
18 September 2014 | 13 replies
If a court is deciding whether your business and personal assets are effectively the same, it will be much easier to conclude they are not if they aren't all going in and out of the same bank account.

23 September 2014 | 6 replies
Notify them in writing, and keep all copies of notifications.

22 June 2018 | 6 replies
Fully rented to three tenants with yearly lease, to expire May 2015, July 2015 and August 2015.However. in reading over the lease - the seller has written into each of the lease that internet and cable TV are included with rent.Investigating further, it is a personal Comcast account to the seller, and it's a SFR account, he has a cable modem in the laundry room, with coax cables running to the individual units, and tenants have the WIFI WEP password.Obviously when the purchase is completed the account will be deactivated, and I am going to have to figure out a way to provide cable TV and internet service in accordance to the lease.In speaking to the tenants, yes they use both, and yes they depend on both.As a matter of preferences, I have never provided any of this to my tenants, I would rather not if I can avoid it.I believe my options are:(1) Negotiate with the seller to maintain the account in his personal name for now...he continues to pay for the bill and I would reimburse him for it.

19 July 2015 | 80 replies
It works sometimes it not. If
24 May 2011 | 6 replies
Not if they've actually got ok credit.btw: I'd also advise not putting the sister on the lease anywhere.

29 June 2013 | 27 replies
As such, in either casee, it is important that you understand the IRS rules regarding SDIRA's clearly before making any investment, checkbook control or not. If

7 July 2014 | 10 replies
If you need to get in, post a 24 notice to enter on her front door, and if you are feeling generous, give her a courtesy notification via email.

19 February 2010 | 14 replies
Mark - as it stands today, you can see all colleague requests as a notification on the upper right of your dashboard.

24 March 2010 | 5 replies
Well you don’t really do much to the contract until you have a buyer because you don’t know if you have a deal or not unless you plan to close on the home whether you find a buyer or not. If