If the house is legally yours, then you can go to or call your city hall and ask how to evict someone from your property. They should be able to walk you through the whole proccess. I would not waste my time with lawyers on this matter, because this is a free service that can be done by you going down to the court house. There may be city, county, court, or filing fees, but the are small compare to having a non-payer in your property.
In most states, if not all, the realtor is paid by the seller when the house is sold. The buyer pays closing costs on the home but the seller pays the realtor. Keep that in mind as you are shopping for a house. As you spend time with the realtor you begin to develope a bond but remember, since the seller pays the realtor, the realtor is actually working for the seller. Also, try not to look at more than 6 homes in one day and make notes about likes and dislikes on each home you visit. If you don't, you'll find yourself trying to remember one house from another later that night.
No. You should not show a property that is already under contract, unless the contract falls though. Then it is for sale again. http://www.allwholesaleproperties.com
Always. The service is free to you, as the seller pays the real estate commission. If you aren't real estate savvy you need someone in your corner to make sure you don't miss deadlines and have done your due diligence. Selling a house? I say no, you don't need an agent. But if you're buying, do yourself a favor and get an agent. Below is the original answer, not mine: You don't have to sometimes if you don't the seller can reduce the price of the house more readily because they don't have to pay that extra expense.
Well if you want a second name I would say Pauline Close, Carter, White house.
commission is a percentage of a amount given to a party. It happens mostly in real estate. This is how it works Lets say you want to sell your house for $500,000, and the agent finds a buyer. Then they set a commission percentage[ lets say 10% ]. 10/100*500000=50000 now the seller has to pay both price of house and commission meaning buyer gives $550,000
You are buying a house, you must have a closing attorney. Why wouldn't you ask him this question? He needs to draft a contract.
You go to "..." and click "edit town." Once you are in the town, click on the house you want to evict Sims from, and scroll over the three options. One of them is "evict Sims." choose the Sims you want to evict, and voila!
An escrow account is funds put aside for a future liability. Two common examples relating to a home: If you bought a house and there was a repair needed to be done and paid for by the seller, but the repair couldn't be completed before settlement, the seller might be required to set aside adequate funds in an escrow account, controlled by a third party. When the repair was completed, the third party would pay the bill from the escrow account and return any remaining funds to the seller. Also, some mortgage companies require the home owner to pay money into an escrow account every month to cover 1/12 of the cost of real estate taxes and homeowners insurance. Then the mortgage company issues payment for those items when they are due. This way, the mortgage company knows that those payments will be made, protecting their collateral.
Seu inquilino
Call a title company
Refin in 03/2009. did not know it was mac. Financial institute asked if I wanted to keep escrow, I said yes for now. I asked it I would be able to cancel later, the institute informme yes. Today, I wanted to close escrow account. Not possible. The Financial institute is JP Morgan Chase. I owe less that 50% of what I can sell my house for. Why do I have to have and escrow account now?
a seller
Are you trying to evict a family from a house? You click on the bulldozer icon at the top of the screen and then place the bulldozer over the house you want to evict from and click. It will ask if you want to evict the family, click yes and they are out of there! It then asks if you want to bulldoze the house if no then click no. Place the bulldozer back over the icon at the top of the screen and click. It will go away and you can do what you wanted to do with the house or family.
a seller
he is close to ur house (south-east) before 10:00pm
A lien is filed with the county clerk against a particular property at a particular address. The homeowner/s is/are free to make improvements to the house and continue to use the house and all its amenities; it's still his/her/their house. If the house at that address is ever sold, the title company conducts a search of liens against the house. Any outstanding liens are paid out of escrow. This gives the seller a smaller bottom line at close of sale. It also satisfies the lien, and the lienholder.
First of all, you cannot place an involuntary lien on the sellers house unless you have a court order (i.e. you filed a lawsuit and got a judgment). Laws vary by state and you should really talk to a local estate attorney. However, you probably signed an agreement that included escrow instruction. The escrow instructions probably have instructions on how terminate the escrow and retrieve you deposit or this topic might be covered in the sales agreement. Some contracts require mediation and/or arbitration. Legal action against the seller and the holder of the deposit money may be necessary, but I cannot emphasize enough the need to see a local attorney who knows the laws of your state.