Ex stock prior to sale
"Ex stock subject to prior sale" refers to goods or inventory that are available for sale but may already have been offered to another buyer. This means that while the seller is willing to sell the items, there is a possibility that they may be sold to someone else before a final agreement is reached. It emphasizes that the stock is not reserved and can be sold at any time, highlighting the importance of acting quickly if interested.
You are not able to purchase a home prior to auction unless the auctioneer and/or auction company has provisions with the seller to permit such a sale.
An owners policy refers to a title insurance policy issued to the property owner not the lender. It provides protection to the owner of the property and is normally purchased at the time you settle on the purchase transaction. If the prior owner purchased an owners policy on the property prior to the new sale a discount called reissue rate may be applied if you can provide the prior policy information. The discount can be significant.
The proceeds from the sale of a property to a third party are generally not considered unearned income, as they represent the capital gained from an asset you owned. Unearned income typically refers to earnings not derived from active work, such as interest, dividends, or rental income. Instead, the sale proceeds are often classified as capital gains, subject to taxation based on the difference between the sale price and the property's original purchase price.
Price, age, prior use, availability of spares, cutter conditions and cost of changing/sharpening, power supply required, volume capability, size and mobility, cost of transferring if its a static unit, service history
Means it could get sold at anytime, even if you offer a bid for it it is subject to prior sale to another buyer/bidder that offers more.
No. Most financial institutions want to know what the market reflects for the subject value. A buyer and seller may have different motivations than the "market" and should a loan go bad the market is what must be the supporting factor. The subject sale must be analyzed in the content of the appraisal (per USPAP) just not used in the adjustment grid.
Only if the insured incident occured before the sale of the house (and the claim placed prior to sale). It is at the date of the claim not relevant to selling.
The Cash account will be credited.
"Ex stock subject to prior sale" refers to goods or inventory that are available for sale but may already have been offered to another buyer. This means that while the seller is willing to sell the items, there is a possibility that they may be sold to someone else before a final agreement is reached. It emphasizes that the stock is not reserved and can be sold at any time, highlighting the importance of acting quickly if interested.
Not on your nellie!
Leland Stanford Prior has written: 'Prior Brothers ranch, 1868-1928' -- subject- s -: History
Yes
Entirely depends on the contract. If nothing was mentioned in the contract regarding this, then it was the buyer's responsibility to have surveyed the home prior to the sale. If this had been done, then any repairs or a value deduction could have been done prior to the sale.
Merchandise each year in NASCAR normally comes out 2-3 months prior to the season starting so it is on sale.
consider what you already know about the subject. use prior knowledge about the subject.
The sale of a foreclosed property follows a process of collecting records of all monies due that are attached to the title. Once the foreclosure sale is complete, monies are paid out according to the priority of the claimants. If the sale does not fully pay all monies owed, the prior owners may be liable for the remaining debts.