
31 May 2019 | 2 replies
Are there any laws preventing me from using that money to purchase a rental?

7 August 2019 | 9 replies
(Not that it doesn't happen still)Ohio: Ohio Law FirmFlorida: Florida Law FirmSome people make the argument that you're not brokering without a license because you hold an equitable interest in the title.

2 June 2019 | 3 replies
Every state or county is going to have different laws on this.

3 June 2019 | 6 replies
Lot of what ifs that vary from traditional landlord-tenant law

1 June 2019 | 4 replies
I would put the Property Owner, unless you have a different agreement with the Property Manager and state laws allow it.

1 June 2019 | 14 replies
Check this out: State Clan Lab Decontamination LawsTwenty-five states have enacted clandestine drug lab assessment or clandestine drug lab decontamination laws, or both.
2 June 2019 | 9 replies
However your plan (401k, Ira, Hsa, etc) can also be brought into a law suit with an asset such as house that has some liability but insurance should limit a lot of exposure.

14 June 2019 | 7 replies
.- Increasing Demand Across Age Cohorts: Boomers downsizing coupled with a growing number of Americans who can no longer afford to rent or own traditional housing continues to drive demand for MHC - see chart below.- Limited Supply: Only 10 new MHC sites have been approved in the U.S. over the last two decades - see chart below.- Downcycle Outperformance: MHC is the least sensitive property type to negative changes in GDP - the average stay in in MHC is 13 years, unheard of in residential real estate - resulting in stable predicatble cash flow with an ability to consistently, yet responsible increase rents.Lastly, a quick glance at some MHC investors and proponents:Warren Buffett is a significant investor in the MHC space, favoring the sector for its stable, predictable cash flow.

9 August 2019 | 5 replies
This draft is just that, a draft, I'm not too worried about it, and if it goes into law, there are always work arounds.

3 August 2018 | 6 replies
in all states in the US the way wholesaling IE assigning contracts is taught its simply a violation of the licensure laws.. what happens Is some states could care less so the guru's sell courses to these folks convince them that equitable interest works.. but its up to each state to determine if they want to enforce their licensure laws.Oregon is one that is starting to go after folks that market properties they don't own.. same with Ohio and FLA and some others..NB being a very small market has not really been talked about on BP.. but your correct the bottom line Is folks need to talk to the regulators not an attorney.. attorneys in these instance are paid to argue..