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9 July 2017 | 28 replies
So the question that just popped into my head goes like this.Why aren't squatters and tenants who are knowingly staying and forcing you to evict them ever held liable and or charged with a crime?
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13 January 2016 | 2 replies
I've yet to hear a complaint about their service, and would welcome feedback.I also personally used them to screen my tenants, who have been nothing other than wonderful to date.That said, we don't force anyone to use any product or service, and you can use whoever you like to conduct your background checks.
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15 August 2019 | 37 replies
It really is a very powerful program and requires hours of operational time before you can make it dance.QB is good only if you own the property, know how to force it to recognize rents, automate the billing monthly to track rents due and are familiar with expense billing.
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22 August 2016 | 20 replies
:)Neither one of us has any children so we are unique in that we are forced to think about legacy either via cash from the sale of everything by an executor or putting enough internal management into the operation to serve continuous benefit to charities and what ever else you might imagine.
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22 October 2016 | 33 replies
(There are many others but you will likely never see them as a landlord) It used to be that all FUTURE income was free and clear, but about 7 or 8 years ago they did a huge revamp where they can force a bankrupt filer to pay for quite a long period of time on his debts if his income exceeded a certain level based on family size and location.
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12 March 2019 | 50 replies
The law is often misread by laypeople, for example, the anti-discrimination rules for section 8 recipients were not written to force landlords to accept Section 8.
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27 December 2013 | 38 replies
Joe Gore First, there is absolutely NOTHING illegal about forcing a creditor to comply 100% with the law.
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2 September 2018 | 8 replies
Previous Tenant Was Not Forced Out If the previous tenant—who was not required to pay for water—left involuntarily, a landlord cannot bill the new tenant for water.
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29 October 2015 | 96 replies
Thus, it can’t force the LLC to pay money to it or anyone else.”These articles and examples have to do with "personal creditors", not judgments from business or work related injuries resulting from owning real-estate.
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7 September 2012 | 52 replies
According to your first post, there's a "gap in a doorway" allowing pests inside, her a/c bill was jacked up because you "took too long" to fix the a/c, and you do a poor job of maintaining the property, because she's forced to look at an "eyesore" tree stump in the yard.