Posted October 10th, 2010
by admin
gb298888 asked: If you have a written contract for a property/ real estate and the buyer(supposed buyer) breaks it by not paying, can I enforce that contract? And get the property back since he didnt pay for it? The written contract was done in the County Office in front of a notary and lawyer(buyer’s lawyer). Also i have found out that if a party(buyer) fails, without legal excuse to perfrom any part of a contract that it is called a breach of contract and can be voided is that true? the suppose buyer and his lawyer was the one who wrote up the contract and they are the ones who broke it. Can i reclaim back the property/real estate that he buyer well supppose buyer didnt pay for? He has the deed and wont return it, what can i do? That wont be right for someone to keep something that didnt pay for. Also I live in the state of NY what is the statue of limitations for this? I looked on this website and it said 6years is that true? Help Please.
Tags: Legal Excuse, Notary, Property Real Estate
Posted in Law & Ethics | 2 Comments »
Posted October 24th, 2009
by admin

lirpaneb asked: I asked this question in the renting & real estate section and didn’t get any really helpful answers so I’ll try here.
Basically my husband and I applied at an apartment in mid June for August 1st. The 1st week of July we finally got a letter saying we were rejected due to unsatisfactory credit history, unsatisfactory debt to income ratio and unsatisfactory or insufficient rental history. We were shocked because based on their rental criteria we should qualify with the possible exception of our credit (mostly due to student loans.) We were told if our credit wasn’t perfect we would still qualify, but with a larger deposit.
The basic rental criteria was must make 2.5-3 times rent (which we do), must not have any unlawful detainers, evictions or owe money to landlords (which we don’t have any of), and must have a history of satisfactory credit (which is very vague.)
After we got the letter I called the management company and asked for the specific reasons we were rejected.
The woman refused to give me any information. She said that I could write to them requesting the information and then they would mail it to us. She was very rude and wouldn’t even tell me their rental criteria until I argued that there was no reasonable reason she could have for not disclosing it.
My husband and I were of course forced to look for another apartment- and with so little time left a lot of the places we were interested in are now taken. All the places we’ve looked at since we got the rejection letter seem shocked by how the aforementioned property dealt with the situation. The place we applied to now doesn’t understand why we would have been rejected either.
Its our right in Minnesota to dispute the information that the property management based their decision on and they must investigate and reconsider us. How can we do that if they won’t tell us why they rejected us?
My question is- is there anything I can do?
In addition to the $80 application fee, we had to spent time and money looking for a different place to rent from. We wasted over 2 weeks waiting for them to run our application, when we called the property during those 2 weeks we were simply told that they hadn’t gotten around to running our information.
Tags: Rental History, Satisfactory Credit, Woman
Posted in Law & Ethics | 1 Comment »
Posted February 13th, 2009
by admin
I am a petroleum landman and some coworkers are having a dispute on some real estate law for a New Mexico Property.
If two parties come into title as Joint Tenants and one of those Joint Tenants executes a Warranty Deed on his own, is that deed valid?
My understanding of Joint Tenancy is that once the parties are in the joint tenancy it requires a signature from both parties so sell or convey even one tenants interest.
The argument on the other side is that each party has a right to sell and/or convey his own property. My problem with this argument is that each party does not own the property on his or her own right, they both own it together.
If anyone with New Mexico Real Estate Law experience can help me it would be greatly appreciated.
Also if you can post a Link to where you found the proof it would help me out to no end! Thanks
By: H85
About the Author:
Tags: Mexico Real Estate, New Mexico Real Estate, Proof
Posted in Law & Ethics | No Comments »
Posted February 11th, 2009
by admin
misskitty3 asked:
I own a piece of property that is burdened by an easement to a neighbor that owns adjacent land that would otherwise be landlocked. He has blocked my ability to use the easement to access my property with an electric gate. The gate was in place at the time that I took title and posession of my land, and a long time prior to that, this party knew I wanted the gate removed; the former landowner (my mother) deeded me the land burdened by the easement for two reasons: Firstly, she wishes to sell the front portion of the property, upon which she lives (my deeded portion is on the back half of the 10 acres), and I need to have access other than through her property when she sells. Secondly, she was tired of fighting with the person who owns this gate in an attempt to get them to remove said gate.This neighbor sent a letter to my attorney citing security concerns as being the reason for his noncompliance. How can I dispose of the gate as abandoned property?
Tags: Easement, Long Time, Noncompliance
Posted in Law & Ethics | No Comments »
Posted January 30th, 2009
by admin
Nick C asked:
was convicted, but recieved an early discharge fo behavior and first offense.
Tags: Early Discharge, Licen, Ny Real Estate
Posted in Law & Ethics | No Comments »
Posted January 17th, 2009
by admin
tstep_1868 asked:
Het gaat om Oklahoma Real Estate wet, en als ze niet op stel en ze doen, wat zijn de gevolgen?
Tags: Huis, Oklahoma Law, Overlijden
Posted in Law & Ethics | No Comments »
Posted January 14th, 2009
by admin
Claudia B asked:
Ik stel deze vraag wegens een vriend en zij probeert een agent te worden in Onroerende goederen In Noord-Carolina. Zal zij haar verslagen om het te doen moeten verzegelen.
Tags: Als, Asking This Question, Seal
Posted in Law & Ethics | 1 Comment »