Yes. You can leave your property to a beneficiary. However, the beneficiary must pay off the mortgage or the lender will take possession of the property by foreclosure. When you grant a mortgage you are granting the lender an interest in your property. Your beneficiary would take the property subject to the bank's interest.
Not unless they paid some rent to the landlord.
IF ONE OWNS A HOME & HAS A LIEN PLACED AGAINST THEM IT WOULD ATTACH TO ONE'S HOME & WHEN SOLD, THE LIEN MUST BE PAID OUT OF THE PROCEEDS.
In the US nursing home care is usually paid for privately by the individual. If someone has good insurance then this might pay for some level of care but anything else must be paid for separately.
Yes, so long as you are billing someone for work done at home. A good example is telecommuting jobs where people are paid to work at the comforts of their own home.
i think police put hidden cam in my home is it illegal
who paid for a military man to come home
where might you find someone who gets paid in that manner?
An attendance allowance is a sum of money paid to cover the expense of someone working somewhere else, for example, away from home.
It means that you owe someone money, they have obtained a judgment against you and you will not be able to sell or refinance your property until the lien is paid and a discharge is recorded.
A reverse mortgage works by allowing someone to borrow against their home equity. The money does have to be paid back, though
A person paid to lie will hesitate in starting. They cannot answer you as fluently as a true person.
if you mean the street meaning then its someone who gets paid to to rough someone up no a goon is someone who is paid to kill someone who is a gangster a hood nig if you kno wat i mean