
30 March 2016 | 53 replies
I can generally take your final paystub from Dec 2015, final paystub from Dec 2014, add your bonus income up, divide by 24, and get an exception that allows me to take a 2 year average of bonus/ot/commission income even though you've maybe only been on the job 20 or 18 months, provided we can prove in writing that you're still (as in, present tense not future tense) getting bonus income equal to or greater than what you got in the past even though you're job title changed.If those two issues are your only issues, you need to start over again with your agent's preferred local non-big-bank-retard lender that works for a company with "lending" or "funding" or "mortgage" in the company name, that only does mortgages.

5 April 2016 | 3 replies
Let's say the tenant lived at the unit for a year.Price of flooring $2,500Expected life: 10 yrs$2,500 divided by 10 yrs = $250 per year In this scenario, the flooring has 8 yrs of life left so you can charge the tenant $2,000 for the damage.

7 October 2015 | 8 replies
Further, the gain is divided into two parts.

1 December 2017 | 3 replies
It's in these type of 3rd party ownership solar programs where, while there is still a cost savings benefit to the buyer, appraisal value is arguable and divided among appraisers.

6 December 2017 | 4 replies
They figure out the replacement cost of the roof then divide it into the actual cash value based on the age of the existing roof and the remainder of the replacement cost.

6 July 2015 | 7 replies
A generation later the two properties were divided and sold to separate non-farm families as the farm land became a residential subdivision....
20 July 2015 | 5 replies
Ultimately I would say that your decision should take into account whether that $100 in cash flow at the fixed rate is likely to outweigh the interest you will pay over the course of the loan, divided by the number of years you have the loan, divided by 12 so you can get a direct comparison of that increased cash flow vs the interest accrued monthly over the term of the loan.

20 December 2015 | 1 reply
You can just evenly divide over the properties.Hope this helps, good luck

22 December 2014 | 18 replies
He's what I've thought up today:1 - cardboard permit that entitles tenant to preferred parking.2 - cardboard discount card that works at local businesses3 - cardboard storage locker for laundry room4 - cardboard markers to defines gardening space 5 - cardboard room partitions that divides space or creates a reading nook

9 August 2018 | 40 replies
If the extermination company balks and says they don't do visits every two months, keep the monthly visits but divide them among the two locations.