
22 January 2016 | 2 replies
I was thinking about a quit claim deed or a release of liability but my mortgage company will not honor either of those for purposes of removing her completely(credit report, etc).

22 January 2016 | 14 replies
The roof was leaking, and we reported this promptly.

21 January 2016 | 1 reply
" Well I could call the electric company and report it for you .

23 March 2016 | 18 replies
@John Boby, As long as that LLC is a disregarded entity (meaning all activity is reported on your personal Schedule C and E) yes you can close that way.

22 January 2016 | 4 replies
In this case, I'd want to do a credit pull every 2 months and run LP each time because I have absolutely no idea what LP is looking for specifically in your credit report, meaning my preapproval is only good for as long as that credit report isn't expired.

22 January 2016 | 2 replies
At that point you would want to make sure they can both afford the place.In short, I'd say yes, make sure the daughter has her criminal/credit report checked.

21 January 2016 | 1 reply
And/or you do the unthinkable and READ THE APPRAISAL report (if it's not to your liking, invoke the appraisal contingency and back out of the deal).Expenses: No one's going to be honest about this, you could theoretically ask for schedule E of seller's tax returns.
26 January 2016 | 26 replies
Thus allowing me to focus more of my time and energy into investing in my brand/ building my own businesses.Obstacle: Currently I am on the hunt for an experienced FHA lender who accepts credit scores between 600-620 (due to having less than 2 years of established credit history and 2 accounts in collections, one is completely paid off but remains on report, the other is from school and is only $991) To build my credit I have 2 credit cards, I only utilize 10% monthly and pay in full & on time.

22 January 2016 | 0 replies
If the Property does not include any buildings, a Vacant Land Disclosure Report containing the disclosures provided in Wis.

25 January 2016 | 16 replies
I can't help wondering about the $7.7 trillion undisclosed Federal Reserve loans that the Bloomberg Report had to use the freedom of information act to get the dirt on.