Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Louisiana School for the Visually Impaired (LSVI) is a PK–12 state-operated school located at 2888 Brightside Lane in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, United States. [1] The school has both blind and other visually impaired students, and shares its campus with the Louisiana School for the Deaf .
Levi Jordan (1793–1873), a Georgia-born planter, traveled in 1848 to Brazoria County, Texas, bringing with him twelve enslaved Black people. [3] Previously, Jordan had owned adjoining plantations on the Louisiana-Arkansas border (Union County, Arkansas) with his son-in-law, James Campbell McNeill, [2] however he was not as successful as he wanted to be.
On Aug. 17, rules surrounding real estate commissions are set to change thanks to a legal settlement between the National Assn. of Realtors and home sellers. Proponents hope the new rules will ...
How to avoid paying Realtor fees. Selling your home without the help of a real estate agent — called “for sale by owner” or FSBO for short — is certainly possible. Between July 2022 and ...
Hire a discount agent: A low-commission real estate agent will likely charge much less than a traditional agent would — usually 1 to 1.5 percent of your home’s sale price. (However, you might ...
Once an instrument affecting the title to real estate has been recorded, the law holds that everyone is deemed to know of its existence, even if they have not searched the records in the recorder's office. This is the doctrine of "constructive notice" and it is nearly universal in the various states of the U.S. So, for example, after a deed or ...
Real estate commission rates used to typically total around 6 percent of a home's sale price, but in recent years, that amount has been closer to 5 percent. Due to a recent lawsuit, sellers will ...
The Mississippi State Sovereignty Commission was founded in 1956, and was the organizational template for the Louisiana State Sovereignty Commission, and the Alabama State Sovereignty Commission. [5] A former candidate for governor, Frank Voelker, Jr. had led the Louisiana group in 1962 to 1963.