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31 March 2012 | 44 replies
It is down a lot this year, but I would bet sales will drastically rise as people are laid off, money gets tighter, and good ole Tomato Soup makes a strong comeback!
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15 June 2009 | 14 replies
I agree with what your saying Dory about 70-80% of foreclosures are medical related - however - I would be willing to bet that was BEFORE this whole mess.
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10 June 2009 | 19 replies
I bet if you ask a large subset of this forum what a typical operating expense is they will respond with 50%.
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18 November 2009 | 11 replies
Your best bet is to have an engineer look at it.
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28 June 2010 | 6 replies
I'd say that Steve's method is probably a better bet, unless the apartment building is garden style where you've got access to all the doors.
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15 November 2012 | 28 replies
Interesting mess....I bet you get it figured out!
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14 July 2016 | 41 replies
even when they leave, i bet they'll tell their friends about your place.i once knew a big apartment complex that would throw a summer bbq for all the tenants.
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4 January 2013 | 6 replies
I'm not familiar with Cali but if the s/l was 4 years for contracts and unsecued notes I'd put my money betting on 4 years.I'd weigh the option of proceeding regardless of the s/l as the borrower would need to bring that as a defense, I'd bet they don't if no payment was ever made.Another issue, if a payment was never made it sounds like mortgage fraud that is another category getting to criminal charges, the s/l will be longer, 7, 10, 12 years, not sure, it depends too if the original was an insured lending institution or a private individual.It also depends if the note was generated from an installment sale or was made as a cash loan, purchase or refi.It will also depend on whois in the property and if the property has been sold over the past 16 years, we just had an example of a subject 2 deal going sour with subsequent sales and that can limit your security if the note holder fails to act in a timely manner.Frankly, I wouldn't fool with this one, 16 years old, foreclosure notice gievn and never followed through, that's pretty much allowing the note to go stale and abandoning the claim of the amounts owed.If the maker of the note is still in the property and you can contact them by phone or in person, you might be able to negoiate something holding the fraud claim over thier head, forgive some of it and modify it back to life, but they need to agree and you can certainly bluff your way along to a point.
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1 April 2013 | 22 replies
I bet if he gets a letter from an attorney and he hasn't been paid yet, he'll change his tune, they usually do.
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22 April 2013 | 13 replies
I would bet that you have no legal grounds for earning any money (you're not licensed and you had no contract with the buyer or seller).That said, I would do my best to destroy his reputation if I could...But, as I like to say, I'm very spiteful when it comes to unethical people...