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30 August 2012 | 2 replies
If you broker, well,, that's brokering and was a licensed activity even before the SAFE Act.Your scenario is standard private borrowing and Alan's basic system covers it and the forms/docs used.
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24 August 2012 | 0 replies
House is an estate sale and I am getting a pretty good buy on it as it is so not sure how much i want to rock the boat.I know it is fine if left undisturbed but it looks like the pipes have had leaks in the past and at somepoint If I need to repair or fix a leak in one of the pipes I will have to deal with the asbestos.what do you guys think on both fronts?
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28 August 2012 | 6 replies
I know these abatement companies charge a small fortunate to properly abate it so I Was wondering how you deal with these situations (if you have) I have a nice deal on a 2 fam. on the table it's an estate sale but it appears there is asbestos covering the steam mains in the basement.BEing it will be a rental along with the fact that these old steam pipes can and will leak over time so the asbestos issue will have to be addressed sooner or later.What are yoru thoughts on this?
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29 November 2012 | 36 replies
I'm looking at +45 days and no loan docs yet.
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24 September 2012 | 29 replies
He can open the Voice-to-text to record details and when he is done he hits a button and all of the data prints at our offices in the formats we want - spreadsheets, word docs, work orders for rehab crews and materials lists.
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31 August 2012 | 5 replies
Try to find lenders where the bank's junk fees (processing, underwriting, doc prep, and such crap) is $600 or less.
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1 September 2012 | 9 replies
In some places, uninhabitable is a better condition than condemned; condemned usually means that they are thinking about tearing it down, uninhabitable means something needs to be addressed (plumbing leak, roof leak, insect infestation, electric wiring problem, etc.).
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10 September 2012 | 5 replies
Jon as usual is correct, but if you are planning on assigning the contract, you need to make sure the seller understands this, and if the seller has an agent, which I'm assuming since they want to use TREC docs there is an agent..make sure the agent knows what you are doing.
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9 September 2012 | 3 replies
I am sure the HOA docs say they can do repairs in an emergency.
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8 September 2012 | 19 replies
As others have already mentioned, in a traditional short sale with a major lender, you will be required to sign docs that state you are receiving no benefit and you will be submitting hardship documentation.