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Valuation Bureau. Bureau of Fraud Deterrence. Office of Captive Insurance. Office for e-HIT. Office of Property and Casualty. Office of Solvency Regulation. New Jersey Real Estate Commission. Bureau of Subdivided Land Sales Control. Office of Public Affairs.
Real estate license. A real estate license is an authorization issued by a government body to give agents and brokers the legal authority to represent a home seller or buyer in a real estate transaction. Real estate agents and real estate brokers are required to be licensed when conducting real estate transactions in the United States and many ...
New Jersey sellers and landlords are now required to explicitly disclose the flood dangers a property might have to prospective buyers and tenants.
weichert .com. Weichert, Realtors is a residential and commercial real estate franchisor founded in Chatham, New Jersey in 1969. Since 1989, the company has been headquartered in Morris Plains, New Jersey. It is a family-owned and operated business led by co-presidents, founder Jim Weichert and James Weichert, Jr, his son. [1]
Commercial real estate (4 C, 33 P) Condominiums (5 C) Conservation communities (3 P) Construction (42 C, 155 P) Country estates (2 C, 6 P) Crown land (2 C, 6 P)
Life estate: An estate lasting for the natural life of the grantee, called a "life tenant". If a life estate can be sold, a sale does not change its duration, which is limited by the natural life of the original grantee. A life estate per autre vie is held by one person for the natural life of another person.
The Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate network is composed of independently owned and operated franchises. The network includes several large companies. The network has grown substantially since its reintroduction in 2008 and expanded into Canada in 2011. [8] Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate's corporate offices are based in Madison, New ...
Jordan Arterburn (1808–1875) and Tarlton Arterburn (1810–1883) were brothers and interstate slave traders of the 19th-century United States. They typically bought enslaved people in their home state of Kentucky in the upper south, and then moved them to Mississippi in the lower south, where there was a constant demand for enslaved laborers on the plantations of King Cotton.