Richard Nix M. Caasi
Newbie from San Clamente, CA
12 February 2016 | 4 replies
I just finished purchasing my next project at the court house steps and will get started with the rehab soon.
Wally Katz
1031 to personal residence (already owned?)
18 February 2016 | 8 replies
It appears that it has been treated and reported as if owned by both the LLC and your silent partner.
Tavis Stice
Tavis Stice - new to real estate
14 February 2016 | 11 replies
Just so that my name would never appear on any deed associated with the homes.
Chris Lynch
New member
16 February 2016 | 4 replies
I tried taking them to court, but didn't because I was sick of them both, I swallowed it a lesson learned, repair the damage and moved forward.
Harry Neakok
Pre-Forclosure deal structures.
17 February 2016 | 6 replies
Everything will be done by the letter of the law and you wont have to worry about being sued or taken to court.
Shari Lawson
Has This Happened to You?
13 February 2016 | 12 replies
In any event the buyers talked about taking me and the realtor/broker to court.
Reese Phillips
1st Time MHP Buyer
10 March 2016 | 25 replies
I would also add that at a glance , Boise appears to have good market numbers so you might be higher and I know some of the parks in the top left of the US go for lower caps ( maybe leaving a small park ok at a 10 cap ) but regardless, get to some local parks and comp out the lot rents to see where you stack up against the market.
Kristen B.
Bankruptcy Trustee Sale? First-Time Flipper
12 February 2016 | 0 replies
She said the process is similar to a short sale but requires court approval.Obviously, I will be researching this more throughout the weekend but I was just wondering about other investors' experiences have been in the past with these sort of sales.
Adam P
Rent rise discimination
14 February 2016 | 7 replies
However, if a determined tenant could display that you were charging them more rent for a duplicate property, for no justifiable business reason (rents went up after lease expiration, building taxes, etc), than another tenant, they could probably come up with a protected class reason that you were violating - race, age, family status, etc, and then you would be forced to use your "pain in the ***" logic in court to defend the differential.So I would say you should probably not proceed down that road, and if you do, I would probably delete this thread.
Al Philips
General contractor question
13 February 2016 | 6 replies
I am a court reporter and have done many, many cases for the Contractors Board here in California where contractors did not adhere to the law regarding what is supposed to be included in their contracts, and how much money should be paid as a deposit and progress payments, etc.