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All Forum Posts by: Cornelius Garland

Cornelius Garland has started 10 posts and replied 353 times.

Post: How can I start wholesaling in Sacramento?

Cornelius GarlandPosted
  • Real Estate Consultant
  • Charlotte, NC
  • Posts 384
  • Votes 657

@Anthony Thomas Welcome to BP and congrats on getting your start in real estate investing. Wholesaling is great to get started in real estate; however, please realize that it does take money to get started. While you may not have to pay for the property, you need to pay for your marketing and systems. I highly suggest getting your license, especially since you're in such a competitive market. Any way that you can monetize your deals will help you gain momentum and turn a profit.

To get started wholesaling, I would definitely check out the  Ultimate Beginners Guide to Real Estate Investing. I read it several years ago when I first started and it cleared things up for me. Make sure you understand the basics before you dive in. It'll save you a lot of time and money. If you have perseverance, then you'll be able to make it. You just have to push through when things go south. Trust me, they're not going to go well immediately. The people that make it past this rough patch, in the beginning, are usually able to turn this into their full-time gig. I've seen multiple people, like you, come and go over the years. The question is: will you be one of them?

All the best.

Post: Need Investor Attorney ASAP

Cornelius GarlandPosted
  • Real Estate Consultant
  • Charlotte, NC
  • Posts 384
  • Votes 657

@Carlann Mckenna Really sorry to hear this. It's unfortunate when others have a scarcity mentality and end up cheating others out on their hard-earned money. I work with a few investors in the DMV area. I'll see if their attorney does work in your area and also see if he can handle this issue.

If they sold the property already, then it's too late to put a lien on it because it's owned by a new person. You can likely sue them for damages or put a lien against their current assets. Any paperwork you signed with your business partner would help you get compensated. The attorney of this deal messed up big time if he didn't have you sign. I've had multiple deals hanged up in escrow before because one or more members of an LLC couldn't (or wouldn't) sign the closing documents. The notary at closing, which should be the attorney, checks the licenses of both individuals at closing to ensure he's working with the correct individuals. This definitely sounds like legal malpractice, and you may also be able to sue the law firm that closed the deal for damages as well.

I believe there's a search feature on BP where you can search local attorneys. Anybody that's registered on here should be legit and investor-friendly. Hoping that this situation turns out in your favor.

Disclaimer: I'm not an attorney, and please don't take this as legal advice. I'm just an investor that has had experience with similar situations.

Post: finding the owner of abandoned property

Cornelius GarlandPosted
  • Real Estate Consultant
  • Charlotte, NC
  • Posts 384
  • Votes 657

@Jacob D Adamczak Dude that's awesome. There are a lot of duplexes you can house hack in Ladson. There are some in North Charleston, but Ladson is a nicer area and the prices are just as affordable. There are a few deals that come across auction.com. However, a lot of eyes are on these so the prices get pushed up quickly. Let me know if you have any questions. I know the area well and if I can't answer a question for you, I know someone that can. Best of luck!

Post: Direct mail marketing

Cornelius GarlandPosted
  • Real Estate Consultant
  • Charlotte, NC
  • Posts 384
  • Votes 657

@Rob Badhorn Follow-up is so important, but it's not "flashy", "cool", or "hip" to talk about. Most people just want to chase low-hanging fruit all day and find that ever-elusive motivated seller. That's a good way not to have a business in the long term. My whole business changed once we started focusing on the follow-up. It's crazy because it doesn't seem like it works because we often think "well if someone told me no once why would they change their mind when I call a second, third, or fourth time." It just works. Can't explain the underlying psychological reasons why it works, but it does! I agree with you on the ringless voicemails. I sometimes throw this into my follow-up sequences in case I can't reach the seller after multiple attempts.

Post: Opportunity to buy neighbor's house, no cash, a lot of private $.

Cornelius GarlandPosted
  • Real Estate Consultant
  • Charlotte, NC
  • Posts 384
  • Votes 657

@Clark Nowlin That's great that your neighbor is giving you the opportunity to purchase the property first. What I would do in this situation is see if the owner will sell it to you on a land contract. The seller will essentially finance a portion of the property. It'll be awesome if he'll finance the whole $475k, but that's unlikely. See if he'll take a small down payment and take payments for his equity (assuming there's no mortgage). This way you don't need to involve other partners.

Separately, I would only partner with other investors on a multifamily unit or a package of single-family houses. Keep us posted on how this goes.

Post: REI for JV - Fort Lauderdale

Cornelius GarlandPosted
  • Real Estate Consultant
  • Charlotte, NC
  • Posts 384
  • Votes 657

Hey @Account Closed . I invest in Fort Lauderdale virtually from Charleston, SC. I moved a deal this summer in Dania Beach through another wholesaler. I found him by typing in Google "we buy houses Fort Lauderdale" or something to that effect. He was on the first page. His name was John, and I can dig up his information and shoot it to you. He saved me on that deal because I had no buyers for that property, and my contract close date was approaching. Do you have a deal already? Or are you looking to build up your network before you start marketing to sellers?

Post: finding the owner of abandoned property

Cornelius GarlandPosted
  • Real Estate Consultant
  • Charlotte, NC
  • Posts 384
  • Votes 657

@Jacob D Adamczak Glad to help out. I seriously went down this rabbit hole for about a year before I finally figured out the real reason why some properties downtown still haven't been renovated. I like Goose Creek (29445) and Ladson (29456). Ladson has seen tremendous growth over the last three years. I started back in 2015 and largely overlooked the area then. I think the lack of dirt to build houses in Summerville is causing there to be a scarcity in inventory. A lot of parents want to put their kids in Dorchester District 2 schools, and Ladson is on the fringe of being DD2 and Berkeley County. If you're looking for buy and holds, then North Charleston isn't necessarily a bad spot. You can pick up a 60k property in decent condition and rent it for about $800-$900. Not a bad ROI, but the area overall, outside of Park Circle, hasn't seen the same improvements as other areas in Charleston.

I grew up in Summerville and there are a few neighborhoods that have investment activity. However, there are a lot of neighborhoods built post-2000. So it's going to be another few years until there is a surplus of "blue-color" homes that investors can buy and rehab, due to them having deferred maintenance. Hope this helps!

Post: Can’t find absentee,preforclosure, and code list in baltimore

Cornelius GarlandPosted
  • Real Estate Consultant
  • Charlotte, NC
  • Posts 384
  • Votes 657

@Luis Rivera Are you able to contact your county where you got the list from and request it in Excel format? The same thing happens to me as well. If they're unwilling to do this, then I would file a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request with the county to request it in Excel format. You may need to pay them for this if it's not readily available. You can typically get code violations lists and tax delinquent lists from your county. There are a lot of sites that sell preforeclosure and absentee lists because those aren't necessarily county-specific.

If you still can't get it, then I would go on Upwork and find a virtual assistant to put the data in Excel format. You can find one for about $3.50 that can knock out around 1k records in a day or two. It's a very manual process, but the more steps you have to take means that your competitors likely aren't doing the same. It's worth it; trust me.

Post: Direct mail marketing

Cornelius GarlandPosted
  • Real Estate Consultant
  • Charlotte, NC
  • Posts 384
  • Votes 657

@Jeremiah Alston The first direct mail campaign that I did was with yellowletters.com. I landed my first deal by sending those out. It was a small $3k check but I spent about $1k on the yellow letters. That was enough to get me hooked on real estate, and I haven't looked back since. I would save up for a direct mail campaign, but make sure your list is targeted, though. I over analyzed my list to make sure I was sending it to the most-motivated prospects. I only had a few thousand dollars to start investing with so I needed to make sure I did it right the first time.

Post: finding the owner of abandoned property

Cornelius GarlandPosted
  • Real Estate Consultant
  • Charlotte, NC
  • Posts 384
  • Votes 657

@Forrest Shealy I see you're in Charleston. Honestly, if you're looking in 29403 or 29401, then all of those abandoned properties are tied up in probate or have some title issues going on with them. The only other area in Charleston with abandoned houses would be North Charleston. If you're looking in The Neck (Chicora or Union Heights), then those most likely have some title issues as well. Most of the abandoned houses that were able to be bought have been purchased and flipped by investors in the last 5 years. I was lucky enough to find one downtown when I first started several years back, but since then things have changed. I don't even market to downtown properties because there aren't any deals left.

However, if you have found a property you want to find the owner of then I would check out our  tax assessor's site and look up the owner. Then go to Family Tree Now to search for their current phone number. They even have phone numbers there. It's free so I'm unsure how accurate those numbers are. Let me know if you have any questions. Charleston is a great market and it's home for me!