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15 July 2012 | 16 replies
Have a great real estate agent on your side, or better yet, get your license in that state so you can get access to the MLS yourself.2.
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15 July 2012 | 10 replies
And, they will both share a common entrance road off the main access road (casino will have other access, but this is the only neighborhood access -- there will be no pass-through traffic in the neighborhood).My thoughts are that it can be bad or good -- values could go up if the casino creates a commercial growth response and a developer wants the small neighborhood for a commercial project, golf course or something along those lines.
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12 July 2012 | 4 replies
No, it won't be on there if you're the buyer (in CA, anyway).Of course, if you have MLS access, you can figure out how much your agent got (and typically you can assume the listing agent did not get more than this, if an REO or corporate flip usually significantly less).
14 July 2012 | 4 replies
To expand a little more, in an S Corp you can receive income as both earned (paycheck) or passive (stock dividends).
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18 August 2012 | 23 replies
I ended up drilling injection holes below and shooting it with expanding foam.
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6 August 2012 | 10 replies
Btw - no dumb questions, we are all here to expand our vision.
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27 August 2013 | 7 replies
Some of my property's lines will separate allowing access to pouring solutions down but a couple don't seem to separate anywhere.
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27 January 2013 | 15 replies
If you just ask to be taken off it, they'll happily take your name off but leave you hanging with any joint responsibility you signed on for, without even telling you you're still responsible until it becomes an issue on your credit report, no access to the account but liable for it all the same.
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19 January 2014 | 32 replies
Once I purchase at tax sale, I drive to the house, gain access and change the locks.
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6 August 2012 | 7 replies
These trusts are designed to house real estate within a grantor trust and provide limited access to grantor or beneficiary information contained in the trust instrument or known to the trustee.