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We can only practice within North Carolina and can not provide answers for out of state... Read Answer
I'm not an Ohio attorney, but you need to complete the work, and if it costs enough to justify it, sue the owner of the property for contribution.... Read Answer
Those are part of the closing costs. They are negotiated regularly. Often times the buyer pays these costs unless otherwise agreed upon.
It depends on the terms of the contract and additional details about the situation. I suggest sitting down with a landlord-tenant attorney in... Read Answer
In short, probably not. You were not in privity of contract with the lawn service. That being said, if the company performed work on your... Read Answer
In short, you need to get an attorney involved. You are arguing for a constructive eviction in essence. An attorney can walk you through... Read Answer
They probably want to change many of the provisions of the lease. Essentially, it sounds like they will be terminating the old month to month... Read Answer
I'm sorry to give you the lawyer answer, but it depends. There may be capital gains tax depending on when she got the property and if it was... Read Answer
It appears as though this is not intended as a legal question, but soliciting legal counsel. The Find a Lawyer tab is where you should... Read Answer
From the facts provided it does not sound like you should be responsible. The contract for sale of the house and contract with the propane... Read Answer
It may depend on the terms of the sale. Many real estate transactions are completed with the property "as-is." That would mean the buyer... Read Answer
Title is not transferred until all payments are made. While you are right that there needs to be a foreclosure proceeding rather than an eviction if... Read Answer
It's going to depend whether 1) you had an "as is" clause in your contract, 2) whether you had a home inspection as part of your purchase agreement... Read Answer
Whose house is it? If it is the grandfather's house the the aunts have no power whatsoever, it's all on grandpa do decide who lives in the house.
It is usually the landlord's responsibility to repair the air conditioning. Check the terms of your lease on this. You do not have the ability to... Read Answer
Further to my previous response, I meant: "son in law", not "son and law". Apologies for the misspelling.
Best,
Steve
I'm a little confused by the question. This was a property that you won? As in a game show? Do you mean that you purchased the property at auction?... Read Answer
Potentially. If you had a home inspection and moisture or mold was noted then you probably don't have any way to force the seller to do anything. If... Read Answer
Under these facts, you should be entitled to at least your earnest money back due to the impossibility of complying with the timeline due to a... Read Answer
Typically a creditor can't "claw back" spent funds and is limited to collecting whatever the debtor has once they've successfully sued them. The only... Read Answer
Unlikely. Because you broke up and then got back together again (as opposed to just breaking up and then later getting around to a divorce) the court... Read Answer
This is a very unusual situation. You have a discharged note that is giving you no credit for making payments on it but have been doing that for ten... Read Answer
You can call any title company to do that. The title search (or preliminary judicial report) will likely run you $300-$500. The policy to insure the... Read Answer
You should find a real estate attorney to assist with drafting a purchase agreement.
Depending on the extent of the involvement of the attorney, this is something that should cost no more than $400 to draft the quitclaim... Read Answer