
30 March 2024 | 9 replies
Since the foreclosure, along with no recorded mtgs showed up supposedly by searching their names, I suspect this may be the case. what do you suggest i do cus i really want to know if i own any more money Call a title company ask for a Title Insurance Commitment…may cost a couple hundred bucks.

30 March 2024 | 2 replies
Have you tried calling the office?

30 March 2024 | 5 replies
If Seller no shows, have your agent give them a call and communicate the consequences of defaulting.

30 March 2024 | 2 replies
I’m also open to continuing a lucrative partnership, and if we vibe well then let’s keep making money.In exchange, I want to manage the project and design and I have an eye for design, it’s called class, style, perfection!

30 March 2024 | 10 replies
I'm not sure how old your "oldest son" is that can hear them arguing, but if he's older and is ok with recording them on his phone (if he can hear it, he should likely record it), then you'd have some sort of proof of threatening behavior and lease violation in case you call the police.

29 March 2024 | 13 replies
Last summer I interned for a commercial real estate aquisistion, management, and development firm in the city of Chicago.
30 March 2024 | 17 replies
In either case, if you call the employee listed on her voucher or annual renewal notice, they're usually happy to run the numbers ahead of time and let you know exactly what will happen, though they obviously wont encourage you to raise the rent over the limit even if they wont actually reject the increase.

27 March 2024 | 43 replies
Did you guys decide to call it due cause you had concerns about the loan, Or just a generally policy you always call all loans due if title changes hands?

30 March 2024 | 5 replies
Congratulations on your closing; most PM have a trust account for the rent collection, and you have to pay them directly just send them a message or call

30 March 2024 | 11 replies
And evaluating the track record is a call that's made first by the taxpayer or their CPA, and ultimately by an IRS auditor (should one get involved). it is very true that the IRS cares about intent with respect to capital gains in real estate -- I've certainly seen cases where the statutory timelines were less important and the identified intent of the investor.with respect to determining whether you qualify as a developer or an investor, it's much more of a "forest" than the "trees"...so holding any given investment for 14 months prior to a flip is certainly no guarantee of receiving long-term capital gains treatment.I hope this helps.