4 November 2007 | 3 replies
A litmus test for a legal deal is if the institutional lender will write the loan after being fully informed of the seller financing.John Corey

30 October 2007 | 5 replies
., Ask for the name of the Legal Newspaper (Insiders Secrects) where Foreclosures are listed for the Next Upcoming-Sale.

9 November 2007 | 8 replies
A master lease with an option could be one legal construct to fit what you need yet not be too involved in the property directly.I think the biggest issue will be for you to clarify in your mind the sorts of deals that would make sense.

15 December 2007 | 6 replies
Some are talking about properties where legal action has been started by the lender.

6 November 2007 | 2 replies
I don't know the Legal side of that but why would you rent to someone you don't trust?

30 November 2007 | 7 replies
[/code:1]How can they legally keep the profits ?

15 November 2007 | 12 replies
Are there legal issues I'm unaware of if you buy a property and represent yourself?

4 December 2009 | 11 replies
Just be sure that the state and your process keeps you on the legal side of the line.John Corey

3 November 2007 | 13 replies
For example, you completely ommitted advertising, management (even if you do it), maintenance (even if you do it), legal expenses, evictions, setout fees, damage done by tenants (in excess of the security deposit), entity maintenance, utilities paid by the owner during rehabs and vacancies, capital expenses (although not technically an operating expense), lawsuits, etc, etc, etc (I could go on and on and on).The good thing is that you're at break even, so this is not a disaster.