Friday, December 11th, 2009

Tax Attorney Help

Do you remember when everyone read the classified ads? You could buy or sell anything (legal) by placing an ad in the newspaper or the item-specific ad weeklies; of course you still can, but an even better option for most consumers and marketers these days is the online seek/find route.

Someone out there is looking for a new home but dreads the process of driving to, walking through, and weighing options while a sales agent breathes down the back of their shirt. The buyer prefers to be their own “finder” but may retain a realtor as the transaction agent, the one who handles the paperwork after finding a new home. Wouldn’t we all like to omit the middleman (or woman) as often as possible, or rather omit their fee? A prospective buyer goes online and looks for a home for sale by owner. That buyer may be in your hometown or on the opposite side of Earth.

Used- car salesman. That’s a term that evokes unpleasant images of a coarse loudmouth in a gaudy plaid sports coat, hawking lemons of various vintage. Our apologies to those professional auto salespersons out there; we know that many of you suffer daily because of that stereotype. A lot of us, male and female, enjoy a review of the auto classifieds; I personally always home in on the ones that indicate a car for sale by owner. Hoards of would-be car buyers search the online ads daily and nightly.

In the piney woods of a northern state where summer is a delight and winter is an endurance test, someone is looking for a change. Butterflies make them smile and snowdrifts send them into depression. Just for such a person is an ad that states “Time Share for Sale by Owner.” Equally anxious to escape the heat of the Deep South is someone who would love to partner with them on a home away from home, a man or woman who yearns to hop onto a snowmobile or strap on skis and cool off. Talk about making everyone happy…

His riding lawnmower blew its engine; the last time he tried to clean out the rain gutters on the eaves, he fell off the ladder, and when he was up there he also noted several loose singles. The fifteen-year guarantee on the roof is about to expire. Arthritis is gaining on him, making home and yard maintenance a real painliterally. But I want a nice home of my own, he thinks. I don’t want to waste money pouring it down a rented rat hole. He is in the market for a condo; catch his interest and perhaps make a sale by listing your condo for sale by owner. His son works for a large sporting goods store in an affluent section of the city. Just as Dad is ready to move into a new home, his son is ready to move on and rid himself of the unreasonable dictator who is his boss, whose managerial style is causing so much stress that the son’s health is negatively affected. He is ready to become the boss and run his own business. He goes online to search for a business for sale by owner.

The Internet was the prime tool for all of the buyers and sellers in the above scenarios. It can be yours, too.

Simon Rand
http://www.articlesbase.com/law-articles/tax-attorney-help-64098.html

3 Responses to “Tax Attorney Help”

Brian A Says:

Attorney Help?
I’m purchasing a home with my gf, we are not married yet but an engagement is soon to follow. The home will be in her name for now however we are splitting all costs of the home, downpayment, appliances, etc. To watch my back I want to have a legal document drawn up that states in the event we split apart I will get my portion of what I invested into her home back.

Has anybody ever done this, if so can you tell me what attorney you used to do this and how you go about getting this document. Also how much it costs?

Thanks

jpr302001 Says:

If you are paying for half the home, then your name should be on it. There’s no way around that. It’s the only real way to protect yourself. The other way is to let the property be in her name and you pay her a flat amount per month and call it rent, but then you have no rights to the property.

You can get a lawyer to document your oral agreement, but it will be difficult to enforce if your name is not on the loan or deed.

If your credit is the problem, you can be on the deed without being on the loan…then the legal document can outline that you are paying half the loan, etc.
References :

menasha_rabinowitz Says:

Yes. It is called a pre nuptial agreement by any other name. If she is reluctant to do so, run for the hills.
References :

Leave a Reply