25 April 2015 | 16 replies
Currently I work as an admissions counselor for an online school.
25 December 2016 | 20 replies
With that in hand and your own admissions it looks to me like the landlord has a pretty clear cut case.
25 July 2016 | 46 replies
LOL They don't have Frats but you could sell it to the college as an admissions building?
14 February 2016 | 53 replies
At any rate we've heard your point which by your own admission doesn't apply to the situation of the OP.
16 May 2023 | 23 replies
Now I'm wishing I went with a 5/1...Source: http://www.katehorrell.com/capital-gains-rules-for...There's a lot of replies with sound advice from everyone contributing to this post so I apologize for not responding to everyone directly as I would end up writing an essay!
11 June 2016 | 32 replies
Just a few comments, not an essay, LOLRestraining a property owner from obtaining equity, such as doing a first and not allowing a second behind them can be illegal, (State laws vary) and is predatory, even in commercial.
1 April 2015 | 4 replies
I'm not going to type an essay but I joined the site hoping to gain wisdom and guidance from others.
27 January 2015 | 11 replies
It’s not admissible under FNMA conforming guidelines.
15 June 2011 | 40 replies
Or if you had insurance but no LLC then the plaintiff could seize all your assets that were unprotected.The long and short of my essay is that you have to evaluate the level of risk you want to assume on your own and how much you want to offload to insurance.
15 January 2015 | 19 replies
By your own admission, this property isn't "that" distressed... which means it "is" distressed.