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20 December 2022 | 61 replies
Realtors can help find them and get pricing along with a lot of other market information but draw from a few sources as well to satisfy yourself if you are reaching outside your own back yard.
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17 February 2023 | 84 replies
I've followed some basic rules of thumb and been satisfied with the outcome:1) Mild climates save money and are more manageable.
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24 January 2023 | 14 replies
They will most likely need to sell and split it or the one that keeps the house will need to refinance to satisfy the divorce decree.
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11 February 2023 | 20 replies
It’s hard to satisfy both parties ..This is more reserved for much larger transactions it seems, commercial Multi-family ,where all parties are sophisticated buyers and seller and you can have the broker represent both sides..
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28 August 2023 | 1 reply
I just got out of chapter 13, Made all my payments in full to satisfy the courts.
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5 September 2023 | 27 replies
I'd sell my least favorite one, satisfy your 13% or whatever loan and regroup / retreat and reassess at your rally point.Or as Chesty would say- not retreating, just advancing in a different direction 😎
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20 September 2023 | 11 replies
You have several issues going on:1) If all unsecured creditors have been satisfied, you MAY be in a position to distribute the asset. 2) Court MAY allow distribution subject-to secured mortgage lender, per Federal Law (Garn-St.
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14 September 2023 | 3 replies
If you mean sell on a Wrap, that is closer to what you are describing.But either way, your name is no longer on title and you'd have to foreclose to get the property back if they stopped paying.On seller finance, the title stays in your name, the buyer has a contract with you, they make payments to you and when they satisfy the agreement, title transfers to them.You can do a Lease Option and protect yourself better.
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10 October 2023 | 9 replies
I never did a formal closing at the onset of the contract, however I will take title once the contract has been satisfied (I'd completed several contracts like that before.
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21 July 2021 | 14 replies
My CPA told me that in this case, only 1 year was fully satisfied.