
6 January 2014 | 7 replies
From a practical standpoint it appears a landlord should be prepared to wait 6 months to clear the existing tenant and/or come to some kind of agreement with tenant to move--I would not call it extortion, but with financial assistance apparently available for deposits, an existing tenant has a lot of leverage over a selling landlord.Are you thinking that DCHA makes the payment to a tenant to relocate them prior to the end of a lease rather than the landlord as well as that DCHA essentially has to sign off on any eviction/termination with cause that is prior to the end of a lease term (and it appears that can only be after the first 12 months?)?

17 September 2010 | 65 replies
awesome post.... now lets look at practical applications Lets start with an IRA, Self Directed ROTH type IRA.

25 October 2013 | 16 replies
You make a great point on the subtleties of the statute & the actual practice.

6 November 2017 | 198 replies
The integrity of many industries is tarnished by crooks and irresponsible business practices - take contractors for an example.

27 July 2011 | 4 replies
Since then, no communication and no money.It's hardly practical to have someone bang on the door at all hours.

4 January 2010 | 6 replies
After that you can only append to the post.This was put in place to stop the thread-killing practices that some people were undertaking when there was a negative response to a comment/post/etc.

11 June 2007 | 25 replies
In practice, though, you need to use these formulas the exact opposite way.

10 April 2008 | 2 replies
Often, it is not possible to inspect the property before the auction, so you cannot know what the condition is – In California I'm finding that its somewhat standard practice for the trustee to send someone to the home to check to see if it is vacant.

22 February 2011 | 5 replies
But it's a lot of work and a real PITA.The good news is that if you succeed with this rental you will have gained invaluable people skills and business practices that will help you succeed if you continue as a LL.Two points.

10 August 2015 | 0 replies
This is clearly a cost of doing business from a practical perspective, but is it also considered a tax-deductible cost in the eyes of the IRS?