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28 March 2012 | 3 replies
Is there a way to get a warranty to protect me if something is discovered?
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14 March 2012 | 3 replies
I figure since the property is sold they will not care about it since there is a valid reason for it sitting empty for a few months to sell to an OO, they will only carre about the properties I still own when applying for the new mortgage.
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28 March 2012 | 21 replies
If no problems, give the new owner a warranty.
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27 March 2017 | 30 replies
The HOA lawyer is from the bottom of the lawyer barrel, they are a collection of real toileteers and will lie and cheat at the drop of a hat.You better have excellent documentation about your issue, otherwise the HOA lawyer will simply lie to the court and probably get away with it.One of the repulsive things about HOA litigation is that the "presumption of validity" that goes with deed restrictions is currently being extended to HOAs themselves.
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20 March 2012 | 7 replies
That said, you may have valid reasons for owning properties that produce losses.
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14 October 2012 | 13 replies
And sometimes it helps for me to know (for example) that even though I thought the property was titled in the name of the estate, 'Operation of Law' (OOL) in NJ dictates that because roughly 3 years passed and the heirs failed to either probate the decendent's estate or convey the property from the probated estate to their individual names, it was 'virtually' done automatically and therefore a deed from the legal rep. of the estate would not be valid.
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10 June 2012 | 15 replies
This may not help, but, I've actually used a home warranty as my property manager.
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10 May 2012 | 6 replies
.* Validate what the prop taxes will reset to based on your sales price.
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28 October 2013 | 56 replies
Congrats on your 1,000 post, that is quite an accomplishment.As far as your note question, I look at the purchase price compared to value, how much the borrower placed down, what year the loan was generated and by who, does it come with reps and warranties (something I newly discovered), condition of security (property), borrower's pay history (performing, not performing, re-performing, how many payments made, credit scores, etc), and area only matters to me that it is not on the downslope of value.
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2 April 2012 | 3 replies
Yes banks will lend on MHP's, it depends on your credit and the validity of income from the MHP.3.