Home › Forums › Closed Forums › Properties or Areas › 12335 Spy Glass Terrace, Poway
- This topic has 55 replies, 8 voices, and was last updated 15 years, 11 months ago by sdrealtor.
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June 30, 2008 at 5:44 PM #231624July 19, 2008 at 12:53 PM #242821AnonymousGuest
My office just listed this home – it is a short sale and will be subject to the lender(s) approving the sale, and for the record, there has never been anything “shady” going on with me or my office –
July 19, 2008 at 12:53 PM #242962AnonymousGuestMy office just listed this home – it is a short sale and will be subject to the lender(s) approving the sale, and for the record, there has never been anything “shady” going on with me or my office –
July 19, 2008 at 12:53 PM #242972AnonymousGuestMy office just listed this home – it is a short sale and will be subject to the lender(s) approving the sale, and for the record, there has never been anything “shady” going on with me or my office –
July 19, 2008 at 12:53 PM #243026AnonymousGuestMy office just listed this home – it is a short sale and will be subject to the lender(s) approving the sale, and for the record, there has never been anything “shady” going on with me or my office –
July 19, 2008 at 12:53 PM #243036AnonymousGuestMy office just listed this home – it is a short sale and will be subject to the lender(s) approving the sale, and for the record, there has never been anything “shady” going on with me or my office –
July 19, 2008 at 4:31 PM #243116CVFanGirlParticipantoh Snap!
For some, any view is better than none at all. Maybe they liked the open airy feeling being of being situated high up.
You could buy a condo in UTC with a view of some college students I suppose. Or a Portico in CV overlooking your neighbors bicycle storage, um I mean patio.
July 19, 2008 at 4:31 PM #243126CVFanGirlParticipantoh Snap!
For some, any view is better than none at all. Maybe they liked the open airy feeling being of being situated high up.
You could buy a condo in UTC with a view of some college students I suppose. Or a Portico in CV overlooking your neighbors bicycle storage, um I mean patio.
July 19, 2008 at 4:31 PM #243060CVFanGirlParticipantoh Snap!
For some, any view is better than none at all. Maybe they liked the open airy feeling being of being situated high up.
You could buy a condo in UTC with a view of some college students I suppose. Or a Portico in CV overlooking your neighbors bicycle storage, um I mean patio.
July 19, 2008 at 4:31 PM #243053CVFanGirlParticipantoh Snap!
For some, any view is better than none at all. Maybe they liked the open airy feeling being of being situated high up.
You could buy a condo in UTC with a view of some college students I suppose. Or a Portico in CV overlooking your neighbors bicycle storage, um I mean patio.
July 19, 2008 at 4:31 PM #242909CVFanGirlParticipantoh Snap!
For some, any view is better than none at all. Maybe they liked the open airy feeling being of being situated high up.
You could buy a condo in UTC with a view of some college students I suppose. Or a Portico in CV overlooking your neighbors bicycle storage, um I mean patio.
August 6, 2008 at 12:51 AM #253219AnonymousGuestBeware of short sales! If you are not failiar with the way they work, they list at a rock bottom price that they never intend to sell the home for. The purpose is to stimulate multiple offers (this seems unethical to me) and then they raise the asking price.
I had a full price offer in on my dream home back in December of last year (short sale). It was an another Battiata listing. My offer was excepted and I scheduled a roofer to check an issue and was told when I arrived, there were other offers higher than mine. An accepted offer is not exactly an accepted offer, so don’t get emotionally invoved. To this date, this property is still vacant. So, in the mean time, there has not been a payment made on this property in at least 12 months, I’d imagine the payments were about 8k plus, a month. I would have been a happy home owner had they not started playing these games and the bank wouldn’t be sitting on this vacant piece of property. Who’s running these bank owned properties anyway?? Doesn’t make sense to me.
August 6, 2008 at 12:51 AM #253382AnonymousGuestBeware of short sales! If you are not failiar with the way they work, they list at a rock bottom price that they never intend to sell the home for. The purpose is to stimulate multiple offers (this seems unethical to me) and then they raise the asking price.
I had a full price offer in on my dream home back in December of last year (short sale). It was an another Battiata listing. My offer was excepted and I scheduled a roofer to check an issue and was told when I arrived, there were other offers higher than mine. An accepted offer is not exactly an accepted offer, so don’t get emotionally invoved. To this date, this property is still vacant. So, in the mean time, there has not been a payment made on this property in at least 12 months, I’d imagine the payments were about 8k plus, a month. I would have been a happy home owner had they not started playing these games and the bank wouldn’t be sitting on this vacant piece of property. Who’s running these bank owned properties anyway?? Doesn’t make sense to me.
August 6, 2008 at 12:51 AM #253391AnonymousGuestBeware of short sales! If you are not failiar with the way they work, they list at a rock bottom price that they never intend to sell the home for. The purpose is to stimulate multiple offers (this seems unethical to me) and then they raise the asking price.
I had a full price offer in on my dream home back in December of last year (short sale). It was an another Battiata listing. My offer was excepted and I scheduled a roofer to check an issue and was told when I arrived, there were other offers higher than mine. An accepted offer is not exactly an accepted offer, so don’t get emotionally invoved. To this date, this property is still vacant. So, in the mean time, there has not been a payment made on this property in at least 12 months, I’d imagine the payments were about 8k plus, a month. I would have been a happy home owner had they not started playing these games and the bank wouldn’t be sitting on this vacant piece of property. Who’s running these bank owned properties anyway?? Doesn’t make sense to me.
August 6, 2008 at 12:51 AM #253450AnonymousGuestBeware of short sales! If you are not failiar with the way they work, they list at a rock bottom price that they never intend to sell the home for. The purpose is to stimulate multiple offers (this seems unethical to me) and then they raise the asking price.
I had a full price offer in on my dream home back in December of last year (short sale). It was an another Battiata listing. My offer was excepted and I scheduled a roofer to check an issue and was told when I arrived, there were other offers higher than mine. An accepted offer is not exactly an accepted offer, so don’t get emotionally invoved. To this date, this property is still vacant. So, in the mean time, there has not been a payment made on this property in at least 12 months, I’d imagine the payments were about 8k plus, a month. I would have been a happy home owner had they not started playing these games and the bank wouldn’t be sitting on this vacant piece of property. Who’s running these bank owned properties anyway?? Doesn’t make sense to me.
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