
29 September 2014 | 13 replies
Either your home inspector was a complete moron or your new management company is taking a slightly leaking or weak foundation wall and trying to make a major paycheck on it.

26 July 2014 | 2 replies
Before you did that I would get the buyers personal financial statement, net worth, liquidity, other properties they own, track record, etc. to know odds of the bank approving them.If the buyer is weak and only has the 30k down and no development track record the likelihood the bank would agree to an assumption is low.

31 July 2014 | 17 replies
Unfortunately, the determination was made that the case for a bona fide contract was weak without the consideration, so no further action was taken.My advice, though: consult a contract law or tenancy law attorney.

9 May 2014 | 3 replies
And if your financial situation is really weak it might hurt more than it helps.

4 June 2014 | 131 replies
Its nothing more than preying on the weak.

11 December 2014 | 37 replies
If you have a system in place I'd love to hear about it.My weakness is engineering a marketing system.

21 May 2014 | 4 replies
Starting out, I think it's really important to really know who you are - know your strengths and weaknesses.
9 June 2014 | 7 replies
Fastest way to get to know the strong and weak points of the construction aspect of these things..

23 May 2015 | 32 replies
So, to complain about losing 9 bandit signs is a little weak.

30 May 2014 | 0 replies
We went through a balance sheet contraction recession where weak borrowers were (and continue to be) separated from their assets.