16 June 2020 | 9 replies
The admission of guilt was verbal in a telephone call.
4 July 2020 | 17 replies
Out of 5 times total, it cost me a grand sum of about $1000, and that was on one where I settled the case for $500 after paying my attorney about the same, with no admission of wrongdoing (because I didn't do anything wrong) but preferable to paying my attorney another $5k or so to prepare for trial.
23 April 2021 | 28 replies
I only read first two sentences of your endless essay.
5 July 2020 | 6 replies
By your own admission, You have canceled the contract, there is no longer a valid purchase agreement so filing any memorandum/cloud on your part would be a Fraudulent filing.
14 July 2020 | 5 replies
(c) financing [if you would like a connection to a mortgage broker that specializes in flips, message me], (d) a plan for the property once you buy it [I tell all young investors to take at least a full week, measuring and conceptualizing what they want to do; flipping houses is like writing a long essay, the more you prepare the better the final product] and (e) a plan for selling itI hope this helps!!!
14 July 2020 | 5 replies
I’m not sure if the work you’ve done to help them has any impact on an “admission of guilt”, and I’m not sure how the as-is sale translates to Canadian laws.
12 January 2021 | 27 replies
"I can't control my husband or my kids and they don't like me but I can control your property for this moment in my life" was worth the price of admission.
11 August 2020 | 6 replies
You're responsible for arranging for some of the most important financial decisions most people make and need to understand that.2) By your own admission, you don't know what you want to do or if you want to do it with any dedication, like full-time.
21 August 2020 | 4 replies
If you have an admission of negligence and acceptance of liability in writing, may be worth it so just see what the other unit owner's carrier will give you.