
14 March 2018 | 13 replies
Teachers, police officers, etc. who can't afford to live in expensive central cities.

6 March 2018 | 1 reply
Obviously, we track each property independently, but track cash flow out of one account.

7 March 2018 | 3 replies
Found an abandoned property been mailing them for months then went to code enforcer office and they told me that the owner was deceased for a year or so.

11 March 2018 | 8 replies
And yes, finding a job and focusing on school should be priorities to not lose track of the other goals.

7 March 2018 | 2 replies
A relative found out recently that the lawyer who recorded a lien for them put his law office as the notification address, not their home address. 10 years later when the guy stopped paying, they found out from the records' office that the home foreclosed and they never received notice because it went to the lawyer's office, now non-existent, not their home.

7 March 2018 | 17 replies
The 5/1 is my office which I likely won't add too much value to and took a longer term.

13 March 2018 | 8 replies
But if not, you might be better off letting Click2Mail do it.And unless you actually track the expense, you'll never know.

7 March 2018 | 1 reply
Maybe call your county office and ask for their list of permits for residential projects.

8 March 2018 | 10 replies
That way if a lawsuit comes down, at least in my mind, it should be more difficult to reach my personal funds.From another angle, you should have no trouble tracking the money trail in another account if needed, but gets more complicated if you include all of your personal transfers.

12 March 2018 | 18 replies
In addition there are records that go all the way back to William Penn the original owner of all of Pennsylvania, which means Penn's woods.We've had many title issue problems, because that's a lot of the business that we seek that nobody else wants to mess with.Railroad properties are a big problem, much of the RR land was never deeded, they only had rights of way, and once the tracks are removed the land reverts to the original owner or their heirs.