have leaks.