
4 January 2008 | 15 replies
The title insurance covers any other claims, but not that specific one.

19 November 2007 | 13 replies
If there is a sale the IRS might have a claim on the property that has to be paid in full before the title can be released.Selling might be one step in a very painful process that has no economic benefit at the end.John Corey

13 November 2007 | 0 replies
.* They claim to be working in your neighborhood and just happened to notice some sort of repair needed on your house, such as roofing, painting, or cracked portions in your driveway.* They offer a special price or discount claiming they are in the area and will knock off a portion of the cost due to excess materials from other contracts.* You may be told you must act right away to get this special discount pricing, and you may be asked to give them money up front before starting the work.* They offer you a discount price if you allow them to use your home to advertise their work.

18 November 2007 | 3 replies
Here in Ohio, you can Quit Claim the properties into your LLC without incurring the transfer tax.

7 July 2008 | 4 replies
I was watching an infomercial by John Beck's program that claims you can buy properties for few hundred dollars (about $300) from tax foreclosure sales.

19 November 2007 | 2 replies
In OR there can be a claim for back taxes that were paid by the state to the county.

26 November 2018 | 37 replies
Alot of what this is about is not a safeguard for consumers as claimed, in my opinion, but a way to make it very hard for the small mortgage broker to survive.
18 December 2007 | 5 replies
had a couple other jobs pop up in the interim, gave him those too, 75% down.please hold your laughing as you know where this is going.realtor lives with contractor, contractor scratched surface for a looooonnngg time. kept making excuses, stories. found out they have been sued before and he has aggravated theft charges out.so he claims to have had inspections, etc.

20 January 2008 | 25 replies
On tops, you will NEVER have a claim.

25 November 2007 | 10 replies
You have no claim against the purchaser at the auction, whether that's the lender or someone else.