. Generally, no. A co-signer on a loan does not have to reside at the same residence as the primary borrower. Once the co-signer signs for the primary borrower; he or she is as liable as the primary borrower. It should be noted that some lenders may have their own requirement that the co-signer live at the same address as the primary borrower.
No. "HO3" is for owner occupied dwellings. "HO6" is an owner occupied, condo unit owner's policy. HO3 is for the house itself (dwelling), personal property, liability, and loss of use. HO6 is for personal property, "walls-in" coverage (usually called additions & alterations), liability, and loss of use
What tax rate will apply on gain on a non-primary residence owned by an American if that property is located in B.C. and has been held for seven-plus years by the same owner?
A cubic meter is about the same as the space occupied by a washing machine.
Yes, it does not matter who you pay the interest to as long as it is secured by a loan on your primary residence or secondary residence. If your lender does not provide a 1099 at the end of the year, you will have to calculate your interest on your own.
Absolutely not. The upper 50 states all run off of the same system. If your license is suspended in the state of your primary residence, you cannot get a drivers license in any other state until your status in your primary state changes. This even applies if you change your state of residence.
No. No. A co-signer on a loan does not have to reside at the same residence as the primary borrower. Once the co-signer signs for the primary borrower; he or she is as liable as the primary borrower. As far as where the co-signer resides is up to the company providing the loan proceeds. Example: parent co-signing for a collge loan for their child who lives or attends school in another state.
yes there is difference in names but both r same
A private residence is a dwelling place occupied for an extended period of time by the same persons, if, (a) the residents have a reasonable expectation of privacy; (b) food preparation, personal hygiene, and sleeping accommodations are not communal in nature; and (c) any use of the dwelling place by a resident for a home occupation, trade, business, profession or craft is secondary to the use of the dwelling place as a residence and does not use more than 25 per cent of the indoor floor area.
in general yes but you wouldn't be receiving the same type of policy if the owner is not living there (example you wouldn't need personal property coverage since your property would be at your primary residence).
Sure, they can get married.
A group of organisms of the same species living in the same area.