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The service is your electrical distribution service. It is what the power authority connects to in your house to service you with electrical power.
260 volts
it supplies electricity all over the house, including the electrical appliances.
You will have to run wires from your electric box in your house, I would suggest barring these wires.
The summer house will be connected to the house system as a sub panel. Check the code rules on sub panels to make the installation conform to the electrical code.
No, homeowner's insurance only overs damages on the house.
To file a lien on homeowner association you have to file at the court house.
Yes
A foreclosure occurs when a homeowner defaults on their mortgage payments, and the bank sells the house in order to get it money. The homeowner has the right to redeem the house before the sale, in most states.
A reverse mortgage is defined as a type of mortgage in which the homeowner is allowed to borrow money against their house's value. The repayment is not required until the home is sold or the homeowner dies. The house is basically collateral, and has to be sold to pay the mortgage when the homeowner dies.
A homeowner can receive tax credit claims by selling a house in order to recover back rent. When the house sells, the only thing that must be repaid is the amount of gain on the sell.
If there was something wrong with your house that caused an injury to someone in your house, then it may.
At the discretion of the lender, a house can be foreclosed after a period of missing payments.
The bank that the mortgage Is through
If a homeowner's association notices a problem with a vacationing resident's house, and seeks to fix it during the resident's vacation, do they have liability?
No, Not to the homeowner, because the bank or morgtage company actually owns the house even if it was not in forclosure. Read your morgtage and insurance paperwork, you do not own it at all until it is paid in full.
Very doubtful, especially if this is a result of normal house settling over time. Most policies specifically excludes damage to walls, ceilings, foundations etc from damage due to settlement.