
26 November 2013 | 16 replies
Not a battle you should be fighting.

7 December 2013 | 7 replies
This is for the hardcore veteran that is still willing to fight to make the numbers work.

21 August 2015 | 4 replies
Did they leave are you still fighting them?

1 March 2015 | 10 replies
If all you have is a W-2 and one rental property, there's probably no reason to get a tax preparer, but if you're like me and you managed to create a 75 page tax return from a week's work of fighting with TurboTax, then you've probably come to the point where you need to hire help.

20 November 2015 | 6 replies
They are a particularly awesome (in my opinion) because they are a company that has been actively fighting for financial equal rights for the GLBT community for awhile now.

18 May 2018 | 5 replies
. $600 is a decent chunk of change, definitely agree with you on that, but in the end I don't see this as a battle worth fighting.

1 May 2018 | 1 reply
If you are close enough possibly have #3 call you and go over when there is a issue.Many landlords would do nothing and let them fight it out till someone leaves.

10 February 2018 | 28 replies
10-20k for lawyer fees (licenses, contracts and such ) 50-100k for recovery reserves ( to fight to get your money back ) OR is this in the form of 15+% of the deal Either way that would reduce the initial capital available from 200k down to 130k on the high side to about 100 on the lower side.

8 December 2017 | 2 replies
-The estate has no money to fight this.So all the mold, copper and structural issues are actually not an issue for me since I was planning on gutting the place to put the salon in, however I have no intention on telling the selling agent this!

30 May 2018 | 2 replies
4 months is a long time to be fighting with someone who is dealing with a lot of long-term emotional stuff.