What country does his house looks like its from?

Posted on August 18th, 2011 by admin in realestate com | 5 Comments »

Its my house ;) what country you thinks its from Australia Canada, UK or US…. obviously some would know lol hahaha

http://www.realestate.com.au/property-house-qld-sovereign+islands-106782519

USA_-!-)~I’m still right-US,AUSTRALIA…

How long since US working class got their “garish mansion helicopter fly-by photos” fix…?

Posted on August 15th, 2011 by admin in realestate com | 2 Comments »

…in order to satiate vicarious lifestyle defined as “worshipping US richclass thieving slavers”? If it’s been a while, today’s the day:

http://realestate.yahoo.com/promo/us-neighborhoods-with-the-biggest-houses.html
@Right! Of course that complaint comes first.

Where’s the helicopter? Along with it, where’s my fix?

Those homes aren’t that great, trust me on this.

-it’s been awhile since I’ve seen a home that just says oooooh. I’m more interested in Panamanian retirement beach houses myself. Less upkeep, good views and cheap labor.

Paraguay and Argentina also have some nice real estate. I’d have to stay out of the metro area’s myself with condos going for 500k and up. Who wants to live in a 500 sq. ft apartment in a large city for 500k?
Not me.

LESS TAXES though. That’s what it’s about. Less taxes.

What color is on the walls of this house? Be specific if possible please.?

Posted on August 13th, 2011 by admin in realestate com | 2 Comments »

http://realestate.yahoo.com/Washington/Seattle/1217-39th-ave-e:a8ed8a628d5310a3e99fbc1b303589f1;_ylc=X3oDMTEzMmVzOHJkBF9TAzI3MTYxNDkEc2VjA2ZwLXB1bHNlBHNsawN5cmUtcGRw
I mean the walls inside of the house; living room, etc.

If you can afford that house I’d guess you could afford to repaint if you don’t really like the colors.
Happy house hunting.

Is a realestate contract binding or void if the lender does not sign the borrowers copys?

Posted on August 11th, 2011 by admin in realestate | 2 Comments »

I helped my daughter purchace her first home. After one year she was unable to continue making her mortgage payments. We tried to get a loan modification but was denied. I reviewed the contract and noticed that the lender did not sign any of the documents.

The contract of sale would be signed by buyer and seller- not by mortgage company. Even if some of the contract paperwork is not binding for some reason- the fact that your daughter signed the closing documents shows that she was OK with what had been agreed.

If you are talking about loan documents that she got at closing- she may have gotten copies that were not yet signed by mortgage company at closing. She could have gotten copies later that had signatures- or the signed ones may have been sent directly to county. It is possible someone made a bad mistake- but not very likely. You would have to hire a good local real estate lawyer to get a good idea.

Why do white people get mad when a black man buys a $300,000 house for $16.00?

Posted on August 9th, 2011 by admin in blog realestate | 7 Comments »

http://realestate.aol.com/blog/2011/07/18/man-snags-300-000-house-for-16/?icid=main|htmlws-main-n|dl10|sec1_lnk3|219259

Just look at the above website it explains everything!

thats a very very smart man

Texas Man Takes Advantage of Loophole That Allows Him To Live in $300K Home for $16 Bucks?

Posted on August 6th, 2011 by admin in blog realestate | 6 Comments »

The law in Texas is called "adverse possession". The owner of this particular home simply walked away and the mortgage company happened to go out of business.

This opened the door for this "Squatter" as the neighbors call him, to go to court and sign a form claiming ownership of the house that he payed for a mere $16.00

If the home owner wants him out then he has to pay off the massive mortgage debt and the bank would have to file a lawsuit. The "squatter" thinks that neither of which is likely gonig to happen so he is staying there for three years until he can ask the court for ownership.

This has the neighbors outraged that this guy is "living on easy street" and are looking for ways to get him out, but for now he says he ain’t going anywhere.

What do you think about this?

http://realestate.aol.com/blog/2011/07/18/man-snags-300-000-house-for-16/?icid=maing-grid7%7Cmain5%7Cdl3%7Csec1_lnk3%7C78504

The issue is whether the Robinson will have, at the end of three years, satisfied the Texas statutory requirements for Adverse Possession. Adverse possession is conceptually defined as possession for a statutorily prescribed period of time which, if certain elements are met, may ripen into legal title. These required elements are, continuous and uninterrupted possession that is open and notorious, actual (requiring literal entry onto the land) and hostile, that is contrary to the consent of the true owner. In Texas, the statutory period is 3 years if the possession is under color of title, and 5 years if the property is claimed under a duly registered deed.

In this situation, Robinson has asserted that the home, Blackacre, has been foreclosed upon. In addition to his open and notorious use of Blackacre, he has in fact publicized his use of Blackacre and his assertions of its abandonment by paying the filing fee to the county clerk, thus meeting the requirement of hostility. Finally, he has entered onto the land, and although the strictest reading of "continuous and uninterrupted possession" could be construed to mean that he cannot leave again, most courts would allow Robinson to leave the premises for ordinary business, as long as he does return at the end of the day.

Should Robinson remain unmolested on Blackacre given these conditions, his possession may ripen into legal title, and Robinson can be held to be the owner of Blackacre. It should be noted that although the fact pattern states that Robinson researched the law and acted, there is nothing in the fact pattern itself that states with certainty that the $16 clerk’s fee gave Robinson color of title and, as such, the prescribed period of adverse possession may be longer than the anticipated 3 years.

A further issue remains as to how Robinson’s neighbors might successfully defeat this attempt to possess Blackacre adversely. Lacking standing to bring a cause of action, the neighbors’ only remedy is to goad the owner of Blackacre to move against Robinson. To this end, the neighbors ought to publicize Robinson’s use of the property and remind the legal owner of his or her right to act.

First and foremost, the legal titleholder may oust Robinson as a trespasser, thus cutting the three-year clock and forcing him to start over. Because an action for ouster is costly, this may likely be a last resort. A potential remedy for the legal titleholder might be to grant Robinson permission to remain on the land for a prescribed period. Once permission is granted, the element of adversity to the owner’s true possession is broken, and Robinson’s three-year clock would be cut.

Why do white people get mad when a black man buys a $300,000 house for $16.00?

Posted on August 2nd, 2011 by admin in blog realestate | 7 Comments »

http://realestate.aol.com/blog/2011/07/18/man-snags-300-000-house-for-16/?icid=main%7Chtmlws-main-n%7Cdl10%7Csec1_lnk3%7C219259

The article and the 2 minute video above shows everything that guy did that was LEGAL, but the white folks are mad and trying to get him kicked out.

I was just reading that article!

Good on him! I’m so happy he was able to get the house and find the loop hole. His neighbors need to stop having a stick up their butts. He owns/has the house fair and square and they need to get over it.

I’m white btw.

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