
29 December 2019 | 6 replies
That could open you up to liability should something bad happen.

8 January 2020 | 33 replies
Our policy with subs is that you only get 50% up front if you have general liability insurance, a trade license, and proof of worker's compensation (or a waiver).Usually with these folks there are two issues: cost of materials and what the worker needs right now.

19 March 2020 | 16 replies
Less liability less resistance and more profits
13 January 2020 | 5 replies
Otherwise you are not treating it like a business and are potentially losing the limited liability protection afforded by the LLC.

3 February 2019 | 47 replies
Make sure the resident has renter's liability insurance of at least $300,000.00 per occurrence.

8 July 2020 | 5 replies
The seller might not know, or might not want to disclose something incorrectly and open themselves up to liability.

11 July 2020 | 6 replies
(About both knowing a buyer for you or someone possibly selling something you’d be interested in.)Think if you sold and collected the $300k profit, paid $50k in taxes on it and then had $250k in your hand (plus original equity and loan pay down of course) you have 500 months of rental income in your hand with no liability or repairs.

4 March 2021 | 20 replies
It's intruding on their work and can be a liability issue depending.

18 January 2021 | 0 replies
There were already clear signs that the hotel was becoming a liability when the Trump Organization received bids at less than half the asking price.

15 January 2021 | 39 replies
Not disclosing liabilities or contingent liabilities or expected liabilities known to be made in connection with a transaction or after that transaction has closed what was created from or in connection with that transaction can constitute fraud.There is no way around it, on a loan application you are to provide your assets and liabilities.