Successful People Create Implement Goals (LA 852)
Transcript:
Steven Butala: Steve and Jill here.
Jill DeWit: Hello.
Steven Butala: Welcome to the Land Academy Show, entertaining land investment talk. I'm Steven Butala.
Jill DeWit: And I'm Jill DeWit broadcasting from sunny southern California.
Steven Butala: Today, Jill and I talk about successful people create and implement goals.
Jill DeWit: Love it.
Steven Butala: I love this topic.
Jill DeWit: I love it.
Steven Butala: We had a live event recently and we had two live events. One was for beginners and one was for intermediate/advanced people. And I get this question all the time, the question is, what is it that separates some members from just killin' it and some members from not. And the answer lies in this episode.
Jill DeWit: Love it.
Steven Butala: And it's not a long, complicated answer. It's very simple. Before we get into it, let's take a question posted by one of our members in landinvestors.com online community. It's free. And as you're listening, please drop us questions into the comments section below. Specifically on YouTube.
Jill DeWit: Ivan asks, "There are two lots in APN/Legal description tract 1A and 1B but the seller is only selling one of them, track 1A. Which is the one I wanna buy. The other one is land lock and about 2,000 feet from the one I want. Should I just got through Title, let them figure out how to write the deed and generate a new APN? Or can I write the new data within one tract that I'm buying, just leaving out the other tract? Will the county take this? And the poll point here... Let me back up.
Jill DeWit: Why is this so funny?
Steven Butala: I just can't wait to hear your reaction to this question.
Jill DeWit: Alright Ivan, this is great, I'm glad you're asking this question.
Steven Butala: So am I.
Jill DeWit: This can hang up people 'cause... let me start by painting the picture. It's like an APN... Let me back up, I'm gonna give some definitions and make this really easy. So an APN is an assessor's partial number and an APN is assigned to, it could be like this description. It can be more than one property can have one APN. And then the legal description is further describing the property and it might be... And there's many ways... It might be subdivision just be describing the subdivision, but actually describing the area. There's lots of ways they write out the legal description. So now, why this is coming up is because you can have more than one property on one deed.
Jill DeWit: So, if this question was written with two APNs and two legal descriptions, it'd be a no-brainer.
Steven Butala: That's right.
Jill DeWit: You could do this on your own, no big deal. 'Cause its one legal description for one property, one for another property. I can then buy them on one deed.
Steven Butala: And two APNs.
Jill DeWit: Yeah, there's an APN per property. That's really easy.
Steven Butala: But, that's not the case here. There's one APN-
Jill DeWit: One APN, and two properties.
Steven Butala: Two properties insid...